PBS Eons Small visual correction if you don't mind me pointing it out: when you talk about the rise of rodents (@6:28)you are showing a picture of something that spookily resembles to a modern day shrew (insectivore) which is fine as they probably also started to evolve, just that it is a wrong/confusing visual. Your videos are super helpful and amazing. So otherwise you receive all of my respect and admiration for the great and important educational work! Keep it up! :)
This series is one of the few on TH-cam that I can watch with my 5 year old grandson. And we are both learning together. He already wants to be a paleontologist. Or a professional wrestler. I'm hoping he stays with the first choice.
This is so crazy. Just imagine the place where you are sitting right now, and now imagine what it might have looked like 10 million years ago, and what type of animals were walking around on the place you now call home. Anyone else also really curious to discover things like this?
@@prototypeone985 mine too, am from the Netherlands. But that’s even crazier, to realize the place you call home had all sorts of now-extinct marine animals swimming around, 10 million years ago.
PBS Eons, please don't stop making these little programmes. I live in the UK, and these episodes are exactly what I wanted to watch as a child and what I want to show my own kids. Your programmes are interesting and informative, as well as fun, which is what programmes like yours need to be. You educate as well as entertain, which is all anyone can really ask for. Thanks for the new episode, we all eagerly await more!
Surprise at the BBC hasn't made a series of TH-cam channels just like this because it seems like that the best documentaries are being made about stuff are made on TH-cam
TBH the BBC makes great documentaries: Planet Earth, Blue Planet etc. But not enough programmes are made about ancient life, and this is so interesting and enjoyable that I eagerly await each episode. I just wish more people were interested in what happened before today, and not just relating to what humans did, but how we evolved, what we evolved from and everything in between.
@@shhimbob6825 We've wiped out 60% of the population of non-human non-domesticated animals in the last 50 years alone, primarily through direct habitat destruction. In 50 years... when in geologic time a 20,000 year span is considered quick...
@@cros13 that type of thing happens all the time. Asteroids, volcanoes erupting, etc. Humans are just one of the hundreds of thousands of "catastrophic" events to happen to the Earth... Really we are just the most adaptable animal, being able to fill almost all general niches... Naturally we kill out our competition. Just Evolution at its best
@@shhimbob6825 Sure... we're not a real threat to life continuing on earth in some form... and our intelligence and adaptability will probably allow us to adapt quicker than other species that need to change inherited behaviour or physiology.... it's just very likely that we're creating a habitat for ourselves that's likely to cause substantial problems for us in the very near future. Damaging our ability to produce or distribute food, pushing areas of the planet to exceed the 35C maximum wet-bulb temperature humans can survive outdoors in and changes in fresh water availability.
this would be a fascinating topic! however not that much is known. sound doesn't preserve very well :) so I think most of what we have to go on is anatomy of speech organs in combination with brain size
Doesn't really fit in with the theme of the channel that well. An interesting topic though, and I would recommend another TH-cam channel called Xidnaf or NativLang. Both do a good job explaining origins of languages, words, and phrases.
It's amazing how this species has information about other species from so long ago. Like it makes me feel so small and in awe but also privileged to be here.
Funny how these TH-cam channels produce amazing documentaries while the multibillion dollar TV channels like Fox, CNN, history channel waste their resources
@@helloitsahmed Thats the difference between BROAD casting and NARROW (or niche) casting. Big networks have a broader section of people to target, while this distribution and funding method allows them to target a very specific group.
As someone who loves to know the details of how everything evolved to the way it is now and how the world transformed over time, I was amazed by this episode, even if it touched over the subject superficially (though it did the best it could within the time limit). I hope that in future episodes there will be more details about the animals and events mentioned, I got really curious
Bruno Souza I've already watched every single video of this channel, since the beginning. There are many subjects yet to cover, but this is actually a good thing, as we will have good material for a long time
João Pedro Watch the Nat Geo documentary: Evolutions: The Walking Whale, if you haven't already. I remember watching that epsiode as a kid, realising how amazing evolution is.
It's really cool, but what pains me is the fact that we will never know for sure every single detail that led to the rise of conscious rational life, or a real reason why it happened
We sincerely apologize for the delay in our services sir/maam. We are currently working on the next period of Cenozoic- "Quaternary 2.0" We shall be releasing it in about 40 million years. Thank you for using our services. Yours sincerely, Earth Developers Co. Pt.Lt.
this is absolutely fascinating; i've always wondered how the tiny mammals from the dinosaurs' time grew and diversified into us and all the other mammals. a lot of natural history that i've seen only focuses on pre-human time
The true fortune of our existence is incredible. We're just one blip in an evolutionary rollercoaster that's been occurring for hundreds of millions of years and it just so happened to lead to a species that is smart enough to realize itself. Amazing.
I'd love to know about each age's 'last survivors' (eg. last non-mammal mammaliformes at the end of the Cretaceous, or last remaining non-archosaur giants when dinosaurs first took over). Always found the interaction between new species and living fossils fascinating.
Beautiful and sad real story at once. From the dark , frightening and yet wonderful ages to the slow realization the world has become what it is. Like an old man remembering his lifetime , like closing a book , like a peaceful awaking after an incredible dream... There is poesy and grandeur in this History.
the book isn't closing... depending on how we form our future, our species is just a longer or shorter chapter. We might be responsible for a lot of species going extinct but in the grand scheme of things we are just making room for ecological niches to be filled again when we are gone. No one knows what might have been if we were never here or behaved differently and no one can tell if we made the future of biological life more or less interesting. Maybe give it another billion years and after us, a couple more self-aware species evolve and go extinct (or maybe we transcend our biological bodies and become gods? A collective hive mind floating through space as a supercomputer, looking for things to assimilate? Maybe we are just the jumping stone for artificial intelligence, which is an unavoidable step in evolution). I can't really comprehend what you meant with "sad" back when you wrote this and hope you'll learn you look at life in a different way.
