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Homotherium: The Cat That Took Over the World 

Paleo Analysis
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Intro 0:00
Not the “Same Beast” 4:09
Secret to Success 7:56
New Frontiers 13:09
End of the Line 17:21
Extinction 19:34
Conclusion 23:00
#paleoanalysis #iceage #pleistocene #sabertoothcat #homotherium
We have already talked about Smilodon, the famous sabertooth cat in a video before, but the thing is that is only one branch of the family of these amazing predators. Of all the Machairodontids there is one that I feel we really need to cover, Homotherium!
It may not have been as large as its more famous relative, but this cat was possibly the most successful sabertooth cat to ever live. spreading to every continent on Earth except Australia and Antarctica! So join me as we tell the story of the sabertooth cat that took over the world!
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4 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 576   
@Crakinator
@Crakinator Год назад
A cat named “same beast” that wasn’t at all like other cats, spread across the globe using pursuit and bleed tactics like canids, and it dominated the biggest biome as an apex predator in the last great epoch. Very underrated and underrepresented animal.
@atul7115
@atul7115 Год назад
ni**A WTF is familiar beast , i searched it up and got lolicon instead
@TheYeetedMeat
@TheYeetedMeat Год назад
@@atul7115 Homos: same. Therium: beast. Are you educated whatsoever in any topic?
@the_bohemian4536
@the_bohemian4536 Год назад
@@atul7115 YOU GOT WHAT?!!
@atul7115
@atul7115 Год назад
@@the_bohemian4536 testicular cancer
@vladtheimpalerofyourmom-ag5112
@@atul7115 probably the search algorithm taking into account your previous searches.
@GallowglassVT
@GallowglassVT Год назад
These cats were so cool and the fact that they were so adaptable makes their extinction hit harder.
@Klikoderat
@Klikoderat Год назад
Somewhere beyond the arctic circle their terror still reigns over shaggy beasts underneath a dim sun and storm battered skies. I want to believe.
@GallowglassVT
@GallowglassVT Год назад
@@Klikoderat same, brother. Same.
@accelerationquanta5816
@accelerationquanta5816 Год назад
It's just a stupid animal.
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin 7 месяцев назад
The heterotherium lived on... but for some strange reason, the homotherium went extinct.
@pugowner1347
@pugowner1347 Месяц назад
@@Mr.Ekshin 🤣🤣🤣
@jourdansarpy4935
@jourdansarpy4935 Год назад
The name Homotherium makes sense when you consider what it must of have been like for earlier paleontologist who found this strange big cat all over the world. Every conference they go to they start describing it and scientists from other parts of the world are like “what! I found the same beast here as well!”
@apexnext
@apexnext 11 месяцев назад
This would definitely explain it 😼
@corvus_da
@corvus_da 10 месяцев назад
The word "homoios" can actually mean "shared" as well. As in, a beast that is shared among all the continents.
@1977jelliott
@1977jelliott 6 месяцев назад
​@@corvus_dano, it doesn't appear on all continents at all.
@corvus_da
@corvus_da 6 месяцев назад
@@1977jelliott You're right, I was being imprecise. It does, however, appear on 5/6 continents inhabited by humans.
@1977jelliott
@1977jelliott 6 месяцев назад
@@corvus_da yeh I gathered that, also, there are 7 inhabited continents 😵‍💫
@Mythil
@Mythil Год назад
Always love looking at underappreciated extinct animals.
@bricksloth6920
@bricksloth6920 Год назад
I like the tiny horses
@slyfox7452
@slyfox7452 Год назад
It would be cool to see a video about that shovel mouthed elephant
@jennyanydots2389
@jennyanydots2389 Год назад
Is it sexual?
@tusker9959
@tusker9959 Год назад
The panthera shawi
@picahudsoniaunflocked5426
@picahudsoniaunflocked5426 Год назад
@@bricksloth6920 Eocene Horses are a huge fave of mine too. I don't love modern horses, so it's always surprised me how charmed I am by Eocene horses. & it's not their size in that era, bc I love me some Giant Sloth family too.
