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Paleontologist Answers Dinosaur Questions From Twitter | Tech Support | WIRED 

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Paleontologist Dr. Hans Sues answers the internet's burning questions about dinosaurs. Why did T-Rex have such tiny arms? What colors were dinosaurs? How do dinos get their names? What did Jurassic Park get wrong? Why do fossils exist? Dr. Sues answers all these questions and much more!
The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History has more exciting dinosaur news on Instagram: @smithsoniannmnn ( smithsonian...)
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5 май 2024

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Комментарии : 6 тыс.   
@Joshua-jb1ee
@Joshua-jb1ee Год назад
"We are much closer in time to a T-Rex than a T-Rex was to a Stegosaurus" That really put things in perspective for how massive a time span dinosaurs were around
@PatB22
@PatB22 Год назад
Yea man it blew my mind.
@Khaufnak.
@Khaufnak. Год назад
Wiped out in a matter of hours or days.
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
And they still are around
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
@@Khaufnak. nope. They're still here
@jhconstruction5632
@jhconstruction5632 Год назад
Had to pause and think for a second. Really crazy.
@ruby7226
@ruby7226 5 месяцев назад
5:03 him saying "godstiddies asks:" is so insane
@Ajesen
@Ajesen 2 месяца назад
😅
@LordDrast420
@LordDrast420 2 месяца назад
it was harry buttcheeks for me
@jubarmh
@jubarmh Месяц назад
“Biotchfromhell”
@Baysidemom2
@Baysidemom2 Месяц назад
😂😂 I had to say that out loud to myself 10 times before I got it. I was like what's godst itties 😂😂😂
@keaton718
@keaton718 Месяц назад
HalfPassStoned
@JOJO-yd7qs
@JOJO-yd7qs 8 месяцев назад
He seems like a genuinely nice person to be around. No wonder he has a dinosaur named after him.
@matthewrajagukguk5406
@matthewrajagukguk5406 9 дней назад
I bet he did alot of contributions in his lifetime.
@mathildakd1
@mathildakd1 9 месяцев назад
It is amazing how he reads out these names and the funnily phrased questions without a hint of judgement and then answers them in such a great way.
@ohh2752
@ohh2752 Месяц назад
Harry ButtCheeks LOLL
@berouja
@berouja Год назад
The way his eyes lighted up when he mentioned that a dinosaur was named after him is so precious 👌✨
@JGirDesu
@JGirDesu Год назад
*lit up
@OggeDCSubToMePlease
@OggeDCSubToMePlease Год назад
@@JGirDesu lit up* And he wasn’t wrong it still works
@JGirDesu
@JGirDesu Год назад
@@OggeDCSubToMePlease No.
@justincoleman3805
@justincoleman3805 Год назад
*lightededed up
@cringeypopsicle589
@cringeypopsicle589 Год назад
Lightenedheaded up*
@dudebroman-ni6kw
@dudebroman-ni6kw Год назад
"Since when were pterodactyls not dinosaurs?" "Since ever" That is probably one of the greatest answers
@DOMPARK
@DOMPARK Год назад
Why was there a content warning for dinosaurs? Were they worried a triceratops that recently had its child eaten by a pterosaur would see it??
@cellinemartins
@cellinemartins Год назад
@@DOMPARK I think it was for comedic purposes
@HankTheT.Rex69
@HankTheT.Rex69 Год назад
Well he’s not wrong pterodactyls we’re discovered well before dinosaurs I think.
@stxrmy7750
@stxrmy7750 Год назад
@@DOMPARK bc some people are afraid of dinosaurs
@letsdostuff8967
@letsdostuff8967 Год назад
I don't get why people think pterandons are dinosaurs. That's like saying an eagle is an elephant.
@makemeasamich100
@makemeasamich100 9 месяцев назад
@5:06 GODSTIDDIES NOOOO this man is so pure
@queercandy1
@queercandy1 7 месяцев назад
the "cw//dinosaurs" is absolutely killing me
@moth8476
@moth8476 18 дней назад
i literally had to check the comments to see if anyone else saw that. i get people have triggeers, but a content warning for dinosaurs?! DINOSAURS?????
@divaalfirman3295
@divaalfirman3295 10 месяцев назад
The biggest mystery is how this man is able to say read all these ridiculous Twitter handles out loud with a straight face 😂😂
@Vendrix86
@Vendrix86 9 месяцев назад
my favorite is when he read "godstiddies"
@ivanrodriguez268
@ivanrodriguez268 8 месяцев назад
@@Vendrix86 it's actually a really good one because, does god have them? lol
@sebastiangorka200
@sebastiangorka200 7 месяцев назад
hes in his 50s, which means he was in his 30s back when the internet was hitting the masses in the 90s. compared to back then, handles now are extremely tame. wild west internet and all that.
@BonShula
@BonShula 6 месяцев назад
@@sebastiangorka200 The wild west of the internet was not in the 90's but in the early 2000's easily
@ano-joe3777
@ano-joe3777 5 месяцев назад
Burst out laughing a harry_buttcheek
@Sashimiburger
@Sashimiburger Год назад
I love how idiotic some of these questions are phrased only to be met with a wonderfully eloquent and insightful answer.
@brianmatthews474
@brianmatthews474 Год назад
the flat earth asteroid question probably made him internally cringe so hard lol
@nerdy_dav
@nerdy_dav Год назад
Any questions, even seemingly daft ones, are good questions. Because as long as people listen to the answer, all questions lead to enlightenment.
@Vegeta_1990
@Vegeta_1990 Год назад
Mostly by black ones
@sleepiisqquid
@sleepiisqquid Год назад
​@@nerdy_dav I've never thought about it that way, thank you for showing me a different perspective.
@Luka1912.