@@notlisztening9821 the only way I try to comfort myself is humans have single-handedly orchestrated the beginning of new species by helping 'vermin' (rodents, feral cats, foxes, raccoons) to dominate and evolve into new future species
I don’t know if it’s the script, presenter, or the background video but ever second of this was interesting to me. Absolutely fantastic job from y’all I would hope these videos are shown in science classes everywhere
Could you talk about how and why the body plan of modern big land predators (big cats, bears...) is so different to that of theropods, the big land predators of the dinosaur age ? Especially, why were they mainly bipedal when their modern counterparts are quadrupedal ?
Dinosaurs were actually ancestrally bipedal, the ones that had quadrupedal stances only evolved them to accommodate a larger gut for digesting large amounts of plants. Why they were bipedal in the first place I don't know.
This is a really good question. Modern bipedal animals are pretty few in number, not counting birds of course. Nearly all mammals are quadrupedal. I hope they have an answer to this.
Grammar Nazi The main reasons are either for tool use (apes) or to use hopping to get around (kangaroos). Sengis are a pretty cool example of a middle stage between a quadrupedal shrew-like animal and a bipedal kangaroo-like animal. I still have no idea why the dinosaurs were bipedal, though. We can be sure that their closest ancestors, the pterosaurs, were quadrupedal; so it had to have been a fairly big detail in what made dinosaurs dinosaurs. Then again, other major archosaur groups like the rauithiscians were bipedal too, so the pterosaurs may have just lost bipedalism. So I really have no idea.
PBS Eons will be the most popular Hank produced channel soon. I'm really quite torn on whether I should watch Eons or Space Time first. Last week it was Eons, this week was Space Time. ❤
It always makes me sad thinking about prehistoric wildlife from around the last Ice Age. I get that we'll never see dinosaurs since they died 65 million years ago but we just barely missed these guys. All those cool wildlife that we ALMOST got to see.
If it's any consolation, there is one ice age mammal still living. It's called a musk ox, and you can see them in Alaska. They live in some other arctic areas, too.
@@lindamedrano3313 Evidence is how we know humans didn't exist at the same time. We've radiometrically dated the relevant fossils, and the human remains and they aren't even close. Off by millions of years. We aren't located in the same sediment layers. We would expect to find human fossils in the same layers as non-avian dinosaurs, but we don't. Tho if you are talking about right now in modern times, there are living dinosaurs all over the place. They're called birds.
I really hate snakes and some of the really expressive pics he put into the video for reptile examples will haunt my dreams tonight. Obviously a dislike is what will follow now.
Francois Lacombe With a little skill and _a lot_ of luck, I'd say whenever the first large plants appeared. You'd have to know which ones provided what nutrients and which had toxins, hence the skill and luck, but nutrition and clean water (which you can get from any water with skills) and you're golden.
scaper8, because the first plants were seedless, hence fruitless, you could go probably as far as the first big river fish, because you'de need their proteins. And I don't know how you'de get vitamin C, I don't think there is enough in animals that you could have your share of it by eating meat without dying because there is simply too much meat in your diet.
This episode sets an example all previous ones should have followed and all new ones should. Starts by setting the scene, including climate and predominant forms of life, covers plate tectonics, plant life and general scenery, evolution of main lineages - particularly the ones we care about - and sets up anticipation of the next episode. Perfect!
Complex teeth allow for better adaptive eating for mammals and toughness, the sacrifice is that our teeth cant replace if they do get lost like reptiles
Kenneth Satria why could we not replace our teeth if we lost them because of their complexity ? We do it once, after all, don't we ? So why could we not do it more times ? And if my memory is correct, elephants do replace their teeth multiple times (but only to a certain point, making them dying of starvation before dying of old age, TAKE THAT IN THE TEETH, INTELLIGENT DESIGNER, YOU S*** !) If you have any link, it would be nice to share :)
Nathan Jora Maybe because we arent there yet and have hit a roadblock, this flaw only threatens in old age for elephants and by then they would have done all they need to such as reproduce and pass on knowledge... turns out enamel is unable to be remade for teeth somehow and thats the physical limiter. Basically in animals like reptiles its just simple bone structures usually to grind and slice either plant or meat (and for plants only very crudely so herbivore dinosaurs had to rely on the stomach to get the nutrients needed with the exception of duckbills i think cuz they did chew), with us teeth have roots and layers and different shapes and uses. Most animals before and other were all limited to at most two types of simple teeth (and they were comparatively brittle against the elements since they were structured like lines stuck to one another while mammals were interwoven i think)
I'd love to have the last bit of this series: the quaternary. I know you have done all sorts of videos about topics during this period but it would be amazing if we get a big picture about it. Love all your videos. Thank you so much
I am so lucky, to live in a time where shows like this are a click away. I am soo sooo lucky I get to exist and believe I am significant while knowing so well how insignificant I am in the history of the Earth. No matter how crappy your life might be, you are so damn lucky just to be alive, and be conscious thinking humans, aware of your place in time.
One little thing might be there to present: How crustaceans (maybe) crawled onto land and became the predecessors of insects. And later how they learned to fly. Well, if any of this is known, it would make a great video. If.
I so enjoy the story-telling narrative method of presenting this information! We process the information much better when it is presented in such a way, especially if the narrative is engaging, as yours is. And while I am at it, let me also say Thank You, Hank and all of your staff, for all the different channels you have developed to diversify your efforts in telling the story of science in its many different forms.
