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Cretaceous Life: Dinosaurs, Marine Reptiles, Mammals, Plants, Invertebrates, & Microbes | GEO GIRL 

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The Cretaceous was the last period of the Mesozoic Era from ~145 to 66 million years ago. Life in te Cretaceous was drastically different than today. Dinosaurs dominated the terrestrial realm and huge marine reptiles dominated the oceans. Marine reptiles were later replaced by marine mammals in the Cenozoic. Smaller ocean dwellers, like ammonites were also abundant in Cretaceous oceans. Still smaller micro phytoplankton, coccolithophores, became so dominant in the Cretaceous they invented a new rock type! Coccolithophores made such thick chalk deposites during this period that the Cretaceous got its name from chalk (creta means chalk). Siliceous sponges (glass sponges), on the other hand, became less abundant because radiolarians and diatoms took so much silica from the oeans that hardly any was left over for the sponges. Reefs in cretaceous oceans were made of mollusks instead of corals or sponges. Rudists were the dominant reef builders in the Cretaceous because the ocean chemistry favored aragonite precipitation which rudists and coccolithophores secrete. Corals secrete calcite rather than aragonite, so they were not dominant reef builders until the Cenozoic when ocean conditions favored calcite again. Moving back to land, plants also underwent a major event during the Cretaceous, angiosperms, flowering plants, evolved! Angiosperms diversified along with insects in the Cretaceous and throughout the Cenozoic. Laslty, mammals remained small in the Cretaceous, but after the KPg extinction were able to come back and diversify greatly in the Cenozoic, or Age of Mammals.
References: Earth System History: amzn.to/3v1Iy0G
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0:00 When was the Cretaceous?
0:28 Chalk forming organisms!
1:46 Glass reefs came to an end
2:28 Cretaceous plants
3:22 Reason for Angiosperm success
5:09 Cretaceous invertebrates
6:40 Rudist reefs vs coral reefs
8:00 Marine predators in the Cretaceous
9:20 Marine reptiles dominated Cretaceous oceans
11:35 Cretaceous dinosaurs
13:28 Cretaceous mammals
15:01 Related videos & references
Disclaimer: Links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product or service with the links that I provide I may receive a small commission, but there is no additional charge to you! Thank you for supporting my channel so I can continue to provide you with free content each week! And as always, let me know your topic suggestions in the comments down below!

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24 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 84   
@shivprakashyadav5960
@shivprakashyadav5960 3 месяца назад
Watching from India 🎉🎉🎉❤❤
@Ervan80
@Ervan80 Год назад
great video, thanks again
@edgeofsanity9111
@edgeofsanity9111 Год назад
This is the most inclusive video I've seen so far
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
Thanks! That's always my goal! Even if some people don't find all the details interesting, I certainly do ;D
@edgeofsanity9111
@edgeofsanity9111 Год назад
@@GEOGIRL many creatures of that time are indeed underrated Tho within the dinosaurs you did miss some things: you forgot the Sauropods which were very dominant in the continents that were once Gondwana; you did mention Hadrosaurs, but you forgot the other important Ornithopods, Iguanodonts and Hypsilophodonts (which were prevalent in the early Cretaceous), about the Pachycephalosaurs too and some Theropods actually evolved a herbovirous or omnivorous diet (Ornithomimosaurs and Therizinosaurs), and as the cherry on top (but I don't blame you for not knowing this) you could've mentioned the last few Stegosaurids that roamed the early Cretaceaous Other than dinosaurs, maybe giving a little touch on the fish of their time and Pterosaurs would do some good too And touching upon the European arpellagon would've been a big bonus (especially Haţeg island) But as I already said, it's more inclusive than pretty much every vid I've seen on it
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Hey guys! I've gotten many requests for individual Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic overview videos, but I actually aready have videos like this on my channel, so I wanted to link them here for you all: Paleozoic video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Uh29X2etieA.html Mesozoic video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-uO05x2PHyxk.html Cenozoic video: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Qm705M08DtA.html Hope you enjoy! ;D
@TheRexisFern
@TheRexisFern 2 года назад
As a biology focused "scientist" i absolutely love the studying of evolution of life and it's direct influence on the geology of those beings habitats. The connection between every branch of study gives us such a better picture than always separating them.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Oh my gosh, I couldn't agree MORE! Connecting the branches of science and studying them as interrelated fields is so so so much better! Thanks for commenting this! ;)
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 года назад
It is incredibly fascinating, isn't it? I refer to Geo Girl and other geology/evolution channels my free college.