@Luka1912. Год назад
@@Vegeta_1990 ur weird
@easternag16
@easternag16 9 месяцев назад
As a person who loves paleontology and prehistoric animals, this guy was great lol. You guys need him back on
@lenkajilek2050
@lenkajilek2050 8 месяцев назад
PLEASE PLEASE WE NEED A WHOLE SERIES WITH THIS LOVELY KNOWLEDGEABLE MAN! HE IS A DELIGHT!!!
@andrewpatterson3662
@andrewpatterson3662 Год назад
5:22 "We are much closer in time to a T-Rex, than the T-rex was to a Stegosaurus." To me, that is one of the coolest facts ever. The timescale we are talking about is mindboggling.
@Davey768
@Davey768 Год назад
Yeah, like how Cleopatra lived closer to our timeline then that of the building of the Pyramids. Or that woolly mammoths still roamed the earth when they were built.
@isthatbraised
@isthatbraised Год назад
@@Davey768 Well roamed the earth is kind of an overstatement. They were stuck in an island as they slowly died out, mostly because of lack of diversity
@jimv1983
@jimv1983 Год назад
@@isthatbraised what was stuck on an island? Certainly you don't mean wooly mammoths?
@isthatbraised
@isthatbraised Год назад
@@jimv1983 Yes Most of the mammoths died a couple thousand years ago, yet these island mammoths lived till 4000 years ago
@JustAWalkingFish
@JustAWalkingFish Год назад
@@jimv1983 As far as we know, Wrangel Island was the last hold out for mammoths, where they lived until about 2000 BC. Most other continental mammoth populations died out around 10,000 BC
@kefkaZZZ
@kefkaZZZ Год назад
Can we PLEASE get more of this guy!!! He answers what sound like telling questions with real enthusiasm. I love how he doesn’t flinch at names like “godstiddies” or several other funny ones.
@MrMilarepa108
@MrMilarepa108 Год назад
You can tell he knows the internet. I bet he's been roaming paleontology message boards since the dawn of time. I can see him growing up to the sound of dial up modems reading dinosauria, having heated discussions about Mesozoic vertebrate paleontology and being staunchly encamped on the right side of the question which is better, the Plesiosaur or the Pterosaur.
@R20966
@R20966 Год назад
hes ace!
@amandataylor893
@amandataylor893 Год назад
I know!! I learned so freaking much. You can tell he genuinely loves what he does.
@godofpoison6667
@godofpoison6667 Год назад
'Biotchfromhell'.
@GeeEmming
@GeeEmming Год назад
also hes german, im pretty sure :D *so am I
@playingindies6730
@playingindies6730 8 месяцев назад
I like how it's visible that Hans actually loves talking about this stuff. You guys should invite him more often.
@xx_sugarcube_xx8170
@xx_sugarcube_xx8170 7 месяцев назад
I love hearing him sound so professional even pronouncing people’s funny usernames lol You can tell palaeontology is a fun job! ^^
@HaraldinChina
@HaraldinChina Год назад
the way he factually states "the world is a sphere" makes you feel like he's heard even weirder statements before and this is just another misconception he corrects 😅
@LKonstantina915
@LKonstantina915 Год назад
id just be annoyed at how some people dont know how an asteroid hitting the eath works xd
@scoutbane1651
@scoutbane1651 Год назад
@@LKonstantina915 Ikr. I don't mind uneducated people who aren't cocky about it, but when someone is completely uneducated on a subject and makes stupid statements like that person it just irritates me
@thebardslament5337
@thebardslament5337 Год назад
Because there is a flat earth society that still believes the world is flat and dinosaurs didn't exist
@firestorm165
@firestorm165 Год назад
He probably has
@medexamtoolsdotcom
@medexamtoolsdotcom Год назад
It's not a sphere though, and I'm not even talking about mountains, but because it rotates, it is wider at the equator, though the really extreme one for that is Jupiter which is MUCH wider at its equator since it spins so fast and if it was spinning much faster it would be flung into pieces.
@vikitheviki
@vikitheviki Год назад
I love how he destroyed flat earthers with one punch statement 😁😂
@gregorysimileer
@gregorysimileer Год назад
I came to this post to find this!!
@cringeypopsicle589
@cringeypopsicle589 Год назад
I dont think flat earthers watch science videos tho
@falcon_arkaig
@falcon_arkaig Год назад
@@cringeypopsicle589 They do, mostly to argue with the people in the comment section
@brandonnguyen160
@brandonnguyen160 Год назад
@@cringeypopsicle589 lol it’s because they look for whatever serves their bias. it’s a bummer but it is what it is
@88marome
@88marome Год назад
@Falcon But they don't actually watch the video.
@waywardgoddess7219
@waywardgoddess7219 3 месяца назад
The only peeve about this video is that it's WAY too short! He is very entertaining, knowledgeable, and easy to listen to!
@garywheeler7039
@garywheeler7039 11 дней назад
And no problem with the accent.
@dallasmed65
@dallasmed65 Месяц назад
We need waaay more videos like this. Too many people nowadays thinking dinosaurs are a myth. lol
@nsk370
@nsk370 День назад
Dallas! No way i found ya here. Love your vids man!
@TheMassgames
@TheMassgames Год назад
I love this series, the experts are not judgemental and very professional.
@khalilahd.