WOW!!! loved it! So glad I've found a channel that is going to save my brain from atrophy. Love the speed at which the information is dispelled. Thanks! Going to pass it on to my 20 year old son. At one time he wanted to be a Zoologist. Now he's about to study Psychology. 👍🏾🇹🇹
Thank you for this. I love playing this in the background while I'm tinkering with my hands. I get to learn and be entertained at the same time. Yes, entertained. You kept an otherwise dry (cough) topic very captivating and I was engaged the whole time and may have Googled some terms on the side. Thank you!
I LOVE THIS CHANNEL. It gives you an sense of location and historicity and we realize we're but a blink of cosmic time. I'd love more videos on the early humans and the various lineages.
Disappointed Turtle, thanks. I was just scrolling the comments to see if someone had spotted that problem. Great channel but sloppiness should have no place in science. Now I'll have to check everything this guy says because I can't trust him anymore.
Long ago, "reptiles" referred to any non-mammal/bird amniote. Only later, around the 80s I think, paleontologists started giving scientific merit to those non-technical group names. This lead to "reptiles" being used to refer to diapsids/sauropsids, while non-mammalian synapsids that looked a lot like reptiles were suddenly no longer classified as reptiles. But the public expectation of what constitutes a "reptile" goes way back and is hard to dispel. Even today some synapsid/pelycosaur researchers may casually throw the word "reptile" to refer to Dimetrodon. In my opinion it's the meaning of the word "reptile" itself that has changed over time. - Based on my personal conversations with synapsid workers but mostly Christian Kammerer
Franz Anthony Yes it is my understanding that tetrapods diverged into amphibians and reptilomorphs. Reptilomorphs are not however reptilia. Reptilomorphs then diverged again but the only extant lineage is that of the amniotes. Amniotes then diverged into Synapsids from which mammals derived and Reptilia which eventually led to the true reptiles.
I always get a pleasant burst of nostalgia when seeing Hank as the host of the earlier videos on channels like these. I hope y'all have a delicious bean-filled chom chom
I'd love to see an "in depth" episode on the Permian period. Most "popular" media only focuses on The Great Dying, and while yes it's very important, it's overdone. Everything I find just glosses over the Permian, like "yea this happened some weird stuff is there, but hey look! it's almost all dying because of this great extinction so it doesn't matter. Dinosaurs next everyone! " No, go back that looked cool what was that? Did you say the entire world was ruled by a group of animals that doesn't exist anymore? Go back and explain that dammit!
btw, love your program, (actually wish our taxes went toward this...) I think some graphics could help make it more clear the order of Eons Eras Periods Epoches Ages you’re talking about. Maybe even a consistent timeline on the bottom of the screen, in scrolling segments like what the Kurtzgezat channel does.
It is pronounced as, "Waimanu," as in "whymanu" with a fast, short "a" sound than a long, slow "a" sound if you spelled it like you would say it. So, you are both wrong; sorry I am late.
The history of life on Earth is an epic saga stretching unimaginably long time! Even the relatively short Cenozoic Era is so filled with so many events. I can't imagine the entirety of all other ages back across 3.5 billions years.
Bring on the Rise of the Humans video! Finish the series! (But also don't rush because your videos are awesome due to your attention to detail) But also hurry because I CAN'T WAIT ANY LONGER PLEASE!
They were a strange group of mammals that formed the sister group to the therians (placentals + marsupials). They held niches very similar to those of modern day rodents and rabbits and went extinct for unknown reasons. They may have also laid eggs. That's all I know about them.
Wonderful video, as allways. What I would personaly like to see is more on early human civilisation, stone age and hunter/gatherers type of comunities.
So much information! And so much more still yet to learn, I don't mean to get political or controversial here but just stating the facts, it's sad how religion can limit our yearning for knowledge.
Since they are cold blooded, they were able to adapt to the changing temperatures. If it cold very cold.. They had the ability to hibernate to stay alive.
No c'mon, Tarzan and Conan were the first humans. They lived inside Hollow Earth, and when they emerged through the hole at the North pole people started roaming the rest of the planet. Of course, they had to meet the Amazons to procreate.
@@johannageisel5390 makes you wonder how those two type A personalities got all the way to the Amazon without killing each other. Of course, what were they doing for sex?
@PBS Eons when mentioning CARBONEMYS the background of this artistic recreation shows lepidodendrals, some lycopods that died out long before carbonemys lived. Apart from this small thing, I really enjoy all of your videos.
Best thing and my reason to love science, are the evidences they show. We do not just believe in science but there must be a clear description with evidence for a topic.
Thanks PBS Eons. I needed this a school year ago, but I guess last year's Grade 7s weren't as lucky as this years! Thanks again and God bless you for this! :-)
Like! They can expand on this by presenting evidence as to whether extant komodo dragons are examples of island gigantism relative to smaller varanids OR an example of island dwarfism relative to Megalania.
KSound Kaiju goanna are an entire pylogenic assembly. and yes goanna in general, especially the parante monitor, and komodo are thought to be the closest living relatives.
Mainly I study and love human history, but it’s so important to know where we came from in every aspect we can discover. But when watching these I always think how amazing it really is, that we are the first species to be fully aware of our place in time, and what has come before (extinction events) and how we could possibly survive the future.
I would love to learn more about the life on Antarctica when the earth was so warm that there was no ice, but forest's. This seems to have happened more often in the history of the earth and I find it particularly interesting because the continent, despite the warm climate, was always half a year in the light and half a year in the dark. The video was as always fantastic and very educational and I'm looking forward to the next one :)
But, if the Earth's axis of rotation were perpendicular to the plane of it's revolution around the sun, rather than be tilted as it is today, then there would be a day-night cycle at the poles, so organisms would adapt to that as they have with today's organisms.
