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How Lava Turned a Rhino Into a Cave 

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We know that fossils are fragile, and volcanoes are destructive. So you wouldn't think that volcanoes are really any help when preserving fossils... but you'd be wrong! From the Laetoli Footprints to the Blue Lake Rhino, here are five fossil sites that only exist thanks to the destructive might of volcanoes.
Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
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12 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 402   
@heskan
@heskan 12 дней назад
"Hm, where did my rhino go?" *suspiciously rhino shaped cave*:
@clarehidalgo
@clarehidalgo 11 дней назад
Junji Ito-esqe "this hole was made for me" vibe
@ZentaBon
@ZentaBon 11 дней назад
💀 An emoji commonly used to depict medium-high levels of amusement
@jwalster9412
@jwalster9412 8 дней назад
SKKKKUUUHHHLLL​ EMMMMOOOJJJIIII@@ZentaBon
@feuerling
@feuerling 7 дней назад
"Gone, reduced to atoms."
@N0v4.fr05t.
@N0v4.fr05t. 12 часов назад
Saddam hussein shaped hole​@@clarehidalgo
@SgtSupaman
@SgtSupaman 12 дней назад
A lot of people have pointed out that children will step in someone else's footprints for fun, but there is another aspect to it. Sometimes ground can be uncertain, but, if you've just seen someone else bigger than you step there without any problems of slipping or sinking, then that is a safe place for you to step as well.
@Tugela60
@Tugela60 11 дней назад
Pretty sure that is not what kids are thinking. That is what you are thinking. Not the same thing.
@tvrkm6897
@tvrkm6897 11 дней назад
I'm surprised nobody has remembered that sand people walk single file to hide their numbers.
@eotwkdp
@eotwkdp 11 дней назад
@@Tugela60possibly some sort of instinct. Very old ones barley ever used
@Tugela60
@Tugela60 11 дней назад
@eotwkdp Not an instinct. It is something called "fun". It is a game.
@SgtSupaman
@SgtSupaman 11 дней назад
@@Tugela60 , you don't have to consciously think something for it to be a reason behind an action.
@ProjectPhysX
@ProjectPhysX 12 дней назад
3:58 who hasn't ever steped into someone else's foodprints in mud/clay as a child? This seems so very... human.
@gaiacelt
@gaiacelt 12 дней назад
Exactly my thought!
@lady_draguliana784
@lady_draguliana784 12 дней назад
🤤mmmmm... food prints... 🤤
@brqxton8974
@brqxton8974 12 дней назад
This phenomena is actually mainly only done by humans. While many animals will follow trails, they will almost always create their own tracks instead of using tracks already established
@DemPilafian
@DemPilafian 12 дней назад
Clearly the Laetoli people were superstitious. Even pre-humans knew it was bad luck to step on the line. You either step completely inside or completely outside the footprint. I bet the Laetoli also gambled and did drugs.
@Ravenpaw1313
@Ravenpaw1313 12 дней назад
@@DemPilafian You know, almost as silly as that sounds one of my favourite food channels that travels the world to learn about traditional food cultures including many still functional tribal ones laughs that (politely) that humans have been seeking "drug" items for pretty much as long as there have been humans
@VespertilioHomo
@VespertilioHomo 12 дней назад
The Blue Rhino Cave is so amazing because it has a creature literally become their own mausoleum with the bone remains housed inside?! Since the rhino was already dead it's a beautiful happenstance of memorialization.
@germanomagnone
@germanomagnone 11 дней назад
it's almost similar, as in Pompeii they create the "bodies" of the Pompeians
@gilliesiut2332
@gilliesiut2332 4 дня назад
That rhino definitely died from the volcano. Just not the lava
@evilsharkey8954
@evilsharkey8954 День назад
@@gilliesiut2332It may have died from something else and been washed down a river and into the larger body of water where the lava pillows were forming. Pillow lavas can happen when there’s nothing going on above the water. It also could have died from volcanic activity on the surface. Without any soft tissue, it’s hard to tell cause of death sometimes.