@khalilahd. Год назад
Agreed! So interesting 🙏🏽
@Omar-wq9dz
@Omar-wq9dz Год назад
definitely
@Skorn75
@Skorn75 Год назад
Still though "@ Harry_Buttcheek asks..." LMAO @8:45
@galaxydeathskrill5607
@galaxydeathskrill5607 Год назад
@@Skorn75 I died laughing, even felt bad for the guy😂
@Noise_floorxx
@Noise_floorxx Год назад
Thats why they can answer the simplest of questions and the most complex of questions with the same gusto and passion
@ngjackmin3529
@ngjackmin3529 Год назад
I like how he focused so intensely on the questions and completely ignored the funny usernames
@skylarshum0417
@skylarshum0417 Год назад
Bruh this was the exact comment I had lmao godstiddies had me dying😂😂
@meghanmonroe
@meghanmonroe Год назад
Best part by far
@hadrian270
@hadrian270 Год назад
@@skylarshum0417 harry buttcheek got me
@XSemperIdem5
@XSemperIdem5 Год назад
The Harry one 😂
@Dayvit78
@Dayvit78 Год назад
Seriously, the names this time.
@Fares_NaberYT
@Fares_NaberYT 8 месяцев назад
T-rex had small arms because earlier theropods had longer arms. But overtime the earlier theropods adapted to using their mouths to get food because it was more effective. Because they no longer used their arms to hunt, as they evolved, their arms did not really grow that much because they did not need to.
@user-bf9ev4mb6z
@user-bf9ev4mb6z 10 месяцев назад
I love his answer,"Since when were pterodactyl's not dinosaurs?""Since ever!" . I love this series, the experts are not judgemental and very professional..
@GREYFLWRMUSIC
@GREYFLWRMUSIC Год назад
10:09 also really important to mention: Not every dinosaur became a fossil. In fact, fossilization is such a delicate process that we probably lost far far far more species than we have discovered, sadly.
@tigerpaws77
@tigerpaws77 Год назад
on the flipside, theres species of dinosaurs that we have not discovered yet and their fossils are sitting in the earth waiting to be found
@Gabriel-bt7ix
@Gabriel-bt7ix Год назад
And probably the fossils we have is because of the number of species we know were very high
@zwenkwiel816
@zwenkwiel816 Год назад
yeah kind of weird how we're forming an idea on very incomplete information. like we assume T-rex was this big apex predator but for all we know there were dino's far bigger that just never got the chance to fossilize.
@nickdouglas736
@nickdouglas736 Год назад
@@zwenkwiel816 'far bigger' might be a stretch since their size is limited by their anatomy. T-rex was one of the heaviest bipedal animals to ever exist on this planet and alread pretty slow. Other Theropods reached the same length but most of them were significantly lighter. It's pretty unlikely that there was an even bigger predator around at the time and location as T-rex and if it was it had to be very rare.
@stephanieyee9784
@stephanieyee9784 Год назад
That is true. Only a very small fraction of dinosaurs, or subsequent life forms, were fossilised. That requires a specific set of circumstances, the right type of soil or mud, the right temperature, the right weather to set the fossilisation process in motion. Otherwise the animal would simply rot away and the bones disintegrate.
@Julia-lk8jn
@Julia-lk8jn 11 месяцев назад
This man is just oozing knowledge and enthusiasm without a hint of arrogance to him. You gotta love somebody who is happy to be immortalized via a a small bone-headed dinosaur! And his answer to how a meteorite would affect the entire globe is amazingly respectful, as well as chilling.
@lebowski3748
@lebowski3748 8 месяцев назад
"Chilling" because... you know... it got very cold. Hehe. Ill see myself out.
@georgegherghinescu
@georgegherghinescu 8 месяцев назад
@@lebowski3748 A stanford study by Jessica Xu (dec 2015) estimated the energy released by the Chicxulub impact to be equivalent to roughly 230 years global energy consumption, most of it absorbed by the atmosphere. The initial impact and returning ejecta released green house gases trapped in carbonate rocks of the crust, such as SO2 and CO2. The study estimates that it caused a long term atmosferic temperature increase of 2 to 5 degrees C based on the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary rock analisys. I would have thaught it would cause a short increase than a longer decrease in temperature too :/
@seekzugzwangful
@seekzugzwangful 3 месяца назад
Asteroid. Not meteorite.
@koselig402
@koselig402 5 месяцев назад
if this man has grandkids im sure they love hearing his storytelling. he seems like a great guy and you can see how happy he is to discuss his passion.
@user-kw3ed1nj9o
@user-kw3ed1nj9o 3 месяца назад
Thank you for your time in doing this Dr. Sues - I've seen your name in many dinosaur books.
@skylarshum0417
@skylarshum0417 Год назад
Wired chose ppl named godstiddies and harry buttcheeks and this man just ignored the fact he read these names like it was nothing😂😂😂
@enkeltrik9330
@enkeltrik9330 Год назад
An experienced scientist isn't easily surprised.
@gust2036
@gust2036 Год назад
Trex buttcheeks would do the job 😁😁
@marcel151
@marcel151 Месяц назад
What's so funny about "godstiddies"?
@guydreamr
@guydreamr Месяц назад
@@marcel151 What's *not* funny about that name?
@marcel151
@marcel151 Месяц назад
@@guydreamr Everything, what should it mean?
@IceCapCarnivore
@IceCapCarnivore Год назад
I love how he calls the T.rex in museum "our pride and joy "
@r.jackson9962
@r.jackson9962 Год назад
Every scientist has their catch phrase “It belongs in a museum” “Your scientists were so concerned with weather or not they could, they didn’t think about weather they should” “The T-Rex behind me, our pride and joy”
@briannadau
@briannadau 9 месяцев назад
This was so much fun to watch, and so informative! Love to see it
@bigjilms
@bigjilms 2 месяца назад
i loved watching hans talk and i learned a lot. it's sweet to see someone who's in the right profession. bring hans back!!
@stacys8729
@stacys8729 Год назад
Him carefully reading the questions with the unneccessary 'like' in them tickled my funny bone. I enjoyed listening to him.