Really. Whole forests "going to sleep", dropping their leaves in preparation for the long dark and continuously photosynthesizing during the Summer. I guess the animal response would have to be hibernation or extreme migration
They skipped over a lot of things and focused on a few random details. I think the main point of this series was to talk about our origins and what the world was like at the time, but I still have no idea why they devoted so much time to titanoboa.
Thank you for this recap of the last million of years, I'll be sure to do much more research (that my school doesn't recognize) and learn even more. Ps: Thank you for helping me through my difficult time of school, they won't give me the education that I so desperately want.
I'm sorry you're stuck in a backwards school, & it's amazing that you're seeking out more knowledge on your own 😊 If you ever see this comment, PLEASE check out Aron Ra & Trey the Explainer, they're my favorite paleontology/evolutionary science TH-cam channels.
link to the poster please!
Here you go! store.dftba.com/products/eons-poster
You should put it in the description, or pin this comment.
It certainly would have helped in my case!
PBS Eons Small visual correction if you don't mind me pointing it out: when you talk about the rise of rodents (@6:28)you are showing a picture of something that spookily resembles to a modern day shrew (insectivore) which is fine as they probably also started to evolve, just that it is a wrong/confusing visual. Your videos are super helpful and amazing. So otherwise you receive all of my respect and admiration for the great and important educational work! Keep it up! :)
NICE! Thanks man :D
This series is one of the few on TH-cam that I can watch with my 5 year old grandson. And we are both learning together. He already wants to be a paleontologist. Or a professional wrestler. I'm hoping he stays with the first choice.
Brian Garrow or a wrestler called 'the paleontologist' 😁
dschonsie perfect lol
how about both!!!
@@0megadwarf you can't be both, too much brain damage
Can't it be both?
This is so crazy. Just imagine the place where you are sitting right now, and now imagine what it might have looked like 10 million years ago, and what type of animals were walking around on the place you now call home. Anyone else also really curious to discover things like this?
That's so cool to think about. Thanks :)
I am
My home would be underwater
@@prototypeone985 mine too, am from the Netherlands. But that’s even crazier, to realize the place you call home had all sorts of now-extinct marine animals swimming around, 10 million years ago.
I would be in the middle of the ocean because Oahu did not exist 10 million years ago
PBS Eons, please don't stop making these little programmes. I live in the UK, and these episodes are exactly what I wanted to watch as a child and what I want to show my own kids. Your programmes are interesting and informative, as well as fun, which is what programmes like yours need to be. You educate as well as entertain, which is all anyone can really ask for. Thanks for the new episode, we all eagerly await more!
Surprise at the BBC hasn't made a series of TH-cam channels just like this because it seems like that the best documentaries are being made about stuff are made on TH-cam
TBH the BBC makes great documentaries: Planet Earth, Blue Planet etc. But not enough programmes are made about ancient life, and this is so interesting and enjoyable that I eagerly await each episode. I just wish more people were interested in what happened before today, and not just relating to what humans did, but how we evolved, what we evolved from and everything in between.
wholesome
True i idnt know how much i wanted this
I wanted to be a paleontologist a decade or so ago when I was his age. Now I'm a teenager and want to be something else.
Wow! I’m Navajo from New Mexico and at 2:35 that bird Tsidiiyazhi in Navajo language means “small bird”. That’s amazing.
lol.
“What should we name this small fossil bird?”
“Tsidiiyazhi”
“Oh cool, what does that name mean?”
“Small bird”
“…”
this is the REAL greatest story ever told .i can’t get enough of it!
It's crazy how small of a blip on the radar humanity is in the grand scheme of things.
And yet we have destroyed so much in the minuscule amount of time that we've been here.
@@BananaCake26
On the mass scale, humans haven't affected that much
@@shhimbob6825 We've wiped out 60% of the population of non-human non-domesticated animals in the last 50 years alone, primarily through direct habitat destruction. In 50 years... when in geologic time a 20,000 year span is considered quick...
@@cros13 that type of thing happens all the time. Asteroids, volcanoes erupting, etc. Humans are just one of the hundreds of thousands of "catastrophic" events to happen to the Earth...
Really we are just the most adaptable animal, being able to fill almost all general niches... Naturally we kill out our competition. Just Evolution at its best
@@shhimbob6825 Sure... we're not a real threat to life continuing on earth in some form... and our intelligence and adaptability will probably allow us to adapt quicker than other species that need to change inherited behaviour or physiology.... it's just very likely that we're creating a habitat for ourselves that's likely to cause substantial problems for us in the very near future. Damaging our ability to produce or distribute food, pushing areas of the planet to exceed the 35C maximum wet-bulb temperature humans can survive outdoors in and changes in fresh water availability.
Everything changed the day the Grass Nation attacked.
Enthused Norseman lol
I wish I could still watch that show it was so good
Robert Merrill Buy the box set. Not that expensive. Sucks that it's only regular DVD and not blu ray.
Only the even-toed ungulates, masters of all 4 stomachs could stop them.
@@robertmerrill8918 look for it online
could you do a video on how language evolved in humans?
Eitan A B This would be v difficult
this would be a fascinating topic! however not that much is known.
sound doesn't preserve very well :) so I think most of what we have to go on
is anatomy of speech organs in combination with brain size
Doesn't really fit in with the theme of the channel that well. An interesting topic though, and I would recommend another TH-cam channel called Xidnaf or NativLang. Both do a good job explaining origins of languages, words, and phrases.
It just gets lazier and lazier as time goes on.
I don't think they can do a video on how language developed because we don't know.
the ability to explain concepts so important so fast is exceptional.
I'm so sad dodo's are extinct. Just imagine having a pet dodo
If they’re anything like the kereru/wood pigeon, I can imagine.
named my cat dodo
People wanting them is why they're extinct though
i wish
Get a chicken
It's amazing how this species has information about other species from so long ago. Like it makes me feel so small and in awe but also privileged to be here.