@JAGzilla-ur3lh
@JAGzilla-ur3lh Год назад
Homotherium: the cat that wanted to be a dog. There's a movie to be made, there. Maybe our sad misfit protagonist teams up with a fox: the dog that wanted to be a cat. And just for fun, we throw in a Megatherium: the sloth that wanted to be the Hulk.
@alyssafigliano3994
@alyssafigliano3994 Год назад
Homotherium has been my favorite extinct animal for a long time! The very idea of a cat being a social pursuit predator that specialized in hunting is just so, so fascinating! This was a great video about a truly amazing animal!
@Mr.Ekshin
@Mr.Ekshin 7 месяцев назад
Somehow, the heterotherium managed to prosper, while homotherium quickly went extinct.
@xscxdrox3367
@xscxdrox3367 Год назад
Knowing their similarities in ecology with wolves, and that they had a similar expansion to humans, I wonder if humans would have domesticated them if they had survived extinction.
@josephvisnovsky1462
@josephvisnovsky1462 11 месяцев назад
We have never dominated cats. They tolerate us at best 😁
@joshuamueller3206
@joshuamueller3206 11 месяцев назад
We domesticated our chief rival, maybe we could have done it with the other.
@saracooper1336
@saracooper1336 9 месяцев назад
Just imagine hunting with cats instead of hounds.
@neepsmcfly4176
@neepsmcfly4176 8 месяцев назад
​@@josephvisnovsky1462cat domestication has been a struggle due to their individualism. That said, if there were a feline exhibiting wolf-like social traits, it's both logical and entertaining to consider a mutualistic relationship w them and what that would've looked like.
@aaroncourchene4384
@aaroncourchene4384 8 месяцев назад
Sabre tooth house cats 🤔??
@billyr2904
@billyr2904 Год назад
Basically it was a combination between a cat, a hyena and a bear.
@davidanderson_surrey_bc
@davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад
So... an overgrown capybera then?
@amberkat8147
@amberkat8147 Год назад
@@davidanderson_surrey_bc More like an anti-capybara.
@nathanielgrey4091
@nathanielgrey4091 Год назад
This was a fascinating look at a critter I have never heard of before
@pumaconcolor2855
@pumaconcolor2855 Год назад
Great stuff! I'd like t point out that Homotherium is a genus comprised of 4 recognized species, I would argue that the genus Panthera historically achieved a similar distribution. It's absolutely fascinating to think that any extinct genus could be as diverse as the pantherine cats and we will likely never be sure about it.
@wesleycagle2354
@wesleycagle2354 Год назад
RIGHT! Not to mention how many civilizations or land masses that have been submerged into the ocean over the centuries. Truly makes you wonder how much rich history of the world is just lost to time
@gutemorcheln6134
@gutemorcheln6134 5 месяцев назад
True, but the genus Panthera is morphologically more diverse than Homotherium was. No "type" of Panthera, so to speak, ever achieved Homotherium's distribution. Lions were pretty close though.
@pumaconcolor2855
@pumaconcolor2855 5 месяцев назад
@@gutemorcheln6134 If P. spelea and P. atrox are still considered lions I'd say they pretty much got there.
@gutemorcheln6134
@gutemorcheln6134 5 месяцев назад
@@pumaconcolor2855 I'd count them as lions. They are now recognised mostly as distinct species, but still the spelaea-lions were the sister group to modern lions, meaning the lion is more closely related to them than to any other cat. Panthera spelaea and P. atrox also seem to have been broadly similar ecologically, although there is evidence to suggest that P. atrox at least was solitary, and P. spelaea also seems to have been less social than P. leo is. As for the distribution, whether P. atrox entered South America is debated but perhaps likely (Panthera atrox/onca mesembrina), but as far as we know, no lion ever reached the Sunda islands, which Homotherium, however, did. I guess we might call it a draw here.
@fartoocritical9409
@fartoocritical9409 Год назад
Easily the single most under-appreciated prehistoric animal
@Dr.IanPlect
@Dr.IanPlect Год назад
How the hell do you even 'rank' that?! Useless tripe.
@Littlekoji-df1cf
@Littlekoji-df1cf Год назад
The statment about us not being the main cause of these animals extinction is straight up facts.