@SilverNox
@SilverNox 12 дней назад
I love that we have evidence of one walking in the footsteps of another. Makes them feel real because we can start thinking of their motivation. Was it easier to step in the foot prints instead of untouched mud? Was it a bored child? Were they stalking/tracking the first traveler? So interesting
@gilliesiut2332
@gilliesiut2332 4 дня назад
I was thinking they where caught in the ash storm so they had their heads down and just stepped in the same path on instinct
@zolacnomiko
@zolacnomiko 12 дней назад
The phenomenon of tree trunks turned into "caves" is quite common in the copious lava flows of Mauna Loa and Kīlauea Volcanoes on Hawai‘i Island. They are called tree molds, you can find them all over the place! I've even found a perfect impression of a hala (pandanus) fruit in lava rock.
@user-xj8wy4uu1q
@user-xj8wy4uu1q 12 дней назад
Wow
@slwrabbits
@slwrabbits 11 дней назад
cooooool
@TheGiggleMasterP
@TheGiggleMasterP 12 дней назад
Lava turned one ring into a new golden age of man
@DefinatelyNotAI
@DefinatelyNotAI 12 дней назад
That's the opposite of preserving it. Now that one silmaril...
@TitularHeroine
@TitularHeroine 11 дней назад
​@@DefinatelyNotAI One? There are lots of silmarilarites.
@CHAD-RYAN
@CHAD-RYAN 8 дней назад
Lord of the rings
@gl15col
@gl15col 12 дней назад
I've been to Ashfall Fossil beds, a really nice set up with an air conditioned building over the major finds so you can walk around on a raised walkway and see all those poor animals where they died. There are often students excavating the skeletons who will talk to you about what they're doing. Clean, well laid out and an outdoor area with bronze sculptures of the animals found there.
@singamajigy
@singamajigy 11 дней назад
Ancient footprints intrigue me even more than fossils because they show the preservation of a specific moment in time, not just the body of a creature. It really gives me goosebumps to think about.
@pauls5745
@pauls5745 5 дней назад
Yeah, an event. Here was ancient life doing it's daily grind in that exact place, millions of years ago. And you are at that same place now.
@zzzzzz4556
@zzzzzz4556 4 дня назад
I love your perspective!!! I will think of this next time I study fossil foot prints/trails! Amber is pretty amazing too if you think about it. especially large intact specimens!!
@evilsharkey8954
@evilsharkey8954 День назад
Sometimes you get both. Some fish fossils were found in North America with tectites in their gills. They appear to have been buried very fast. The fossils are about 66 million years old. Tectites are a type of meteorite ejecta.
@kellydalstok8900
@kellydalstok8900 11 дней назад
I learned from Gutsick Gibbon that the common ancestor of humans and chimpanzees wasn’t a knuckle walker. That trait didn’t develop in chimps until after the split.
@kingofrobbers1751
@kingofrobbers1751 12 дней назад
The foot prints remind me of when me and my father where traversing through snow when I was young and I followed in his foot steps because it was easier and allowed me to keep up without tripping as much
@gl15col
@gl15col 12 дней назад
My favorite are the foot prints at White Sands, where there were animal prints going across the human ones including a giant sloth. Those poor kids must have been so scared...
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 12 дней назад
@@gl15col The sloth could have been there a few hours later. Or the child already knew those sloths existed and did typically not attack humans. Children nowadays can learn about horses and then gleefully walk up to them and kiss them on the nose.
@jessicapearson9479
@jessicapearson9479 12 дней назад
Yeah....... giant sloths WERE NOT docile! They were far quicker than sloths today and they were opportunistic and would EAT people when given the chance. Also, humans hunted giant sloths.
@johannageisel5390
@johannageisel5390 11 дней назад
@@jessicapearson9479 Do you have a source for the people eating sloths? Do we have archological evidence for that? And that humans hunted sloths only supports my hypothesis that the children were probably not afraid of them. They've seen their parents kill those beasts and serve them for dinner.