I get very emotional everytime I read or watch something discussing the evolution of humanity. Anyone else? It's just so beautiful.
Wtf
EONS is so awesome!
Please keep doing these videos!!!
For real! This is like someone made my 5th grade self's dream television show.
Now if only they would have a presenter who could talk, instead of yell at you.
no thx
Funny how these TH-cam channels produce amazing documentaries while the multibillion dollar TV channels like Fox, CNN, history channel waste their resources
@@helloitsahmed Thats the difference between BROAD casting and NARROW (or niche) casting. Big networks have a broader section of people to target, while this distribution and funding method allows them to target a very specific group.
him talking about how we don't look like reptiles but I'm over here thinking about the snakes in my family 👀
rightttt😫
Damnnn
Preach
👀
OML noo😭😭
Now I’m thinking about the snakes in my school🤣
8:13 one of the cutest things i've ever seen.
As someone who loves to know the details of how everything evolved to the way it is now and how the world transformed over time, I was amazed by this episode, even if it touched over the subject superficially (though it did the best it could within the time limit). I hope that in future episodes there will be more details about the animals and events mentioned, I got really curious
João Pedro It was amazing.
many of the mentioned subjects are covered by other videos. I suggest you watch them if you havn't done so yet.
Bruno Souza I've already watched every single video of this channel, since the beginning. There are many subjects yet to cover, but this is actually a good thing, as we will have good material for a long time
João Pedro Watch the Nat Geo documentary: Evolutions: The Walking Whale, if you haven't already. I remember watching that epsiode as a kid, realising how amazing evolution is.
It's really cool, but what pains me is the fact that we will never know for sure every single detail that led to the rise of conscious rational life, or a real reason why it happened
Do a video on the evolution of plant self-defense mechanisms such as poisons, thorns, and alert signals spores.
That sounds fun....
That *bruh moment* when the reply gets more likes then the comment
@@DuelingFrog huh?
"Because that's the era we're in now"--my first thought: this is like when the TV show catches up with the book.
🤣🤣🤣🤭
... and you realize the t.v. show runners aren't 1/10 as talented at the author of the book.
Amazing trip into my evolution, really made me imagine how much ancestors endured so one day we could exist in a more complex life form
Nobody:
Me hearing I'm related to an ancient bacteria: I knew I was a parasite
Mmm
Mmm
@@rosoro465 Mmm
Mmm-hmm.
*MMMM*
Man, can't leave a single vid in this channel without liking
I'm getting tired of the Cenozoic patch. When will the devs release the next version?
I’m not looking forward to the server wipe that has to happen for them to release a new version 😖
Mods have been leaking Anthropocene patches for 2021
They have been trying to nerf humans lately
We sincerely apologize for the delay in our services sir/maam. We are currently working on the next period of Cenozoic- "Quaternary 2.0" We shall be releasing it in about 40 million years. Thank you for using our services.
Yours sincerely,
Earth Developers Co. Pt.Lt.
@@eltiospike7672 Well, at the very least humans need a redesign.
this is absolutely fascinating; i've always wondered how the tiny mammals from the dinosaurs' time grew and diversified into us and all the other mammals. a lot of natural history that i've seen only focuses on pre-human time
The true fortune of our existence is incredible. We're just one blip in an evolutionary rollercoaster that's been occurring for hundreds of millions of years and it just so happened to lead to a species that is smart enough to realize itself. Amazing.
I'd love to know about each age's 'last survivors' (eg. last non-mammal mammaliformes at the end of the Cretaceous, or last remaining non-archosaur giants when dinosaurs first took over). Always found the interaction between new species and living fossils fascinating.
THE BEST SHOW ON TH-cam! PBS eons is absolutely captivating!
What does that mean
@@mkhanman12345”Captivating” means that it catches the attention of a large group of people, or is interesting
Beautiful and sad real story at once.
From the dark , frightening and yet wonderful ages to the slow realization the world has become what it is.
Like an old man remembering his lifetime , like closing a book , like a peaceful awaking after an incredible dream... There is poesy and grandeur in this History.
the book isn't closing... depending on how we form our future, our species is just a longer or shorter chapter.
We might be responsible for a lot of species going extinct but in the grand scheme of things we are just making room for ecological niches to be filled again when we are gone. No one knows what might have been if we were never here or behaved differently and no one can tell if we made the future of biological life more or less interesting. Maybe give it another billion years and after us, a couple more self-aware species evolve and go extinct (or maybe we transcend our biological bodies and become gods? A collective hive mind floating through space as a supercomputer, looking for things to assimilate? Maybe we are just the jumping stone for artificial intelligence, which is an unavoidable step in evolution).
I can't really comprehend what you meant with "sad" back when you wrote this and hope you'll learn you look at life in a different way.
@Erik Lerström I don't think you have looked far enough for one
@@notlisztening9821 the only way I try to comfort myself is humans have single-handedly orchestrated the beginning of new species by helping 'vermin' (rodents, feral cats, foxes, raccoons) to dominate and evolve into new future species
I don’t know if it’s the script, presenter, or the background video but ever second of this was interesting to me. Absolutely fantastic job from y’all I would hope these videos are shown in science classes everywhere
Discovered Eons recently. I can't stop watching.
This is how you compile a year's homework into one video. Great job.
Could you talk about how and why the body plan of modern big land predators (big cats, bears...) is so different to that of theropods, the big land predators of the dinosaur age ? Especially, why were they mainly bipedal when their modern counterparts are quadrupedal ?
That would be interesting. I never thought about it, but it is kind of weird. I wonder if there's any particular reason for it.
Dinosaurs were actually ancestrally bipedal, the ones that had quadrupedal stances only evolved them to accommodate a larger gut for digesting large amounts of plants. Why they were bipedal in the first place I don't know.