@Exquailibur
@Exquailibur Год назад
We could have been a contributor but generally even in modern cases we only cause extinctions when the species is already vulnerable and/or through targeted extermination campaigns. The truth is we definitely didn't cause the decline, but we may have been the ones who killed the last remaining individuals without realizing they were the last ones. Imagine growing up seeing such animals, but one day you see the last one without realizing that none of your decedents would ever see another. Its probably happened many times, the animals that are in strongest conflict with us are those that are desperate and living in degraded habitats which would have certainly been the case for the last few of these ice age animals so the last thousand or so that were brought into conflict due to the desperate circumstances they find themselves were sometimes taken out by us but that is not the fault of those people. If a struggling population of smilodon was desperate enough to have to hunt small prey we would be a prime target, for our size we are somewhat slow but in the end those last surviving saber tooth cats were already on their way out if they had to go for prey they aren't adapted for. It is like how the Tasmanian tiger was already restricted to only a small part of its once massive native range, had it still ranged throughout Australia it would most likely still be around today.
@Uncle_Fred
@Uncle_Fred Год назад
​@Exquailibur We're pretty terrible as a food source. It is much more likely that the last individuals moved closer to humans in order to access our refuse and domesticated animals. By the end of the last Ice Age, most healthy adult humans would have been nearly impossible to kill due to our weapons and social organization.
@Littlekoji-df1cf
@Littlekoji-df1cf Год назад
@@Exquailibur very true. It can take many different factors to push a organism ro its demise.
@pietersleijpen3662
@pietersleijpen3662 Год назад
@@Exquailibur Or through indirect mechanisms most often transporting other species into the region like rats and cats.
@rewild6134
@rewild6134 Год назад
Depends on how you view it. If we take climatic changes and associated faunal population drops, and subsequent retreats into refugia during the Pleistocene as the constant. And humans the additional variable which then pushed many species into extinction with additional pressures from our not so insignificant influences. Any reasonable scientist would say that additional variable was a causative factor.
@Pistolita221
@Pistolita221 11 месяцев назад
I would absolutely LOVE to see a video on Panthera Onca Augusta, the jaguar is one of the most unique big cats and I feel like it's also a very under-appreciated animal.
@Dr.Ian-Plect
@Dr.Ian-Plect 9 месяцев назад
Panthera onca augusta
@origaminosferatu3357
@origaminosferatu3357 Год назад
Another great video. You do an amazing job of demonstrating just how different Homotherium and Smilodon were which really helps one appreciate the diversity of the ecosystems at that time. I'll never look at these two cats the same again.
@invisiblejaguar1
@invisiblejaguar1 Год назад
You're doing nothing short of a service by highlighting these lessor known, yet still amazingly fascinating creatures lost to extinction. I live in hope we will see a documentary on the Great American Interchange one day.
@vickiatabi4235
@vickiatabi4235 11 месяцев назад
YES!!! 🌚🏜️🐈‍⬛
@EmperorDarthOP
@EmperorDarthOP Год назад
Paleo Analysis when do you think that the next instalment of The Complete History of the Earth will come out?
@moblinmajorgeneral
@moblinmajorgeneral Год назад
It's gonna be the early Triassic, so there's a lot to cover.
@Woodswalker96
@Woodswalker96 Год назад
6:32 I thought Homotherium was digitigrade. Would make since if it was a pursuit predator built like a spotted hyena. There’s also an article by Mauricio Anton published in 2021 on ResearchGate with a figure discussing whether Homotherium was digitigrade or plantigrade. It states that based on foot morphology it was most likely digitigrade. But I may have just missed a more recent study that says otherwise 🤷🏾‍♂️. Either way, it’s just nice to see more in-depth Homotherium content 🙌🏾. A very under appreciated animal indeed, many thanks good sir!
@awesomepixie419
@awesomepixie419 Год назад
But he also says saber cats teeth were exposed which too me seems highly unlikely due to the world they lived in (ice age) & the fact they are super dependent on their teeth. (At least last time I heard him speak on them). Both bears & humans are endurance/pursuit predators that are plantigrade. However I see your point, so maybe they had the ability to do both. Scimitar cats having a bear-like pelvis makes me believe they would have been able to stand on their hind feet for sometime, which is beneficial when scanning for prey during the day, similar to how cheetahs use termite mounds & fallen trees as look out points.