@lady_draguliana784
@lady_draguliana784 12 дней назад
under the right conditions, a Pyroclastic Flow is _perfect_ for preserving bones! it instantly incinerates everything else, but for thick bones it can be great! AND you can get animals "frozen" in mid action, such as locked in battle, birth, or... the act that precedes birth... 😳
@TheJohtunnBandit
@TheJohtunnBandit 9 дней назад
Walking through something loose and bulky like snow (or presumably ash) is easier when you can step into the prints of someone breaking trail. Out on long walks through the snow we would take turns breaking trail while the rest followed in the tracks for a more restful hike. It's also good because if there is a risk of stepping in a covered hole or something sharp, the tracks of the one in front are essentially guaranteed to be ok.
@jimwilson3156
@jimwilson3156 11 дней назад
Maybe this has since become outdated, but I remember learning that Pompeii received falling ash, whereas Herculaneum received pyroclastic flow. The vulture head preservation would be more comparable to the scenario in Herculaneum than in Pompeii, for what it’s worth (assuming what I learned is still the prevailing theory).
@jessejorgensen3931
@jessejorgensen3931 12 дней назад
Why would would you step directly into the foot steps in front of you? For the same reason we would. It was something to do. I’ve found myself doing it while on hikes in soft ground. For no real reason other than light entertainment
@Ahrpigi
@Ahrpigi 12 дней назад
I hear sand people do it to hide their numbers
@mayaenglish5424
@mayaenglish5424 12 дней назад
That and it is often an easier path as well. And you know it's a safe one because someone's already stepped there.
@Bogwedgle
@Bogwedgle 11 дней назад
That's the interesting part though, we're talking 3 million years ago and yet it's a behaviour that's so very human. It shows a level of understanding and intent that's cool to know even our far earlier relatives had.
@pheart2381
@pheart2381 11 дней назад
Yes,especially during a volcanic eruption. The ash compressed by the person in front would give a safer foothold.
@JTD19881369
@JTD19881369 10 дней назад
They could also be tactical. Hiding numbers. Chimpanzees have territorial conflicts. Assuming our early human ancestors could have as well.
@germanomagnone
@germanomagnone 12 дней назад
this thing about the "lava molds" of this poor rhinoceros makes me remember 2 things: one the "casts" of Pompeii and the molds for Easter eggs, you might get an easter rhino!
@desert_sky_guy
@desert_sky_guy 12 дней назад
Y'all are the bee's knees, SciShow crew! Thank you for all you do!
@bruceschneider4928
@bruceschneider4928 11 дней назад
What kind of bee? Is it a previously unidentified one trapped in amber?
@christopherbrand5360
@christopherbrand5360 12 дней назад
pain in the ash...
@theghost9667
@theghost9667 12 дней назад
Rest in ashes
@bruceschneider4928
@bruceschneider4928 11 дней назад
All that remained were ash holes.
@NR.gamer240
@NR.gamer240 День назад
Then they started to uncover the ash holes
@tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419
@tengonadacluewhatsgutsprec1419 12 дней назад
When I was little and saw someone leaving prints then I would do everything I could to step in those same spots. It was good entertainment in the pre-interent days! Willing to bet thats what our young ancestor was doing.
@wizardfromthewest
@wizardfromthewest 12 дней назад
I live in Idaho I've been to the Bruneau sand dunes and fossilized lava and it's eerie!
@4RILDIGITAL
@4RILDIGITAL 10 дней назад
Fascinating how something as destructive as volcanic activity can contribute so significantly to preserving our historical ecosystems. The violent eruptions creating beautifully preserved fossils is truly intriguing.
@moocowpong1
@moocowpong1 11 дней назад
the magma footprints were so much cooler than I expected
@liberalenextrema
@liberalenextrema 11 дней назад
The snark when explaining the name of the site was unexpected and perfect.
@oracleofdelphi4533
@oracleofdelphi4533 12 дней назад
And the award for coolest way to be preserved goes to....
@mayaenglish5424
@mayaenglish5424 11 дней назад
It's certainly up there. I think bogs still get my vote for number 1 though.
@lindaseel9986
@lindaseel9986 11 дней назад
It's Stefan! ❤ Thank you for explaining the Lava/ Magma footprints.