@RufftaMan
@RufftaMan Год назад
Also him reading the stupid names, like biotchfromhell.. lol
@batll0
@batll0 Год назад
it was the little (beep) he did when he saw the word mfer that did me in
@itspribanerjee
@itspribanerjee Год назад
@@batll0 yesss
@tacefairy
@tacefairy 9 месяцев назад
Hearing him read godstiddies LOL
@JohnKowalskyDrive
@JohnKowalskyDrive 6 месяцев назад
How he said Harry Buttcheeks did it for me lol
@fingernailplays5602
@fingernailplays5602 Год назад
We must protect this man at all costs he’s so pure 😭✋
@imraanmoos1543
@imraanmoos1543 Год назад
right omss 😭😭😭✊🏽
@TheMightySpurdo
@TheMightySpurdo Год назад
you are the kind of weirdo that sends those questions with a “like” after every other word
@markehlpetersen1040
@markehlpetersen1040 Год назад
Ong 😭
@coIakat
@coIakat Год назад
Fr 😭😭
@SanilJadhav711
@SanilJadhav711 Год назад
fr tho he read the usernames HarryButtCheeks and GodsTiddies without even chuckling 💀
@ladymoon
@ladymoon 3 месяца назад
Great episode! would love to see Dr. Sues again
@rachelliz4786
@rachelliz4786 День назад
I really love how he teaches and I'd love to see him come back and answer more questions. Hes has a really wonderful balance of humor, education, and excitement for the topics her teaching us 💜
@seraphinaaizen6278
@seraphinaaizen6278 Год назад
I would absolutely love to attend a paleontology course that guy was running. His enthusiasm is infectious.
@bimbelimbim4998
@bimbelimbim4998 Год назад
Don't get overly enthusiastic. Paleontology is really interesting, but it's only really when you study geology, which paleontology is a branch of, that you can really appreciate rocks and everything about them, and thats not just fossils. Moreover Paleontology for large animals is a really secluded subject, with very few jobs avaible, so you gotta be really good to get into it. This is because it is not an applied science in any way. Looking at dinosaur bones serves no economic purpose whatsoever. And thus money and in consequence jobs are scarce. Moreover, even though I started to study geology for paleontology bit, I've since shifted my focus within the subject to more interesting and more presently important topics.
@raiyantalukder6807
@raiyantalukder6807 Год назад
I know right I just found his video this one he's actually pretty enthusiastic
@raiyantalukder6807
@raiyantalukder6807 Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-OtF-XR22ZJk.html
@SK008
@SK008 Год назад
@@bimbelimbim4998 as a side course, it's definitely fascinating to learn more about the dinosaurs.. wouldn't be the most practical thing in the world but research is always continuing.. we are learning more good stuff about these creatures..so there will always be geologists and paleontologists who will continue to push the field further...
@bimbelimbim4998
@bimbelimbim4998 Год назад
@@SK008 Maybe but in the end is serves almost no practical purpose. Moreover all data and evidence is extremely incomplete, so it can be an unsatisfying field of research. For example lets say a junvenile of a species look fundamentally different to the adults. This is rather common for many presentday animals. How are you supposed to differentiate? There have been many instances, where multiple species names have been attributed to animals of the same species with different age or gender, or where such is being discussed. The reconstruction of paleoenviroments in their entirety is much more appealing, because paleobotanics, sediments and microfossils give a much more complete picture, simply because these traces are much more abundant.
@shillyshizzlet5066
@shillyshizzlet5066 Год назад
"We are much closer in time to a T.Rex than T.Rex ever was to stegosaurus". That is insane to think about and puts the grand scale of time really into perspective. Super well said.
@nmarbletoe8210
@nmarbletoe8210 Год назад
(checks watch)
@juliaalvarez537
@juliaalvarez537 Год назад
N Marbletoe lol
@Dreabz617
@Dreabz617 Год назад
Really made me stop and think 🤯
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939 Год назад
Stegosaurus was already a fossil when T.rex walked the earth
@alexreid1173
@alexreid1173 Год назад
@@nahadoth2087 Only 500 more years to go until we’re just as far away though!!!
@deepakbhatti155
@deepakbhatti155 2 месяца назад
this guy is the absolute best! just wonderful energy 😁 please bring him back!
@danitajaye7218
@danitajaye7218 2 месяца назад
You are absolutely excellent at communication! Thank you for this video, which caught and held my attention as few do. :)
@nat2nathan2005
@nat2nathan2005 Год назад
Hearing this guy stay professional while reading the Username "Godstiddies" was the highlight of my day.
@hipsterlevi584
@hipsterlevi584 Год назад
Not to mention harry 🍑cheeks at 8:46 lol
@nat2nathan2005
@nat2nathan2005 Год назад
@@hipsterlevi584 I commented before o saw that one. Made me chuckle.
@Ratigan2
@Ratigan2 Год назад
5:03
@silverbackhc
@silverbackhc Год назад
what about harry butcheeks lol
@addamz3277
@addamz3277 Год назад
@@silverbackhc 8:46
@domener9827
@domener9827 Год назад
If we asked the AI to create the most stereotypical, benevolent looking old "science guy", I think this gentleman is what we would end up with. I absolutely love him :D
@khalilahd.
@khalilahd. Год назад
Right?? He’s so sweet I love him!
@DanSpotYT
@DanSpotYT Год назад
The guy on Periodic Videos (chemistry) channel as well!
@cleverusername9369
@cleverusername9369 Год назад
He's an absolute delight, but at the same time, if you told me he had a human centipede or a man sewed into a walrus suit made of his own skin trapped in his basement, I wouldn't be all that surprised.
@glowup612
@glowup612 Год назад
Even his accent ads to the "stereotypical genius scientist"
@bluebluelectricblue
@bluebluelectricblue Год назад
He literally is the most perfect egg head I've ever seen 🦖❤️
@rembrandtvanrijn8591
@rembrandtvanrijn8591 3 месяца назад
Thank you so much for this video, this man is so passionated and fascinating
@frankallen8440
@frankallen8440 21 день назад
Such enthusiasm. This man thoroughly enjoys passing on his knowledge. Let's have some more please.