@sauraplay2095
@sauraplay2095 Год назад
I have heard of this animal, but I never knew how unique it was. Thank you sir!
@averywhelan1631
@averywhelan1631 Год назад
I'm not good at leaving comments, but thank you. Your videos are a great bridge between "Hey, I have some interest" and "Let's wade into Paleonlotogy wholesale!" Thanks.
@NICOLAI_VET
@NICOLAI_VET Год назад
I am always looking to learn new things. Today I really learned. I had never heard of Homotherium before. Now I have to learn more about this feline.
@roku3216
@roku3216 11 месяцев назад
Thanks for this deep look at the success of the homotherium.
@eddiehoplight2003
@eddiehoplight2003 Год назад
If you do collabs, you should do one with Lindsay Nikole, shes a RU-vidr that also does videos on prehistoric animals and modern animals
@christianhunt7382
@christianhunt7382 Год назад
I like her, but I can't handle her long. Too aggressive
@anim8dideas849
@anim8dideas849 Год назад
@@christianhunt7382 her voice and cadence needs work
@FloozieOne
@FloozieOne 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for this. It would have been terrifying to be actually chased by a saber-tooth cat, not that being pounced on by Smilodon would have been great, but running from something that was going to catch you no matter what would been pretty demoralizing. In any case, as a dedicated cat lover, I really appreciate the lesson on a cat that deserves much more recognition that it gets.
@RAkers-tu1ey
@RAkers-tu1ey Год назад
Another triumph of clear education. Thanks!
@eadgyth5009
@eadgyth5009 Год назад
Somehow, I'd never heard of homothereum before. I am very glad to have now learned of them thanks to you.
@largent45
@largent45 Год назад
Been looking forward to this one for a long time! Thanks for doing this one!😊
@basilbrushbooshieboosh5302
@basilbrushbooshieboosh5302 Год назад
Hi, Mr PA, You mentioned, [12:45], that prey isolation by the family leads to the final severing the major arteries in the neck. However, with track and kill hunters, whether quad- or bi-pedal, very often the method of bringing down prey is to inflict various [smaller or larger, many or few] lacerations so that the animal is bleeding consistently, whilst the hunters track the wounded beast, almost casually, until the prey is tiring, and slowing, and weakening, due to blood-loss and thirst. It may be some days till the animal is caught-up, but due to weakness the final kill is much more subdued and less violent ie. less dramatic. This also pairs well with evidence of less broken teeth and injuries sustained by our [scimetar formed and serrated edged] toothy hunter.
@xenon3659
@xenon3659 Год назад
Smilodon fatalis hunted in forested habitats whereas smilodon Populater hunted open grasslands.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz Год назад
This is the most underrated beast that we ever encountered or even dreamed of, thank you for this great docu. It is indeed difficult to imagine they were solitary predators, as I used to believe (rationale below) if they hunted elephants and mammoths. An unanswered question that seems then important is: were they decent climbers? Because I used to think they were, as most felines are, but with the kind of hunting strategy and gait that you describe, they were probably even more ground-bound than cheetas. This brings me to the rationale I mentioned before: I observe a strong association between hominin evolution and felines in Africa: in the days of Homotherium, our ancient kin of bipedal but still somewhat arboreal and small-brained precursors (Australopithecus, Paranthropus and precursors like fascinating Sahelanthropus) managed to survive and even thrive pretty well but went all extinct approx. when lions (Panthera leo) arrived to Africa. This to me needs to be acknowledged as almost certainly the reason for the "punctual evolution" to Homo genus (larger brains, more strict bipedalism and crucially the first technology that we can truly call that way such as control of fire or stone tools) and needs analysis. I used to think that the reason Australopithecines and such survived was that Homotherium was solitary and thus less of a threat to our social kin (the other great predator in Africa were hyenas but not climbers, so trees provided safety in the night) but now I realize that that this is almost certainly not true but my misconception, the reason our kin was relatively safe was that Homotherium, like hyenas, was surely not a great climber... and anyhow it had other culinary interests of greater size than our pre-human ancestors. When lions arrived (varies somewhat on author but at least 2Ma BP, when fossils already exist in East Africa), then we (hominids) had to face a new threat: social climber predators against which tree nesting provided no safety whatsoever anymore (more so as they hunt at night most of the time and were surely accompanied by their leopard relatives). This was necessarily a new and major game changer in Africa, very especially for our slow-moving kin, whose defenses were sociality and retained tree-climbing abilities only. The resulting mega-culling produced us (Homo sp.) as only survivors, who won the evolutionary race, not by being better at exploiting this or that resource... but better at defending from lions, especially at night, when controlled fire would have been a doubly useful weapon. Evolution typically works by pressure, negative selection of the less fit... after a new challenge appears, and our evolution was not different. It's weird that nobody seems to be asking the question of what caused the positive selection of us among the once thriving bipedal hominids who clearly had a good life in the African savanna in spite of Homotherium and hyenas. It's a question that must be asked and one that IMO seems to have only one answer: social climber big cat invasion, namely lions.