This is a really good question. Modern bipedal animals are pretty few in number, not counting birds of course. Nearly all mammals are quadrupedal. I hope they have an answer to this.
I wonder if its tied to the gas ratio in the air, maybe indirectly metabolism.
Grammar Nazi The main reasons are either for tool use (apes) or to use hopping to get around (kangaroos). Sengis are a pretty cool example of a middle stage between a quadrupedal shrew-like animal and a bipedal kangaroo-like animal.
I still have no idea why the dinosaurs were bipedal, though. We can be sure that their closest ancestors, the pterosaurs, were quadrupedal; so it had to have been a fairly big detail in what made dinosaurs dinosaurs. Then again, other major archosaur groups like the rauithiscians were bipedal too, so the pterosaurs may have just lost bipedalism. So I really have no idea.
Please never stop hosting these videos. No one does them better. could listen to you lecture all day . I only wish you did math videos
I love Eons.
PBS Eons will be the most popular Hank produced channel soon. I'm really quite torn on whether I should watch Eons or Space Time first. Last week it was Eons, this week was Space Time. ❤
SciShow!
It always makes me sad thinking about prehistoric wildlife from around the last Ice Age. I get that we'll never see dinosaurs since they died 65 million years ago but we just barely missed these guys. All those cool wildlife that we ALMOST got to see.
If it's any consolation, there is one ice age mammal still living. It's called a musk ox, and you can see them in Alaska. They live in some other arctic areas, too.
We saw dinosaurs. Who's so sure we didn't not.
@@lindamedrano3313 Evidence is how we know humans didn't exist at the same time. We've radiometrically dated the relevant fossils, and the human remains and they aren't even close. Off by millions of years. We aren't located in the same sediment layers. We would expect to find human fossils in the same layers as non-avian dinosaurs, but we don't.
Tho if you are talking about right now in modern times, there are living dinosaurs all over the place. They're called birds.
Why would anyone dislike these videos?
It is beyond me. Probably some theists.
Yep, theists and evolution deniers
I really hate snakes and some of the really expressive pics he put into the video for reptile examples will haunt my dreams tonight. Obviously a dislike is what will follow now.
@@mightsystem1 Sorry about that.
Proven wrong, do the math
How far back in time could a stranded time traveler still survive by living off the land?
As long there is enough food and water, I say pretty far. Maybe Carboniferous Period?
Francois Lacombe With a little skill and _a lot_ of luck, I'd say whenever the first large plants appeared. You'd have to know which ones provided what nutrients and which had toxins, hence the skill and luck, but nutrition and clean water (which you can get from any water with skills) and you're golden.
Ask this question in quora
scaper8, because the first plants were seedless, hence fruitless, you could go probably as far as the first big river fish, because you'de need their proteins. And I don't know how you'de get vitamin C, I don't think there is enough in animals that you could have your share of it by eating meat without dying because there is simply too much meat in your diet.
Oxygen would become more of a problem the further back you went
This episode sets an example all previous ones should have followed and all new ones should. Starts by setting the scene, including climate and predominant forms of life, covers plate tectonics, plant life and general scenery, evolution of main lineages - particularly the ones we care about - and sets up anticipation of the next episode. Perfect!
please make a video about significances of the teeth in paleontology or about evolution of teeth...
YES PLEASE EXPLAIN TO ME WHY TEETH AREN'T SCALES
Complex teeth allow for better adaptive eating for mammals and toughness, the sacrifice is that our teeth cant replace if they do get lost like reptiles
Kenneth Satria why could we not replace our teeth if we lost them because of their complexity ? We do it once, after all, don't we ? So why could we not do it more times ? And if my memory is correct, elephants do replace their teeth multiple times (but only to a certain point, making them dying of starvation before dying of old age, TAKE THAT IN THE TEETH, INTELLIGENT DESIGNER, YOU S*** !)
If you have any link, it would be nice to share :)
I'd love to see one on the origin of teeth.
Nathan Jora Maybe because we arent there yet and have hit a roadblock, this flaw only threatens in old age for elephants and by then they would have done all they need to such as reproduce and pass on knowledge... turns out enamel is unable to be remade for teeth somehow and thats the physical limiter.
Basically in animals like reptiles its just simple bone structures usually to grind and slice either plant or meat (and for plants only very crudely so herbivore dinosaurs had to rely on the stomach to get the nutrients needed with the exception of duckbills i think cuz they did chew), with us teeth have roots and layers and different shapes and uses. Most animals before and other were all limited to at most two types of simple teeth (and they were comparatively brittle against the elements since they were structured like lines stuck to one another while mammals were interwoven i think)
I'd love to have the last bit of this series: the quaternary. I know you have done all sorts of videos about topics during this period but it would be amazing if we get a big picture about it. Love all your videos. Thank you so much
I am so lucky, to live in a time where shows like this are a click away. I am soo sooo lucky I get to exist and believe I am significant while knowing so well how insignificant I am in the history of the Earth. No matter how crappy your life might be, you are so damn lucky just to be alive, and be conscious thinking humans, aware of your place in time.
Watching these always leave me in awe that I happened to be born.
One little thing might be there to present: How crustaceans (maybe) crawled onto land and became the predecessors of insects. And later how they learned to fly. Well, if any of this is known, it would make a great video. If.
I so enjoy the story-telling narrative method of presenting this information! We process the information much better when it is presented in such a way, especially if the narrative is engaging, as yours is. And while I am at it, let me also say Thank You, Hank and all of your staff, for all the different channels you have developed to diversify your efforts in telling the story of science in its many different forms.
WOW!!! loved it! So glad I've found a channel that is going to save my brain from atrophy.