@sbryant1993sb
@sbryant1993sb 12 дней назад
A rhino into a cave okay im interested
@KiaraClaw
@KiaraClaw 12 дней назад
Me too let's see how it happened
@bricksloth6920
@bricksloth6920 12 дней назад
A rhino shaped , rhino sized cave is my prediction
@11amasuperboy
@11amasuperboy 12 дней назад
Pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis!! (I say as I wildly point at the Ashfall Fossil Bed segment, finally getting to use a word I learned in high school for absolutely no reason.)
@flamingspinach
@flamingspinach 12 дней назад
when I was a kid I always felt like that word was kind of cheating somehow because it has a suffix ("-ic") in the middle directly followed by a prefix ("silico-") which isn't supposed to happen ― I thought it should have been two words, "pneumonoultramicroscopic silicovolcanoconiosis"
@11amasuperboy
@11amasuperboy 12 дней назад
@@flamingspinach I mean, everyone knows scientists are notoriously bad at naming things. I'd put 5 bucks on that word being the way it is because someone forgot to put a space between two words when they first wrote it in a paper or something.
@igrim4777
@igrim4777 12 дней назад
​​@@flamingspinachYou're right that it's cheating. It uses microscopic when the combining form would be micro e.g. microbiology not microscopicbiology, c.f. nanobot not nanoscopicbot. Adding: pneumono- should be pneumo-.
@igrim4777
@igrim4777 12 дней назад
​@@11amasuperboyYou owe me and @flamingspinach, who I'm sure would have taken you up on that, five bucks. You're being unnecessarily rude to scientists by saying they forgot a space on the double grounds that the space wasn't forgotten and it wasn't scientists. It was made up as an unnecessarily long word by a guy who was president of a society that made puzzles and did word play. It's a pointless word because the medical condition it purported to name was already called pneumoconiosis or silicosis and ironically volcanic ash is less likely to cause silicosis than other forms of inhaled silica.
@flamingspinach
@flamingspinach 11 дней назад
@@igrim4777 "It was made up as an unnecessarily long word by a guy who was president of a society that made puzzles and did word play." Yup, that tracks. It smacks of those lists of obscure phobias you see floating around, where 99% of the supposed -phobia words were made up by someone for the sole purpose of being included on lists of obscure phobias and have never been seriously used in a sentence by anyone, lol Or actually, for that matter, to cite a much older example, all the supposed group nouns for different animals (a "murder" of crows, an "ambush" of tigers, a "scurry" of squirrels etc.), which were actually mostly made up by bored English aristocrats in the 14th century and eventually published in a book called the Book of Saint Albans which then proceeded to be taken seriously by people hundreds of years later, somehow
@Aoitori365
@Aoitori365 12 дней назад
rhino death cave would be a good name for a metal band
@ErikaCrist7749
@ErikaCrist7749 6 дней назад
Stepping in other people's footprints also has 2 interesting characteristics. 1) It's easier. Any rough or unstable ground you have to do more force stepping and removing your feet, so stepping on already compressed ground requires less effort. 2) you can hide your presence. Tracking footprints are a classical way of finding your prey. Along other reasons.
@TheDarkKnight1212
@TheDarkKnight1212 12 дней назад
Just wanted to do an extra shoutout to Mclaren Stanley for making it so that I can enjoy this amazing content for free. Thank you.
@PopeGoliath
@PopeGoliath 12 дней назад
There are caves made from trees near Mount St helens. I've crawled inside one!
@JustaMuteCat
@JustaMuteCat 12 дней назад
No mention of pitchstones? They are pretty much a slight deviation in composition to obsidian and, iirc, ones found in Scotland can contain ammonite fossils inside them. Well, to be fair, you can find those buggers everywhere in Scotland.
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88
@Benson_aka_devils_advocate_88 12 дней назад
2:26 There were Elephants in Arizona back in the day, too! And that's no oceanfront property joke!!! 😊 In fact, there were elephants in Arizona as recently as the end of the last glacial maximum. Considering they arrived in South America 3 million years ago we know they survived many ice ages events. It wasn't until just recently, geologically speaking at least, that the went extinct here.