@eriksaari4430
@eriksaari4430 Год назад
what does a "scientist" do? "science"?
@introspectiver1787
@introspectiver1787 2 года назад
Your presentation is great!
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thanks so much! Glad you think so ;)
@Alberad08
@Alberad08 Год назад
As always, thank you very much for these! BTW when I started to watch this, I was pretty tired, but immediately went from stand 'by' to 'full alert' when I heard you mention an 18 meter cephalopod in the Cretacious. Off course that can't have been a shelled one - I'm faintly remembering something there... ...now I have to watch your cephalopod video of which existence I wasn't even aware since now. Really looking forward on this!
@harrietharlow9929
@harrietharlow9929 2 года назад
Thank you for uploading! The climate/ geology of the era definitely affected life in this era. I had the climate idea down but completely forgot about the geology/hydrology input.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Of course! So glad you enjoyed it :D And yes, I also often forget about the hydrological effects, but it can be so important!
@stevenbaumann8692
@stevenbaumann8692 2 года назад
Another great episode! 👍🏻
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thanks Steven :D
@barbaradurfee645
@barbaradurfee645 2 года назад
Love this topic :))))))
@barbaradurfee645
@barbaradurfee645 2 года назад
As you know, I'm an angiosperm fan
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thanks mom :) Glad you like it
@alterego3734
@alterego3734 Год назад
10:23 Scaling down doesn't make an animal speedier. It might make it more agile. But the main reason for scaling down is that being big comes with lots of disadvantages, so animals only get and stay big when it's worth it. Such a large crocodilian might not even have been able to survive in later ecosystems.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
Ahh I see, thanks for clarifying this!
@jeremymullens7167
@jeremymullens7167 5 месяцев назад
The biggest issue is food requirement. Bigger animals need more food.
@AmanSharma-qq2gw
@AmanSharma-qq2gw 2 года назад
happy geologists day!
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
OMG I had no idea it was geologists day! That's so cool, thanks for letting me know, and HAPPY GEOLOGISTS DAY!!! :D
@while.coyote
@while.coyote Год назад
I would have loved to see a glass reef.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
Glass sponges actually still form reefs in deep water! Just look up glass sponges on google they are so cool!
@ashajacob8362
@ashajacob8362 2 года назад
Very informative video Geo girl😊 Iam happy that I found out your channel. Iam an Electrical Engineer but I always love about knowing Earth's history and origin of life haha😂 My Mom was a biology teacher so maybe I got her genes😁 Anyway thank you for covering Cretaceous period keep on giving these Amazing Videos!
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Wow, an electrical engineer interested in my videos, that's great! haha, thank you! I am glad your mom passed her bio loving genes to you, these are super fun topics to think about :)
@oliverweeweepie3132
@oliverweeweepie3132 2 года назад
❤️❤️❤️
@astrobiojoe7283
@astrobiojoe7283 2 года назад
Amazing video as always, GG! I envy your presentation skills aaa you're very lucid and entertaining plus beautiful slides. It's so impressive that difference in mineral structures - aragonite & calcite - can determine the sea floor life type. While you talked about the co-evolution of pollinators and angiosperms, I wonder if we can trace back the origin of pollination somehow. Also can we say that the ability to fly gives you a high chance to survive asteroid impacts? 😂
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thanks so much! And trust me, when I started my presentation skills and slides were not this good haha, just watch that original Mesozoic video I made and you'll see how much I have improved 🤣 But yes, I agree, ocean chemistry controlling life (like the reefs) and life controlling ocean chemistry (like the chalk & silica) is the coolest relationship! Also, haha, makes sense but no I don't think the ability to fly helped them. I think it was more so a coincidence that the birds survived over the land dinosaurs because I just made a KPg extinction video to follow this one and it was not the impact that killed them but rather the climatic consequences of such an impact. But it is funny that the flyers managed to make it ☺
@ellenmcgowen
@ellenmcgowen 2 года назад
There is a RU-vid video at ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ya3w1bvaxaQ.html which runs a real-time simulation of the Chicxulub impact as if it were happening today in the Yucatan, and you can see that nobody in the continental US would survive the first hour; a bird just doesn't fly fast enough to get away. If you were in central China you would survive the air blast... but then it would get dark and stay dark (and cold) for a loooong time, and plants would die. Birds survived because they were small (and numerous) and didn't need as much food as larger animals like the non-avian dinos, Mosasaurs etc.