@mstyres00
@mstyres00 Год назад
You can always tell when someone enjoys their job. He is so enthusiastic and knowledgeable about dinosaurs. What a great series.
@nemo99nemo83
@nemo99nemo83 Год назад
But there is one sad thing about it: like with football players for every palaeontholgy student who start and can make a living out of it there are 1000 who need to learn something entirely different when their studies end.
@Rr-hi3qr
@Rr-hi3qr Год назад
@@nemo99nemo83 Way to kill the moment you party pooping, killjoy, piece of excrement.
@fuzyfuzfuz2
@fuzyfuzfuz2 Год назад
I love his answer, "Since when were pterodactyl's not dinosaurs?" "Since ever!" 😂😂😂😂❤❤❤❤
@craigrussell3062
@craigrussell3062 3 месяца назад
Still blows my mind that a pterodactyl isn't a dinosaur but a chicken is
@possiblyarealcat
@possiblyarealcat Месяц назад
Dude acting as if it was old news 😂
@AwesomeWilly968
@AwesomeWilly968 7 месяцев назад
I like how he reads every single username and doesn't question it one bit. "@ Harry ButtCheeks" loll cmon man
@joveybear
@joveybear 7 месяцев назад
When he said Godstiddies it was so funny
@gypsybluewaves580
@gypsybluewaves580 9 месяцев назад
I really enjoyed this video. Dr. Sues is very likeable and knowledgeable.
@KrasMazovHatesYourGuts
@KrasMazovHatesYourGuts Год назад
For those who are curious: Not only is it widely accepted that an asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs, but we also know exactly WHERE the asteroid landed: it's called the Chicxulub crater. It's located on the northern coast of the Yucatan Peninsula and has been carbon-dated to have formed in that time period, and it size of the crater certainly looks catastrophic enough.
@uzumaki346
@uzumaki346 Год назад
As long as we leave the black marker in the crater....we should be good.
@philiproler5572
@philiproler5572 Год назад
@@uzumaki346 and as long as we dont try to reproduce it.
@whatisreality9808
@whatisreality9808 Год назад
Isn't it in the golf of Mexico? I read that as a kid I think
@Osigot
@Osigot Год назад
This is not a 100% fact. The asteroid could be one of the reasons for the next mass extinction, but scientists cannot reach a consensus on this issue, since many species began to die out a little earlier. Most likely it was a complex problem: the asteroid is only a part of it (perhaps not even the main one). By the way, there were extinctions before that and were even larger (Permian-Triassic extinction), but the asteroid did not participate in them (upd. well, some scientists suggest that there was a asteroid, but there are no details)
@alexreid1173
@alexreid1173 Год назад
@@Osigot It is generally accepted that the asteroid played a large role though. But, yes, many paleontologists think there were other issues as well.
@koendos3
@koendos3 Год назад
Beautiful to see him talking about the subject one he loves the most. He’s a great explainer. Dino’s are awesome!
@MrMilarepa108
@MrMilarepa108 Год назад
And wow what an expert. With hundreds of publications this guy lives and breathes dinosaurs like it's 199x10^6 AD.
@peterbreis5407
@peterbreis5407 Год назад
No they are not! They are amazing.
@badcornflakes6374
@badcornflakes6374 Год назад
Your pfp is a dinosaur 🦖
@HarryBuddhaPalm
@HarryBuddhaPalm Год назад
It was also beautiful to hear him say the names "Harry Buttcheeks" and "God's Tiddies".
@LordSnoodles
@LordSnoodles Год назад
the plural of dino is dinos
@jsullivan2112
@jsullivan2112 7 месяцев назад
This was so good! Not only an expert but a terrific presenter.
@Guendison
@Guendison 9 месяцев назад
Randomly recommended to me, this gentleman was fantastic. Lots of cool info.
@GritsAndEggsPod
@GritsAndEggsPod Год назад
Can you imagine being in this field and calling this guy about a discovery you’ve made and the 7 hr phone call that ensues has to be amazing for all parties involved
@jonq8714
@jonq8714 Год назад
Especially if your name is Harry ButtCrack.
@jimv1983
@jimv1983 Год назад
That was cool. I like that he said Jurassic Park was for entertainment not science. I often hear people complaining that things like Jurassic Park aren't scientifically accurate. Who cares. I watch that kind of stuff to be entertained. If I want to learn something I'll watch a documentary which I also do.
@willh3972
@willh3972 Год назад
Despite being the wrong size the velociraptors were a great smaller more agile threat. Only buzzkills really complain about them. I had a teacher in junior high who was livid that the Raptors didnt eat every last bit of Sam Jacksons character, she thought it implied they killed him for sport which "only people do". Yeah I'm sure when killer whales are basically playing volleyball with seal Cubs it's to add flavor.
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Год назад
Not to mention it is 30 years old. Science is always evolving, not even documentaries designed to be accurate survive that time period unscathed.
@alexeratops
@alexeratops Год назад
The problem is that JP is a lot of peoples only exposure to dinosaur stuff, so this entertainment becomes, perhaps unintentionally, “fact” for those people. In turn, it just results in the vast majority of people having major misconceptions about dinosaurs - it’s unfortunate
@manuelsimoes1245
@manuelsimoes1245 Год назад
Los documentales de dinosaurios suelen estar plagados de errores, especialmente los más antiguos
@SpinoMedia
@SpinoMedia Год назад
I just like to laugh at the inaccuracies
@trm7391
@trm7391 5 месяцев назад
I love how passionate Dr. Sues is about his field. He is so sweet! Fun fact: Sues is literally the German word for sweet.