Love the speed at which the information is dispelled. Thanks!
Going to pass it on to my 20 year old son. At one time he wanted to be a Zoologist. Now he's about to study Psychology. 👍🏾🇹🇹
Thank you for this. I love playing this in the background while I'm tinkering with my hands. I get to learn and be entertained at the same time. Yes, entertained. You kept an otherwise dry (cough) topic very captivating and I was engaged the whole time and may have Googled some terms on the side. Thank you!
I didn’t find it dry. You’re not some expert on topics.
I LOVE THIS CHANNEL. It gives you an sense of location and historicity and we realize we're but a blink of cosmic time. I'd love more videos on the early humans and the various lineages.
Please do an episode about volcanic activity throughout geologic history.
Found this channel and watched every video in 3 days. Amazing covent. Amazing personalities as the hosts. Well done.
I’m going to do the same thing.
This is the content I signed up for ❤ I freakin love PBS Eons!
I absolutely love this channel. Everything is so flippin’ interesting.
And I love you
I love these videos but I still wanna see one that talks about Ice Age megafauna in Australia!
+
I will feed you to my pet Thylacoleo, megalania
Relax I won't really. I just have to comment to push Steve's comment up the list.
Keep it going guys! 😃 HEAR ME HANK GREEN! THE PEOPLE WANT THIS!!!
yeh this video REALLY should have covered Australia, how marsupials evolved & how rafting caused herbivores to turn into Thylaco's
oh boy me too!
These are my go to videos while I snack
I'm enjoying a frappucino while watching the episode lol
Cristhian Perez lol!
These videos make me lose my appetite but i still love them
@@Cristhian_Perez I am enjoying ginger Tea
Coco pops brah coco pops
0:42 Synapsids/Stem-mammals did not descend from reptiles, they just share a common ancestor with them among the first amniotes.
Exactly, I keep telling people that diapsids had not even occurred yet so how could we be descended from them.
Wow i didnt know that... but they were reptilelike right? Something like Dimetrodon?
Disappointed Turtle, thanks. I was just scrolling the comments to see if someone had spotted that problem.
Great channel but sloppiness should have no place in science. Now I'll have to check everything this guy says because I can't trust him anymore.
Long ago, "reptiles" referred to any non-mammal/bird amniote. Only later, around the 80s I think, paleontologists started giving scientific merit to those non-technical group names. This lead to "reptiles" being used to refer to diapsids/sauropsids, while non-mammalian synapsids that looked a lot like reptiles were suddenly no longer classified as reptiles. But the public expectation of what constitutes a "reptile" goes way back and is hard to dispel. Even today some synapsid/pelycosaur researchers may casually throw the word "reptile" to refer to Dimetrodon. In my opinion it's the meaning of the word "reptile" itself that has changed over time.
- Based on my personal conversations with synapsid workers but mostly Christian Kammerer
Franz Anthony Yes it is my understanding that tetrapods diverged into amphibians and reptilomorphs. Reptilomorphs are not however reptilia.
Reptilomorphs then diverged again but the only extant lineage is that of the amniotes. Amniotes then diverged into Synapsids from which mammals derived and Reptilia which eventually led to the true reptiles.
I always get a pleasant burst of nostalgia when seeing Hank as the host of the earlier videos on channels like these. I hope y'all have a delicious bean-filled chom chom
Beautiful educational video, I learned so much! Thank you for everyone's hard work putting this video together.
So you learned and posted nothing about the topic?
I'd like to know about alternative ways of breathing and digesting. I was struck by that animal (in the Mesozoic?) which had a one-way respiration.
Gregorio Grasselli +++
I'd love to see an "in depth" episode on the Permian period. Most "popular" media only focuses on The Great Dying, and while yes it's very important, it's overdone. Everything I find just glosses over the Permian, like "yea this happened some weird stuff is there, but hey look! it's almost all dying because of this great extinction so it doesn't matter. Dinosaurs next everyone! " No, go back that looked cool what was that? Did you say the entire world was ruled by a group of animals that doesn't exist anymore? Go back and explain that dammit!
And what about the Krolusks?
Oh they exist, they just left this world.😅
RIP the gorgonopsids 😭😭
btw, love your program, (actually wish our taxes went toward this...)
I think some graphics could help make it more clear the order of Eons Eras Periods Epoches Ages you’re talking about. Maybe even a consistent timeline on the bottom of the screen, in scrolling segments like what the Kurtzgezat channel does.
Where has this TH-cam channel been my hole life
The waimanu is pronounced wai-mah-nu. The a in te reo māori is pronounced ‘aaah’ :)
Just for next time!
It is pronounced as, "Waimanu," as in "whymanu" with a fast, short "a" sound than a long, slow "a" sound if you spelled it like you would say it. So, you are both wrong; sorry I am late.
It's awsum to live a human life
so So SO many years after life
began. Earth's history is epic!
The origin of bats. How dinosaurs cared for their eggs. Thanks for a great channel. I'm enjoying the eon overviews.
The history of life on Earth is an epic saga stretching unimaginably long time! Even the relatively short Cenozoic Era is so filled with so many events. I can't imagine the entirety of all other ages back across 3.5 billions years.
All I can say is thanks. What an amazing journey and so well presented.
Bring on the Rise of the Humans video! Finish the series! (But also don't rush because your videos are awesome due to your attention to detail) But also hurry because I CAN'T WAIT ANY LONGER PLEASE!
You mentioned mammal groups that went extinct during the Paleogene. How about making a video on one of them, the multituberculates?
They were a strange group of mammals that formed the sister group to the therians (placentals + marsupials). They held niches very similar to those of modern day rodents and rabbits and went extinct for unknown reasons. They may have also laid eggs. That's all I know about them.