@jonahblock
@jonahblock 12 дней назад
Did he just say Nevada used to have camels?
@fordwel5
@fordwel5 10 дней назад
Yes. Probably migrated to Asia when the land bridge was formed
@outlawbillionairez9780
@outlawbillionairez9780 12 дней назад
Eruption, pyroclastic flow... Add animals... Shake and Bake!
@KCFreitag
@KCFreitag 11 дней назад
Thank you, McLaren!
@fordwel5
@fordwel5 10 дней назад
Thank you to who ever voted for the current president of science
@HaesslichG
@HaesslichG 11 дней назад
I knew Hank wasn't human!
@KageSama19
@KageSama19 11 дней назад
Mclaren Stanely, thank you very much. You help where I cannot.
@targetdreamer257
@targetdreamer257 6 дней назад
"Why are there dinosaur tracks on the ceiling?" *eye them suspiciously* "Spider Dino, Spider Dino, doing what a Spider Dino does."
@caseyleichter2309
@caseyleichter2309 12 дней назад
The instant I saw the title, I knew it had to refer to my state's Blue Lake Rhino :)
@slwrabbits
@slwrabbits 11 дней назад
Do you know if it's open to the public to visit?
@caseyleichter2309
@caseyleichter2309 10 дней назад
@@slwrabbits It's a trail, straight up a rock slope, with lots of rocks to scramble over - and rocks often fall down from above. So it's not recommended for most people.
@slwrabbits
@slwrabbits 10 дней назад
@@caseyleichter2309 Thanks, good to know. Well, at least this way it won't be ruined by tourists ...
@jeffreynichols6367
@jeffreynichols6367 11 дней назад
I've done the hike/climb up the cliff to go to the rhino cave at Blue lake back in 2015. It's quite the small opening to crawl through and then it's just barely big enough for two people to fit inside. The bones apparently are down in California at some University collection. There is also a fiberglass reproduction of the cave at a museum in Seattle.
@Alice_Walker
@Alice_Walker 12 дней назад
Great Episode! 💜
@pg2826
@pg2826 12 дней назад
What a facinating episode.
@erikreber3695
@erikreber3695 11 дней назад
The mechanics of the world are truly fascinating.
@Yezpahr
@Yezpahr 11 дней назад
'Fear of getting cast in lava' does sound like it warrants a '-phobia' scientific name. 6:55 But it also sounds like a great way to preserve your likeness after passing. Dilemma dilemma.
@alexanderstrauch5531
@alexanderstrauch5531 9 дней назад
I went to Ashfall with my lab and my dad, we were the only people there so we got a personal tour and every paleontologist made the same joke about my dog wanting to steal a bone from the site. 10/10 would go again
@c.jishnu378
@c.jishnu378 10 дней назад
"And the rest is history" says Scishow after explaining something more historic. 5:07
@wade2277
@wade2277 11 дней назад
I have been to Blue lake HUNDREDS of times. I lived in Randle most of my life. It has a pretty difficult ATV/ Motorcycle trail to get to it. Had NO idea that was even there. Edit : This is Blue lake in Eastern Washington. Near Dry Falls.
@protocetid
@protocetid 4 дня назад
great title and content, hadn’t heard about these kinds of fossils
@monicamares9198
@monicamares9198 12 дней назад
I was once or twice in some ash rain...scary is all i could think of but we were all fine
@user-to2gh7sg3l
@user-to2gh7sg3l 12 дней назад
McLaren Stanley is the first scientist to discover you can suspend a penny on top of a proper pint of Guinness.... A Eureka moment of scientific inspiration and discovery!
@jameseddleman6944
@jameseddleman6944 12 дней назад
Dude, I want to be a cave...
@unoriginalname4321
@unoriginalname4321 12 дней назад
That should be a burial option
@JefferyMewtamer
@JefferyMewtamer 11 дней назад
Being entombed in lava sounds like the most uncool way to be fossilized... Pretty damn awesome though.