@TorQueMoD
@TorQueMoD 5 месяцев назад
This was a great video! I really enjoyed Dr. Sues :)
@remveel2443
@remveel2443 Год назад
This guy seems so lovely, kind and passionate. More people in your show like him please
@hakimhayashi
@hakimhayashi Год назад
I’ve seen a few but some paleontologists in my life: they all are actually Ross Geller alright like some intellectual 12 y/o skips whole twentieth and become scientist😂
@darth856
@darth856 Год назад
He seems like such a nice man; even answered the kinda dumb questions politely
@raikazuchi
@raikazuchi Год назад
I'm both annoyed and dismayed there were so many dumb questions. I'd rather have heard him break down some really in depth aspects of paleontology than have to see someone disbelieves in the concept of fossilization.
@Jesse__H
@Jesse__H Год назад
@@raikazuchi In some ways, dumb questions are the best kind, cus it signifies someone taking a first step to understanding something.
@suzannehydes8843
@suzannehydes8843 Год назад
People were so rude, but he doesn't bat an eyelid.
@Michael15_25
@Michael15_25 Год назад
@@Jesse__H I’m gonna go out on a limb that someone named “godstiddies” didn’t bother to follow up on getting their answer
@SeanKyle461
@SeanKyle461 Год назад
That's professionalism. I've kinda been annoyed they even allowed some dumb questions.
@ZoeyZooms
@ZoeyZooms Месяц назад
he really has a passion for this and it’s really motivating and inspiring. loved this video, one of the best i’ve seen in ages!
@MJLupin27
@MJLupin27 2 месяца назад
This was so interesting and informative, thank you so much.
@philip9661
@philip9661 Год назад
5:03 Hearing a man like him speak those words was a… new experience.
@MrNillo2000
@MrNillo2000 Год назад
BRO WHO IN WIRED MADE HIM SAY THAT LOL
@Cheesybiscuit404
@Cheesybiscuit404 Год назад
Bless this man and the person who had him say this username
@Mexisaxrokr
@Mexisaxrokr Год назад
This man is with it. At 9:30 he even had the sense to "beep" mfers
@navehori9075
@navehori9075 Год назад
I WAS LOOKING FOR THIS COMMENT lmfao
@miikkapiironen6899
@miikkapiironen6899 Год назад
How bout the harrybuttcheek
@l.j.turner185
@l.j.turner185 10 месяцев назад
“we are much closer in time to T-Rex than T-Rex was to Stegosaurus” What an extraordinary and fascinating fact; great minds like his are such a gift to our world ❤️
@MikeIsCannonFodder
@MikeIsCannonFodder 8 месяцев назад
I love comparisons like this. Another interesting one I've heard is that we're closer to Cleopatra than she was to the building of the pyramids.
@jiji7250
@jiji7250 5 месяцев назад
It gives you a scale of how long the world has existed
@tylerboothman4496
@tylerboothman4496 5 месяцев назад
​@@jiji7250 Between right now, and the first dinosaurs, is only 3.3% of the earth's age.
@kehmisst
@kehmisst 3 месяца назад
yes he invented this fact... ???
@NoobingAroundtheWorld
@NoobingAroundtheWorld 3 месяца назад
​@@kehmisst wdym?
@kelsiejo2021
@kelsiejo2021 2 месяца назад
I could listen to this man talk about dinosaurs all day! I would love to see more videos with him!
@dingdongs5208
@dingdongs5208 7 месяцев назад
Can we just respect the unbothered, almost deadpan delivery of the word,"godstiddies"
@Kiku91
@Kiku91 Год назад
The fact that birds are technically dinosaurs is a fact that would have blown my mind as a kid. Which is why I try to bring it up with kids as often as I can! Growing up, Plesiosaurus was my favorite “dinosaur”, although it’s technically not a dinosaur. My other favorites are Maiasaura and Parasaurolophus
@AngelValis
@AngelValis Год назад
Learning that birds are dinosaurs gave me a new appreciation for birds. I always liked crows and ravens, but I didn't give much thought to other birds. Now I love birds and thinking how they're just little dinos flying around or hopping along on the ground :) My favorite dinosaur is Therizinosaurus due to the new Jurassic World movie (though it was likely actually a herbivore; the movie paints it at the very least as a predator of some kind)
@SK008
@SK008 Год назад
@@AngelValis I think there is a debate in the scientific community if it was an omnviore.. it might have eaten both plants and small animals.. my favourite dino was, is and will be Brachiosaurus..
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939 Год назад
@@AngelValis they paint it as a territorial creature, it bitchslaps a deer,but it was so it could eat the plants the deer was eating
@therealhippo
@therealhippo Год назад
Did you know chickens are the closest relative to a tyrannosaurus?
@Leonardo-gn9ci
@Leonardo-gn9ci Год назад
YOOOOO A FELLOW PARASAUROLOPHUS ENJOYER
@Klingelej
@Klingelej 11 месяцев назад
the fact that he held a leg bone an animal used to walk around millions of years ago is profoundly incredible.
@Paul.......
@Paul....... 3 месяца назад
No its incredibly profound
@huracan200173
@huracan200173 3 месяца назад
It's not actually the bone. A fossil is stone basically. As he explained, minerals with the size and shape the bone had. But yeah, it is marvelous indeed.
@DarkRoomAmbience
@DarkRoomAmbience 2 месяца назад
@@Paul....... no its profound and incredible
@-THE-CHICKENMAN
@-THE-CHICKENMAN 2 месяца назад
Everyone, it’s super cool, unlike people who argue over grammar…
@BuggsOp
@BuggsOp Месяц назад
@@DarkRoomAmbienceI hold chicken legs after I eat them, is that profound too?