@octodude6815
@octodude6815 Год назад
Can you provide a reference for the 18m ammonites? (I am assuming you mean Baculites, or a related genus). This size statement greatly exceeds any I have seen before, so I would be very interested. Thanks in advance!
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
Wow, I had to rewatch my cephalopods video (ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Vaiz_9armWs.html at 2:56) to remember which type of ammonoid I meant and I realized I made an oopsie haha! The largest cephalopods (18m) are actually the modern giant squids, whereas the ammonoids got to around 1.8m and I clearly just dismissed the decimal lol my bad!. Anyway, the reference I used for these (corrected) sizes is: Prothero, D.R. (2013). Bringing Fossils to Life: An Introduction to Paleobiology. Third Edition. Chapter 16: Kingdom of the Seashells: The Molluscs. pp. 384-431. Columbia University Press: amzn.to/3nU0ada (I've now added a card to the upper right corner of the video with the correction at the time I say 18m) Thanks for catching that! ;)
@anticorncob6
@anticorncob6 4 месяца назад
The thumbnail photo is the cover of Richard Cowen's book History of Life.
@TheChuckwagonLite
@TheChuckwagonLite 2 года назад
We can thank angiosperms for this video
@ramchauhan5238
@ramchauhan5238 2 года назад
Phenomenal video..and. Superb look...nice jacket..🙂🙂😁👍👌👌
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thanks so much! haha, glad you appreciate the jacket too! ;D
@ramchauhan5238
@ramchauhan5238 2 года назад
@@GEOGIRL 😁😁 welcome..🇮🇳🇮🇳🇺🇸🇺🇸
@peterjodway2543
@peterjodway2543 2 года назад
@@GEOGIRL srsly GG the sweater... where do i get it and why don't you wear it always and forever? This is like, grade-9-science-teacher-level apparel... that is like, kid's room bedsheet Good... nicely done... Talks the Rocks Walks the Chalks ROCKS THE SMOCKS!!!!! aaaaahhhhh
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
@@peterjodway2543 Haha I wish I could tell you, I actually have no clue where the sweater came from. My mom got it for me years ago, and I doubt wherever she got it carries it anymore :/ I would like to keep accumulating nerdy clothes like this until I am the living version of Mrs. Frizzle lol ;D
@geoscilove6609
@geoscilove6609 2 года назад
Thank you so much Geo girl.I am loviing this Earth System History book but its not available to purchase in India ;\
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Aw no, I am sorry, I wish it was available there. Well, just keep watching my videos and eventually you won't even need to read the book haha ;)
@JoesFirewoodVideos
@JoesFirewoodVideos 2 года назад
Was that algae which later became oil, natural gas and coal? I ❤️ GEO GIRL.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
If the algae was deposited in thick deposits on the seafloor, yes, it would later become oil/gas/coal. It depends on the setting though. Typically, only oceanic margins have high enough primary productivity rates to cause deposits thick enough to produce economic resource deposits. However, sometimes terretrial environments like stratified stagnant lakes or swamps produce such deposits, this was common for the deposits from the Carboniferous period in Paleozoic.