@apexnext
@apexnext 11 месяцев назад
Interesting. Not that I have much to add. But I watch a lot of stuff. I remember hearing our brains were able to develop greater and larger because we started to cook our food. We spent much less energy chewing and digesting. We got more calories from the cooked food. Basically, cooking our food gave us bigger brains and sped evolution. Something to think about and maybe investigate for yourself. But another point for Fire somehow still not getting the credit it deserves! 🔥
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 11 месяцев назад
@@apexnext - I'm not so sure about the cooking hypothesis: it may have helped (is a pre-digestion) but I don't think it's the main cause. However eating much more meat/fish than our ape cousins is probably helped a lot. In this sense cooking may have helped because we don't have the mouths of a carnivore but we do have relatively small guts almost like carnivores, as if a meat-based diet was part of us since the beginning (sorry, vegans, you got it all wrong). In this sense it's probably not meat strictly (protein) as it is fat (energy) and that links with the theories that make sometimes our Australopithecines ancestors and even early Homo sp. as supposed consumers of fat-rich marrow (however this would have us competing with hyenas, who also exploit the bones). An old theory in this regard suggests that our sweaty, hairless bodies (plus the protective "hat" of thinly curled hair) would have allowed our ancestors to venture in search of carcasses (incl. their marrow-rich bones) at noon, when predators, less well prepared for the midday heat in the savanna, are dozing under the shadow of the acacias.
@apexnext
@apexnext 11 месяцев назад
Wow this is really fascinating. You have thought about this a lot havent you!?
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 11 месяцев назад
@@apexnext - I did anthropo-paleo-blogging for a decade or so and obviously learning before that. So it's stuff that I have thought about or read about now and then... but not that much anyhow. I recall that I got to the lions's hypothesis when I was sharing apartmente with another anthropo-paleo blogger many years ago and he was like "nah, I don't see it". But I do see it: there must be a reason all other clades in the Australopithecine branch went extinct almost at the same time... but not those who developed the basics of technology, notably fire. To me its lions but of course it could be something else like "we ate all the australopithecines" or, simpler: "we displaced them". However many paranthropus were basically gorilla style grass-eaters, we don't compete with that niche. But lions would have eaten them in ways that hyenas could not. The big issue was Homotherium, how was it different from lions. I thought it was because they were not social but apparently the reason was that they were not climbers instead. In any case it's not only about thinking "a lot" but about "thinking outside the box" primarily.
@apexnext
@apexnext 11 месяцев назад
@LuisAldamiz were we really just food for so many cats? I knew they were a problem. Our instincts are still so engrained and heightened for a phantom in the dark lurking and stalking us, even in our modern times we can't turn it off.
@DragonFae16
@DragonFae16 Год назад
Here's something I realized recently, because of that paper that came out recently showing evidence that theropod dinosaurs had some kind of lips covering their teeth. Because mammals only ever have two sets of teeth, no matter how long the teeth of a member of the Machairodontinae got, they had to be covered by lips. If enamel isn't kept moist, it turns brittle and chunks of it will break off the tooth. So the only way uncovered teeth can work is when the species is able to constantly replace the teeth, like crocs do. All mammals as far as I know only get 2 sets of teeth. So logically, unless they evolved someone other than enamel to coat their teeth with, they had to have their teeth covered. Which means, we should really be drawing them with massive chins, rather than bare teeth.