@VandNana
@VandNana 22 дня назад
I always cry when I watch these videos because I'd love to be as passionate about my profession as these people are.
@LoloTRP
@LoloTRP 9 месяцев назад
The way his eyes lit up when he said “gods tiddies asked..” is so precious👌✨
@suchnothing
@suchnothing Год назад
Something that gets missed when talking about the cretaceous extinction is that LOTS of animals went extinct besides the dinosaurs. The asteroid was devastating for sea life, for example.
@PhoenixBlazer39
@PhoenixBlazer39 Год назад
Also that the KT extinction wasn't even remotely the largest. That honor goes to the Triassic one, irrc.
@fubberpish3614
@fubberpish3614 Год назад
oh yeah for sure. the extinction at the end of the Permian nearly ended all complex life on earth - 94% of species went extinct. for comparison, the K-PG killed 75% of species. the K-PG completely wiped out the ammonites though, a group that was (and had been) immensely successful since they first arose. although, I believe I recall reading that ammonites may have survived briefly past the cretaceous? as in a handful of species survived the K-PG, but were in pretty bad shape afterwards so soon went extinct anyway
@khango6138
@khango6138 Год назад
@@PhoenixBlazer39 it'd be the end Permian that's the largest imho. The Earth was very close to losing complex animal life in general.
@laurenskee2665
@laurenskee2665 Год назад
Not only that, but not all of the animals died by the asteroid. The asteroid started a chasing reaction that eventually killed them all off.
@fubberpish3614
@fubberpish3614 Год назад
@@laurenskee2665 yep. the K-PG asteroid kicked up so much debris into the atmosphere it completely blocked out the sun for a long time. plants were unable to photosynthesise, so the entire ecosystem crumbled
@Reactionalz
@Reactionalz Год назад
probably the coolest paleontologist ever. i loved his happy go lucky demeanor. more episodes like this please
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Год назад
He and Robert bakker.
@StudioPluche
@StudioPluche Год назад
This guy also: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-PJXrCtQAYDs.html&ab_channel=VanityFair
@CharalamposKoundourakis
@CharalamposKoundourakis Год назад
All palaeontologists I know are cool.
@namneesh
@namneesh Год назад
Ross is way cooler.
@abinodattil6422
@abinodattil6422 Месяц назад
Dude having a great time, wish I could geek out with him
@ImYourBias
@ImYourBias 3 месяца назад
love this. he explained everything so well and understood the questions even when they were ripe with the youngin vernacular lmao
@lithepanther
@lithepanther Год назад
Wow, this might have been one of my all time favorite "support' videos. I wish it went on for hours
@user-kf7oq6uw8f
@user-kf7oq6uw8f Год назад
There are many great channels about paleontology out there. PBS Eons as an example covering a wide variety of topics in plain language in relatively short videos (8-12 mins). UPD: Personally I also like speculative biology covered on Curious Archive channel, especially The Epic of Serina series. Curious and unusual creatures, amazing worlds and all that.
@mmmbetter55
@mmmbetter55 Год назад
Same! This guy was a delight
@linzyc4696
@linzyc4696 Год назад
Same
@ReptilleX
@ReptilleX Год назад
Can we PLEASE have more of him. His presence was just so engaging
@awibs57
@awibs57 Месяц назад
He's such a charming and funny speaker. It's enthralling.
@dopalisciousangel9488
@dopalisciousangel9488 9 месяцев назад
I really enjoyed that, thank you! That guy would be such a fascinating person to know. Peace!
@bshia13
@bshia13 Год назад
This guy: Brilliantly articulating his knowledge on dinosaurs, fossils, and everything prehistory Also this guy: *Harry Buttcheeks*
@danielp121
@danielp121 Год назад
Also biotchfromhell 💀 these names...🤣
@jasonmest87
@jasonmest87 Год назад
Godstiddies
@nippleninja255
@nippleninja255 Год назад
I'm always haunted by the fact that we'll never know how dinosaurs acted, how long they lived or even how many kind of them are simply because we have no way of acquiring this information. It's been too long
@thecreature916
@thecreature916 Год назад
We know that tyrannosaurus rex probably lived up to 30 years, and we can KIND OF see how a dinosaur acted
@inoli3164
@inoli3164 Год назад
What about mass graves of dinosaurs? do those count? Also weren’t there also tar pits that preserved dinosaurs? Or were tar pits trapping other ice age animals?
@AverageAlien
@AverageAlien Год назад
We do, they're flying all around us as we speak
@anasdomain9994
@anasdomain9994 Год назад
At least how a Dino moves is based on its anatomy. the size of areas of the brain can tell you which actions are prioritized, like how he said some of their brains are similar to a hawk so maybe they would act that way too.
@goblinbabe6664
@goblinbabe6664 Год назад
@@AverageAlien those are the government drones, my friend, not dinosaurs
@dairyqueenshake6719
@dairyqueenshake6719 11 дней назад
The part that gets me is at 1:41 when he basically drops the raptor skull on table, he put it down way too fast and it sounded like it chipped when it hit the table lol. I would assume it’s quite valuable? It just seems crazy to me that he would drop a piece of fossilized bone on the table with such force. I wonder if it is a fake fossil or demonstrative piece.
@RileyBrickFilms
@RileyBrickFilms 7 месяцев назад
He seems like the sweetest guy❤
@sonyavincent7450
@sonyavincent7450 Год назад
It warms my heart to realise that there is a person like this out there in the world. He is literally perfect.
@crow8737
@crow8737 9 месяцев назад
Well he’s not perfect
@Kitty_Cosmic
@Kitty_Cosmic 9 месяцев назад
Oi
@jon-paulpowrie6751
@jon-paulpowrie6751 8 месяцев назад
Unfortunately he’s no longer with us. M/S his wife and child.