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth 2 года назад
Oh yes!!! You’re definitely wearing the right sweater for what I think is one of the most interesting and my most favorite topics, I mean who doesn’t like dinosaurs? The Cretaceous was definitely a world ruled by giants. Prehistoric Crocodiles like Deinosuchus, meaning “Terrible Crocodile” was big enough to turn T-Rex into a prey animal, crocs were here before the dinosaurs and managed to outlive them. I’ve also seen the size of mosasaurus and other marine reptiles up close, who says sea monsters never existed? And then of course there were mammals that were no bigger than the size of rodents who were destined to one day dominate the planet. The evolution of life in this world is nothing short of remarkable.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
I couldn't agree more, the evolution of not only the biology but the environment as well is so cool to learn about! No need to invent concepts for science fiction when the real events in Earth's history are just as cool and mind boggling! :D And thanks for appreciated the sweater ;) I wear it a lot but I knew I had to wear it again for this video! So glad you like this topic because more is coming! ;)
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth 2 года назад
​@@GEOGIRL I couldn’t have said it better myself, very true indeed. I think watching your fascinating videos on your amazing channel is just as fun as visiting museums and exploring prehistoric fossil sights, no better way to make learning more fun for me. As usual, it’s always such a tremendous pleasure for me to learn with you. Just remember that you’re my favorite teacher Rachel. I look forward to more videos coming up soon. You’re Amazing. 😊❤😉👍
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Thank you friend, you are also amazing! ;)
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth
@Smilo-the-Sabertooth 2 года назад
@@GEOGIRL You’re welcome my friend and thank you, that really means a lot to me. ❤
@caspasesumo
@caspasesumo 2 года назад
I want to see Smilo and Geo co-host a video one day :)
@pukulu
@pukulu Год назад
I'm still dying of curiosity to know which, if any, of the Mesozoic marine reptiles (mosasaurs, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs) were endothermic, or partially endothermic, like some species of tuna and some species of sharks are today. Maybe we will never know. How fascinating would it have been to have existed at a time when both pterosaurs and primitive birds were present in the skies?
@princeshukla7661
@princeshukla7661 2 года назад
Again I am the first who's like and comment
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Haha, I love your commitment! How did you like the video?
@princeshukla7661
@princeshukla7661 2 года назад
@@GEOGIRL :,-)
@JasonKale
@JasonKale Год назад
Whats the prevailing theory on why things like crocodiles and turtles are really only the few creatures that made it through the extinction.? I ask myself that Question every time I see a snapping turtle as they are prevalent in PA.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
I don't know, but sounds like a great idea for a video! I'll look into it ;D
@JasonKale
@JasonKale Год назад
@@GEOGIRL Cool...
@jeangab536
@jeangab536 Год назад
The oxygen go lower that why they shrink tho too
@carllewis166
@carllewis166 2 года назад
Are you on Facebook? Do you live close to illinois? Why? Your AWSOME ! And do what I like to do on the weekends.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
I unfortunately do not have a facebook, and no haha I don't live near illinois ;)
@aounabbas5427
@aounabbas5427 2 года назад
Which book do you follow
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL Год назад
Earth System History: amzn.to/3v1Iy0G :)
@aounabbas5427
@aounabbas5427 Год назад
@@GEOGIRL thanku so much ...u r inspiration for me ..doing great work keep it up
@princeshukla7661
@princeshukla7661 2 года назад
Love from INDIA
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
@Enkaptaton
@Enkaptaton 11 месяцев назад
At first I could not find the geochemnistry video from 1:20 , it was not linked anywhere. In case someone else is searching: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-LQKGhPUxrpU.html
@boobio1
@boobio1 2 года назад
It should be left to right and not right to left.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
What should be left to right? The timescale? Many timescale figures are done left to right, many are done right to left. I am not sure why geoscientists switch like this, but as I am trained in geoscience it has never really bothered me since I am used to it having read so many papers where timescales go from down to up, left to right, or right to left. But if it is easier for you to read, I will try to find a figure that shows it in the other direction for future videos ;) Thanks for the input!