@beastmaster0934
@beastmaster0934 Год назад
Indeed, Homotherium, and other machairodont cats with similar canines most likely had lips covering them. Now with things like Smilodon and Megantereon, who’s fangs are quite long, it’s a little bit more mysterious. There was that hypothesis that Smilodon had jowls like a bulldog, but that’s been thrown out soon after it’s conception.
@DragonFae16
@DragonFae16 Год назад
@@beastmaster0934 Whatever they had, they had to have something to keep their sabres moist. Imagine if they had super slimy and thick saliva and that's what did it. Like a Saint Bernard, but even worse.
@camacakegd3714
@camacakegd3714 Год назад
Slightly unrelated, but some mammals have continually replacing teeth like elephants. Of course they are herbivores and very different to cats, but it does show that not all mammals have only two sets of teeth.
@davidanderson_surrey_bc
@davidanderson_surrey_bc Год назад
Maybe they were able to keep the enamel moist by submerging the teeth into fresh quarry. OR... they would take the teeth out at night and keep them in a jar of water. OR... they chewed Dentine gum. That would explain the trace bits of spearmint found in their bone marrow. OR... they spent their spare time lounging about the nearest watering hole.
@DragonFae16
@DragonFae16 Год назад
@@davidanderson_surrey_bc Now I'm imagining a sabre-toothed tiger taking its teeth out to sleep.
@BorderWise12
@BorderWise12 Год назад
Thanks for covering Homotherium, its my favourite prehistoric animal for pretty much all the reasons you mentioned! 😁 Its a historical mystery too: first named by palentologist Emilio Fabrini in 1890, he gave no explanation behind its name and died before anyone could ask him. So we have no real idea why it was dubbed 'same beast' of all things. Its weird, non-descriptive name is probably one of the reasons its not more popular in media, honestly. 🤷‍♂️
@x0lopossum
@x0lopossum 7 месяцев назад
8:30 Eurasian/North American cold Sarengedi 11:45 Homatherium may have been a group hunter. 16:40 FOURHUNDRED baby mammoth individuals in a Homatherium cave 18:20 Insane Ice Age South American Mammalian carnivore compition.
@adamthespinygiant
@adamthespinygiant Год назад
Wasn’t there a supercut of the Paleozoic era that was supposed to premiere too or is that being postponed? I feel like I’m seeing things.
@PaleoAnalysis
@PaleoAnalysis Год назад
That's coming up at the end of the month.
@adamthespinygiant
@adamthespinygiant Год назад
@@PaleoAnalysis ok. Thank you. Me and Spiny can’t wait.
@perspectacle
@perspectacle Год назад
Excellent video. I really appreciate the deep dives and longer format content!
@edofcedar
@edofcedar Год назад
Love the enthusiasm and information
@ktulurob
@ktulurob Год назад
Thank You for continuing to produce such high quality content.
@calebdinebudziszewskiradel8705
Another super cool video! Good luck on the fossil dig!!
@attilaborenszki9782
@attilaborenszki9782 Год назад
Besides dinosaurs, prehistoric mammals are the second thing I like. Mainly because I work in a place here in Hungary that is rich in fossils from the miocene epoch/ period.
@photospectrum3726
@photospectrum3726 Год назад
Thanks for posting this! I learned a lot!
@tombrand236
@tombrand236 Год назад
Another quality and well researched video. Thanks for compiling!
@skitsfossil16
@skitsfossil16 Год назад
Great video once again! Look forward for the future of this channel.
@johnortmann3098
@johnortmann3098 Год назад
There's another factor involved in mass extinctions that's rarely discussed: the fire regimen. When humans arrive in a new area they take the fire regimen away from lightning. This results in more fires, hotter and bigger fires, and fires throughout more of the year. The effect of this is that entire ecosystems were altered and even eliminated, no doubt along with many of the animals that depended on them.