This episode is so well made and beautifully illustrated
Wonderful video, as allways. What I would personaly like to see is more on early human civilisation, stone age and hunter/gatherers type of comunities.
This is just stupendous ! PBS is terrific.
So much information! And so much more still yet to learn, I don't mean to get political or controversial here but just stating the facts, it's sad how religion can limit our yearning for knowledge.
Really nice video but I have a question:When the world started getting colder and an Ice age began how did the reptiles survive ?
Since they are cold blooded, they were able to adapt to the changing temperatures. If it cold very cold.. They had the ability to hibernate to stay alive.
A lot of interesting information to take in, but I got the basics:
Vikings used to keep dinos as pets, and then we invented the cellphone.
No, the dinosaurs used to keep the Vikings as pets and the cellphones invented the dinos duh
No c'mon, Tarzan and Conan were the first humans. They lived inside Hollow Earth, and when they emerged through the hole at the North pole people started roaming the rest of the planet. Of course, they had to meet the Amazons to procreate.
@@keithfaulkner6319 The Amazons lived in the Amazonas basin, where The Lost World is also located. Which, of course, also contains dinosaurs.
@@johannageisel5390 makes you wonder how those two type A personalities got all the way to the Amazon without killing each other.
Of course, what were they doing for sex?
@@keithfaulkner6319 I think they used the Nautilus.
@PBS Eons when mentioning CARBONEMYS the background of this artistic recreation shows lepidodendrals, some lycopods that died out long before carbonemys lived. Apart from this small thing, I really enjoy all of your videos.
Hank, I will never get tired of you telling me all of the bizarre organisms I'm related to.
i LOVE PBS Eons!!!!
What an incredible Video, thanks team!!!
They used a Navajo name to name an ancient bird.
Best thing and my reason to love science, are the evidences they show. We do not just believe in science but there must be a clear description with evidence for a topic.
I’d love too see why are appearance changed and when certain characteristics developed I love your channel keep up the great work
Great video as always!
I'd like to know about all of the hominid fossils we've found, and how we know they are as old as they are.
Javier Gonzalez no, they use different forms of dating.
The BEST Channel in TH-cam!
Thanks PBS Eons. I needed this a school year ago, but I guess last year's Grade 7s weren't as lucky as this years! Thanks again and God bless you for this! :-)
This is a good introduction. Thank you Mr. Green, and to your group of course also.
Could you do a Video on Varanus Priscus Aka Megalania?
Like! They can expand on this by presenting evidence as to whether extant komodo dragons are examples of island gigantism relative to smaller varanids OR an example of island dwarfism relative to Megalania.
Edward Ramirez. Isn't the Megalania more related to the Goanna Lizard?
KSound Kaiju goanna are an entire pylogenic assembly. and yes goanna in general, especially the parante monitor, and komodo are thought to be the closest living relatives.
This idea works hand in hand with my suggestion about Pleistocene Australia in general so im gonna help push it! :)
A video on Australia in general because of how many evolutionary oddities it has had over its existence?
I love this channel. I just felt it had to be said.
Can you talk about temnospondyls and other weird Paleozoic amphibians
8:14 one of your cutest videos yet
Mainly I study and love human history, but it’s so important to know where we came from in every aspect we can discover. But when watching these I always think how amazing it really is, that we are the first species to be fully aware of our place in time, and what has come before (extinction events) and how we could possibly survive the future.
How do you know we're the first species to be aware of "our space in time"?
I would love to learn more about the life on Antarctica when the earth was so warm that there was no ice, but forest's. This seems to have happened more often in the history of the earth and I find it particularly interesting because the continent, despite the warm climate, was always half a year in the light and half a year in the dark.
The video was as always fantastic and very educational and I'm looking forward to the next one :)
YES! I'd love to see a video about life at the poles before the ice caps formed.
Chris Brkbsch they probably can’t find much tbh
Walking with dinosaurs did a ep for this topic.
But, if the Earth's axis of rotation were perpendicular to the plane of it's revolution around the sun, rather than be tilted as it is today, then there would be a day-night cycle at the poles, so organisms would adapt to that as they have with today's organisms.
Really. Whole forests "going to sleep", dropping their leaves in preparation for the long dark and continuously photosynthesizing during the Summer. I guess the animal response would have to be hibernation or extreme migration
Vid on ceratopsians?
Please tell us about the history of life in Australia. I watch this channel a lot and I don't remember seeing any episodes about life in Australia.
That's because Australia doesn't exist.
It's just crazy how I love watching videos like this even though I don't understand a thing hahaha.
I've watched this video at least ten times for a school project
How close are squirrels to primates?
quite close, but lagomorph (rabbit and hare) are closer to rodent (squirrel, rat and beaver)
Afif Brian I haven't even thought of squirrels as rodents but you're right.
Afif Brian And thank you.
There's one about 3m away outside.
Sorry I had to :)
Elrey Sosa XD
why were the terror birds omitted? they were all over the world, and i would think they were significant
They skipped over a lot of things and focused on a few random details. I think the main point of this series was to talk about our origins and what the world was like at the time, but I still have no idea why they devoted so much time to titanoboa.
7lllll There's already an episode on them.
Thank you for this recap of the last million of years, I'll be sure to do much more research (that my school doesn't recognize) and learn even more.
Ps: Thank you for helping me through my difficult time of school, they won't give me the education that I so desperately want.
I'm sorry you're stuck in a backwards school, & it's amazing that you're seeking out more knowledge on your own 😊 If you ever see this comment, PLEASE check out Aron Ra & Trey the Explainer, they're my favorite paleontology/evolutionary science TH-cam channels.
I always love the contents because there's a bunch of references.
Evidence based historical story is a masterpiece!
From Stone Age to Digital Age, Evolution is truly AMAZING