@princeshukla7661
@princeshukla7661 2 года назад
Hello geo girl today u looking so beautiful
@peterjodway2543
@peterjodway2543 2 года назад
1. LULZ GG... the lady doth protest too much, methinks. Somebody is a little bit defensive about feathered dinos, yes??? 2. Your description of the glass reefs of the siliceous is delicious... glass reefs likewut 3. It took me 35 years to learn that an Icthyosaurus isn't just an older version of dolphin, but was a reptile... they evolved to look pretty freakin similar wow. 4. Mosasaur - Mosy Thicccccc 5. If I was that T-Rex I would be sooooooo shook at my life, soooooooo disappointed with my conception of reality, I would actually form the words "WTFFFFFfFfffffFfFFFfFF!?" right before I died... I would feel sooooooooooo cheated by the lizard gods. geo pron: free-for-all at the rudist beach with hundreds of rock lovers
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
hahaha yes to all, I love the mosy thic comment lol I love all your punny comments, they always make me laugh 😂
@ThrashmIO
@ThrashmIO 2 года назад
Am I seeing and hearing Orcas being called whales at 10:58? Should have looked more into this commenting. Orcas are dolphins, but dolphins are still whales. =\ Should have been better after recently engaging in a finger, thumb, digit discussion.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Haha, yes you are right, orcas and other dolphins are part of the whale group, but no worries I also forget this sometimes! ;)
@iohannus
@iohannus 2 года назад
Good stuff, but you need a better mic.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
I know I do, I'm workin on that ;)
@peterjodway2543
@peterjodway2543 2 года назад
record video w/o sound. record the lecture audio on phone. run audio through free sound edit app. most modern video editing tools allow for marriage of the two. buddy is probs most offended by the echo and sibilance. he is def a sound dweeb though lol and the mic isn't that bad. "de-esser" is the function you'll win over audiophiles with, i haven't edited in a few years but I'd be surprised if modern software doesn't have the capability coded into them so you wouldn't have to split the recording either. meh, its not even that bad unless you have been trained to hate Germanic-sounding frequencies 🙃
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
@@peterjodway2543 I have tried the phone thing previously, but I thought it sounded worse... maybe I didn't have the right app, or maybe didn't have the phone close enough to my mouth.. Don't know. Anyway, I noticed that the audio is always worse (more echo-y) in my office (where this one was recorded) than my house (when I have the periodic table blanket & occasionally my cat in the background). I think I will try to avoid recording in my office from now on. Unfortunately, I have pre-recorded 3 more videos that are coming out soon in my office before I noticed this problem, but after that (videos in May and forward) will be in my room for better audio. I will also try and find a mic that I can use for future videos, I just procrastinate on these things because I am really not a tech expert haha.
@peterjodway2543
@peterjodway2543 2 года назад
@@GEOGIRL apps 'LISP' or 'Spitfish' or 'DeEsser' i've used all over the covid anomaly... honestly a cat and a blanket would totally go miles. the shape of the room you are in and the makeup of the walls is extra too. posters or pictures on the first wall your voice is going to bounce off of would also weaken an echo. Echoes really like flat and firm surfaces. without a fancy mic, it's like holistic pest control: if you make it hard for them to like your room, they'll find somewhere else to live... *snigger* stupid echoes. this is real: take a box lid, like the lid from a board game box or such, place it in front of your microphone and wait... your cat will eventually park itself in this box, likely shook about how you are letting it chill on your desk, it will attempt camoflauge... at this point, record you video and the fuzzy kitty is gonna eat up sooo much sibilance with it's infinite fur!! Feed it a few too many of its fave treats so that it is way too lazy and full to chase your hand-talking for chin rubs. :) science rulez! proud owner of two cats yee but fair warning i haven't tried this. the science just makes sense. and yes, i'll be real interested in how this works haha
@boobio1
@boobio1 2 года назад
That bee is girl not a boy; stop the misgendering.
@GEOGIRL
@GEOGIRL 2 года назад
Haha, good point, my bad ;)
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