@averyhollrah1498
@averyhollrah1498 11 месяцев назад
An absolutely fantastic video on an incredible and far too unknown creature! Easily and by far the best video on Homotherium that I have found on RU-vid! Please keep producing such awesome contacts!
@gtbkts
@gtbkts Год назад
Thanks for the awesome content and great videos!!
@cobalt3692
@cobalt3692 Год назад
Great breakdown as always!
@cancel1913
@cancel1913 22 дня назад
Fantastic video! Really enjoyed it and learned.
@noahtews257
@noahtews257 Год назад
Great vid as always
@Scott-wf9kp
@Scott-wf9kp Год назад
Another fantastic video! Thanks for the information, you did a wonderful job as always. I would love to hear more about ancient cats from you. And scorpions, too.
@dukecity7688
@dukecity7688 2 месяца назад
I admire your teaching skills. I'm 71 and inspired by your work. So much to learn. ✨
@krissyb1980
@krissyb1980 Год назад
I very much enjoy all your content. I love the deep dive videos and the history of the earth series. Cenozoic animals are some of my favorites and they are highly under-represented in Paleo media so I really enjoyed this one. Thanks for the work you put into making these ❤
@Jedi_Judo19
@Jedi_Judo19 8 месяцев назад
Interesting video man and goodluck with your dig!!
@mikethibert3351
@mikethibert3351 7 месяцев назад
Appreciate your research and well put together documentary!
@codyweaver7546
@codyweaver7546 Год назад
thank you for continuing to put out some of the best and most accesible paleo content on youtube. Your channel is a treasure.
@feefifofum04
@feefifofum04 Год назад
Always enjoy your videos. Well done.
@afchehiro
@afchehiro Год назад
That was awesome and beautyfull!!! Thank you really!!!! Good luck in your fossil hunt!! 😊
@tornaperinso1484
@tornaperinso1484 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for the video!
@keanevandeweege7587
@keanevandeweege7587 Год назад
letsgo finnally new video,have been waiting for this
@Deathadder90
@Deathadder90 Год назад
Always a pleasure to view these vids, enjoy the dig the coming time!
@SkallywagSkids
@SkallywagSkids Год назад
Hell yeah man I been waiting for yah my boi ❤
@nothingmuch8865
@nothingmuch8865 Год назад
Gotta love such a well done presentation!
@Myxinidae
@Myxinidae Год назад
After so many years of consuming paleo content, it’s not often that I learn so much new stuff in a single youtube video!
@samiamrg7
@samiamrg7 6 месяцев назад
The phenomenon you described with Homotherium and Smilodon coexisting is called “niche partitioning,” wherein similar organisms are able to occupy the same habitat by adopting different habits or exploiting different resources from one another, reducing direct competition and preventing them from crowding each other out.
@davidryall-flanders6353
@davidryall-flanders6353 Год назад
This one's for the algorithm. A highly enjoyable video.
@grimmoris
@grimmoris Год назад
Great video as always
@gtbkts
@gtbkts Год назад
Finally able to watch the video! Thanks again for the awesome videos and amazing content!!
@BlueDragonGalaxy
@BlueDragonGalaxy Год назад
Despite the fact that this video covers an extinct species there's a feeling of respect to this video. Homotherium were absolutely amazing creatures and while they may be gone now that is just the way of things, nothing lasts forever so what matters most is the story you told along the way and this genus had a LOT to say. Rather than looking down at these beasts for dying out their loss is studied with fair conclusions, a sense of respect that even spills over to our ancestors who were at the wrong place at the wrong time to take all of the blame of the full disaster rather than the last straw in a bad situation, and a recognition of the creatures' successes. Having recently come across some videos of old time-y paleo art that also covered how people initially viewed extinction, as "proof of a species's failure", the difference feels like whiplash.
@fionaottley4976
@fionaottley4976 Год назад
Keep doing what you do, always a treat.
@spencerabdo5144
@spencerabdo5144 Год назад
Have fun on your trip, amigo!
@MichellePaulette79
@MichellePaulette79 Год назад
I appreciate you covering the species! I’ve never heard of them before. :)
@mpcaap
@mpcaap 8 месяцев назад
Great video as always :) i literally knew nothing about homotherium before!