@TimYoshi
@TimYoshi 12 дней назад
Wow, that was unexpected (about magma tracks)
@christopherstovall761
@christopherstovall761 11 дней назад
3:57 "...and a third individual followed. What's funny is the third one stepped directly into the larger footprints that were already there. But we have no way to know why they did that." I think Obi-Wan Kenobi could shed some light on this: "Sandpeople always ride single file to hide their numbers."
@evilsharkey8954
@evilsharkey8954 День назад
As soon as you mentioned pillow lava, I knew that poor rhino didn’t go the way of Gollum. It makes you feel less sad than the fossils from pyroclastic flows and ash falls.
@chelseatappa284
@chelseatappa284 11 дней назад
Thanks prez Stanley 🤙
@yuvalne
@yuvalne 11 дней назад
if I remember correctly, one of the very earliest domesticated goats was buried and preserved in an eruption.
@mobilephil244
@mobilephil244 9 дней назад
Unfortunately, the Blue Lake Rhino probably suffocated in agony in the eruption fumes only a few hours earlier - anyt longer and its carcase would have been predated.
@cuibird
@cuibird 12 дней назад
11:25 This explanation of the principles behind preserving ancient footprints somehow reminds me of the photolithography process in semiconductors (lol).
@loompy1440
@loompy1440 11 дней назад
Oh hey you mentioned Bruneau in Idaho! That’s where I rockhound. Look up Bruneau Jasper if you wanna see some very unusual non-fossil ancient information
@juncohill
@juncohill 12 дней назад
This hole, it was made FROM me!
@kashiichan
@kashiichan 11 дней назад
+
@mayaenglish5424
@mayaenglish5424 12 дней назад
🎉 Woohoo Mclaren Stanley. President of Science! 🎉
@susannahallanic1167
@susannahallanic1167 11 дней назад
Thank you!
@TuxedoMaskMusic
@TuxedoMaskMusic 12 дней назад
best title ever scishow well done! lmfao! i was like oh yeah "clickclickityclickclickclick" SOLD!
@octosquatch.
@octosquatch. 11 дней назад
"It was already dead" Good to know we now have cruelty free fossils.
@General12th
@General12th 12 дней назад
Hi Stefan!
@AeronHale
@AeronHale 11 дней назад
That video title is a sentence I bet nobody every thought they'd be reading much less typing out lmao! That said though you mentioned Blue Lake in Washington and it clicked in my brain that I knew what you were talking about since I've been to Blue Lake a number of times as a kid. It's a really cool area to visit if you're ever in the region and there's some good fishing in a lot of the lakes in that general area. Washington actually has quite a few really neat areas for folk who like ancient history and geology! The scrublands in southern Washington for instance are largely the bed of an ancient glacial lake from the end of the last ice age.
@rebekahtaylor4830
@rebekahtaylor4830 12 дней назад
Saving to watch later it's almost 6.30am need sleep lol but too interesting 😂
@wjr4700
@wjr4700 11 дней назад
For a second I thought that Hank was finally elected president of science.
@anerdbyanyothername
@anerdbyanyothername 12 дней назад
I've been to the rhino cave!
@grubalaboocreosote4774
@grubalaboocreosote4774 8 дней назад
Thank you, McLaren Stanley
@MrARock001
@MrARock001 11 дней назад
Can we get a Crash Course: Geology?
@bruceschneider4928
@bruceschneider4928 11 дней назад
Pretty sure I saw Rhino Death Cave at a music festival back in the '90s.
@lawrencewatson577
@lawrencewatson577 2 дня назад
Reminds me of the footprint in Quartsite Arizona
@joebastarache3507
@joebastarache3507 3 дня назад
As someone who grew up whit alot of snow, I can tell you that in a deep snowfall, young kids who don't want to get snow in their boots step in the tracks their parents or a friend
@NickRoman
@NickRoman 12 дней назад
That's it, instead of a grave stone, I want a statue made of me, after I die.
@miriammcfarlane6972
@miriammcfarlane6972 7 дней назад
Well, there you go...magma footprints! Pretty neat, huh? 😊
@sunkissG
@sunkissG 12 дней назад
Cool!!