@keithbrain1169
@keithbrain1169 Год назад
Great, now time for the Prehistoric Bears, maybe some attention to the underappreciated there too, though always up for a short-faced bear episode or 3. Prehistoric Ursus Americanus Amplidens, Ursus Maritiumus Tyranicus, Steppes Brown Bear, bring it!
@broccanmacronain457
@broccanmacronain457 11 месяцев назад
Another great video!
@Taomantom
@Taomantom 24 дня назад
You have a true gift. Thank you for sharing it.
@catha.j.stuart2200
@catha.j.stuart2200 Год назад
Great video, I learned a lot
@stevenelbert8989
@stevenelbert8989 Год назад
This is great today is my birthday thank you for uploading this video on my birthday 🎂 🥳 🎉 🎈 🎁 🎊
@ThePurpleKrow
@ThePurpleKrow Год назад
Happy birthday!
@vickiatabi4235
@vickiatabi4235 11 месяцев назад
Happy birthday 🎉🌚🏜️🐈‍⬛☑️
@nanorider426
@nanorider426 Год назад
Thank you for the video. Always a pleasure. ^^
@MrEnglischjules
@MrEnglischjules Год назад
super. always love your work... shows how much we have learnt or changed our view on things in the past 30 years or so that i learnt. wonderful....
@pelewads
@pelewads Год назад
Love the vid. I really enjoy these more in-depth videos.
@zulubeatz1
@zulubeatz1 Год назад
This channel is a godsend. Loving the content.
@mdberg65
@mdberg65 Год назад
Interesting video, looking forward to more.
@Tarquin2718
@Tarquin2718 Год назад
Awesome you get out into the field ❤
@robertzantay5923
@robertzantay5923 4 месяца назад
Very informative video, thank you
@sassa82
@sassa82 Год назад
I liked the video, good explained and nice pictures.
@catmus1506
@catmus1506 Год назад
Fantastic video once again.
@shelidae4855
@shelidae4855 Год назад
I just found you through Animalogic and I love your channel, grateful for discovering you! Very interesting content
@jennyanydots2389
@jennyanydots2389 Год назад
So you're into dawg fighting then? Real nice dude.
@paulthew2
@paulthew2 Год назад
Excellent, as always.
@JKLynar
@JKLynar Год назад
Great video on a truly fascinating predator! It is astounding that they are not more widely acknowledged, considering their long, successful run over such a huge range! Thank you for all the hard work creating your interesting, informative and entertaining videos. Have fun on your fossil hunt. All work and no play....
@davidhowe6905
@davidhowe6905 Год назад
Very interesting and well made video!
@susanhays5691
@susanhays5691 Год назад
Love this. It's always interesting to learn about ancient species! Thank you ❤
@Islander2112
@Islander2112 Год назад
Top notch content! I never even heard of this species of cats.
@farthersail
@farthersail 4 месяца назад
Thank you! I love your channel.
@z1az285
@z1az285 8 месяцев назад
Exceptional video and narration. 👋👋👋🙏
@heraclius2059
@heraclius2059 Год назад
Another fantastic video.
@liamredmill9134
@liamredmill9134 8 месяцев назад
Love the bear foot lion,I'm blown away with so much new information and context,thanks
@TalesofKaimere
@TalesofKaimere Год назад
Heck yeah man! Another awesome episode. Have a blast in the badlands!
@Priapos93
@Priapos93 Год назад
O mighty algorithm, bless this humble video with eyeballs
@ashketchum5466
@ashketchum5466 9 месяцев назад
Homotherium and Smilodon hunting reminds me of carcharodontosaurus and Trex hunting.
@chheinrich8486
@chheinrich8486 Год назад
Please make a deinotherium video, their my favorite extinct elephant
@tylermanning1600
@tylermanning1600 9 месяцев назад
Honestly I just watched this video and dam it was not only knowledgeable but it was banger from the edits to the breakdown just got yourself a subscription 😂
@KarlaGonzalez-cu8ke
@KarlaGonzalez-cu8ke 8 месяцев назад
Great content!
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