@terraknight2384
@terraknight2384 11 дней назад
I remember when I first went to the Burke Museum over 10 years ago, they had the rhino cave on display. Sadly, when I went there a few months ago the rhino cave seems to have been excluded from the post renovation displays (unless I am stupid and missed it).
@mayaenglish5424
@mayaenglish5424 12 дней назад
Fine Scishow, you've intrigued me... go on. 😂
@Mew-Alder
@Mew-Alder 12 дней назад
I didn't know there was anything in Nebraska
@RobertDPore
@RobertDPore 12 дней назад
There are a lot of Cenozoic fossil sites here in Nebbyraska. Also, we have Carhenge.
@michaelmicek
@michaelmicek 12 дней назад
There is, but it's all just stuff planted in the dirt.
@gl15col
@gl15col 12 дней назад
Henry Doorly Zoo in Omaha, world class with lots of new, open area enclosures and they have gorilla babies every year. The zoo is involved in lots of endangered species breeding programs and the grounds are quite lovely.
@gabriellynch2764
@gabriellynch2764 12 дней назад
Dirt. Most dirt has some stuff in it if you dig enough.
@Kevin89866
@Kevin89866 12 дней назад
I am from Australia... Nebraska doesn't exist it is a conspiracy from the world government trying to make you believe the world exists.
@ariadgaia5932
@ariadgaia5932 11 дней назад
Thank you, President Mclaren!!! 🥰
@bemybff205
@bemybff205 11 дней назад
You can't make a video on this topic and not mention the dude in Pompeii that was preserved while rubbing one out. A true hero 👏
@BanD1t8
@BanD1t8 11 дней назад
Like if you want to be instantly covered in a hot but not too hot pyroclastic flow, leaving your impression inside the rock for the future generations to study.
@KiaraClaw
@KiaraClaw 12 дней назад
Epic
@utej.k.bemsel4777
@utej.k.bemsel4777 День назад
Somewhere in Afrika there is the imprint of a whole elephant herd that was surronded by a very fast lavaflow. You can even see their trunks.
@flashgordon3715
@flashgordon3715 12 дней назад
I've seen the same scenario but with trees. It's called lava cast there.
@trabajaba
@trabajaba 11 дней назад
It's my favorite presenter 💯🔥
@zackrog1270
@zackrog1270 2 дня назад
It sounds so much worse to be buried by volcanic ash that's only almost 200 degrees.. That must suck compared to a more instant death at higher temperature
@emom358
@emom358 11 дней назад
I hope you all find a way to save the microscope show, I cannot believe you are letting it die.
@primarytrainer1
@primarytrainer1 11 дней назад
microcosms is the best
@krisinsaigon
@krisinsaigon 7 часов назад
If they lived long enough after they inhaled the ash for them to have new bone growth afterwards, how long did it take them to die? Them all dying close to each other would suggest they died at the same time, but their having new bone growth would suggest it took some time for them to die
@FrostSoul-qs6kq
@FrostSoul-qs6kq 2 дня назад
Saber tooth : I looked away for one second after that explosion and suddenly there's a whole new location ...
@hashbrown777
@hashbrown777 3 дня назад
4:50 or maybe, like chimpanzees, they're capable of walking upright but don't prefer to, but because it was sticky they wanted to keep their hands clean Idk if using this one instance proves much of anything :/
@RPWhitworth
@RPWhitworth 7 дней назад
Rhinoplastic flow.
@Sausketo
@Sausketo 11 дней назад
Imagine someone finds a t-rex lava cast
@avereth
@avereth 3 дня назад
It's rare I'll click into a video for the title alone, but here we are.
@adampdx
@adampdx 12 дней назад
Thanks for the video! I appreciate the fact that you guys need to advertise, but the new ad breaks are jarring and I find myself just clicking on to another video when they come up. Needs more segue.
@hherpdderp
@hherpdderp 10 дней назад
"This hole was made for me" - Jim Carrey
@TheAechBomb
@TheAechBomb 9 дней назад
"this hole was made from me" - Rhino
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