@julesoxana
@julesoxana 8 месяцев назад
​@@jon-paulpowrie6751Rest in Peace💔🙏 Prayers and best wishes to him, all his family,friends,and loved ones❤
@trishgreen6707
@trishgreen6707 8 месяцев назад
He is very much still alive. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hans-Dieter_Sues@@jon-paulpowrie6751
@ismt9390
@ismt9390 Год назад
I loved this. I'm a geology student and this reminded me of paleontology class. It was awesome, i used to wake up in the morning, have breakfast, put on a fluffy robe, get my tea and then turn on my laptop for the paleontology class (this was during the pandemic). It was like watching a documentary for 2 hours in the morning every thursday. My professor was also very nice and enthusiastic, and he answered all of our dumb questions :)).
@xxdr34m5xx_4
@xxdr34m5xx_4 Год назад
Same here, Paleontology was a good vibes lecture
@kassandar
@kassandar 6 месяцев назад
I want to watch another video with this guy. He is so engaging!
@jeholloway2
@jeholloway2 12 дней назад
Great to hear actual trained professionals on RU-vid
@iamsam8446
@iamsam8446 Год назад
You can tell this person, along with being very intelligent, is also a character. He seems to have a good sense of humor.
@kaidenhall2718
@kaidenhall2718 Год назад
Listen to the accent no chance
@oksure900
@oksure900 Год назад
Dr Sues needs his own show! Bring him back to answer more questions, he’s brilliant.
@toastyminimallows
@toastyminimallows 11 дней назад
This video makes me happy - Dr. Sues is lovely✨
@SteffidelaM
@SteffidelaM 21 день назад
He seems like a really fun guy. Beautiful dinosaur corpse had me chuckle
@midnightriot2454
@midnightriot2454 Год назад
We need more of Dr Hans! His explanations are so easy to understand, plus I could listen to his accent all day
@siskavard
@siskavard 11 месяцев назад
Hearing a professional Dr. Paleontologist say the words "at harry butt cheek" just made my day
@greglane334
@greglane334 17 дней назад
This was the best one of these yet
@schrodinger6991
@schrodinger6991 8 месяцев назад
I love enthusiastic this man is about dinosaurs.
@sweepingtime
@sweepingtime Год назад
I hate that people don't like the feathered dinosaurs. I think that a very beautiful and vicious feathered killer is much more interesting.
@lucas9269
@lucas9269 Год назад
Terror birds are also really cool, sad they aren't very talked about as the non-avian dinosaurs.
@albertocayuelas7342
@albertocayuelas7342 Год назад
It's really hateful to see how some people only see dinosaurs as mindless reptile-like monsters and not what they really were, animals in their own ecosystem. And those who argue that "feathers are not scary" have not seen cassowaries, or ostriches, or geese, or even a simple rooster! angry at their life.
@bruja_cat
@bruja_cat Год назад
People just don’t like change after science reveals new discoveries that are more accurate
@albertocayuelas7342
@albertocayuelas7342 Год назад
@@bruja_cat Exactly, they still think about dinosaurs at the same level as things like mythological or movie creatures. They get angry when they hear things like the feathered rex and polar dinosaurs, as if they were told that mermaids don't have fish tails but shrimp tails or godzilla can now fly.
@OrdinaryEXP
@OrdinaryEXP Год назад
@@albertocayuelas7342 Don't forget the butcherbirds! We find them cute only because we are larger than them. When a 6-foot tall butcherbird seeing you as prey nobody would say "feathers are not scary" ever again.
@krpineda17
@krpineda17 11 месяцев назад
The guy read the godstiddies like its nothing. I love it!!
@kevinskudalski5838
@kevinskudalski5838 4 месяца назад
Gotta bring this guy back for round 2!
@officerator
@officerator 21 день назад
The best part of this video is a well read and educated paleontologist say "godstiddies" lol.
@hettbeans
@hettbeans Год назад
The raptors in Jurassic Park were Deinonychus. Some paleontologists referred to it as a species of Velociraptor at the time the novel was written. In the original novel they even call it "velociraptor antirrhopus" - which is now Deinonychus antirrhopus. The small velociraptor we all know is velociraptor mongoliensis.
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Год назад
Nice to see someone else actually understands this. Everyone just assumes they were using mongoliensis both in the book and movies despite everything saying otherwise.
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939
@gladiusbladeofthenorth9939 Год назад
A small mistake lead to velociraptor becoming the most famous dromeosaur
@apenasmaisumdiogo.7115
@apenasmaisumdiogo.7115 Год назад
It's interesting to notice that, while bigger than a velociraptor, deinonychus was still smaller than a human. The ones at Jurassic Park would be around the size of a Dakotaraptor.
@Andres-nm9li
@Andres-nm9li Год назад
@@apenasmaisumdiogo.7115 exactly, so many people who look into the comparisons of Jurassic park and the real animals overlook the enormous raptors of North America
@julianozaur444
@julianozaur444 Год назад
And now imagine my face when i see jp first time, and when the question:what's that? Appears i answer: deinonychus. Then tom says velociraptor, THEN i hear about what you wrote in that comment. Also, deinonychus was and is in my top 5 dino list. Imagine my rage at the film. Also i was like 5 soo...
@netgnostic1627
@netgnostic1627 Год назад
I always imagined that, a few thousand years ago, a Chinese emperor heard stories of giant animal bones seen in the Gobi - so he sent an expedition there. They brought him a huge skull of a T-rex-like dinosaur. So I think this was the beginning of Chinese legends of dragons.
@fromnorway643
@fromnorway643 Год назад
If so, that might have been a _Tarbosaurus,_ a relative of T-rex living in Mongolia.
@chriswhinery925
@chriswhinery925 Год назад
@@fromnorway643 There are actually quite a large number of tyrannosaurid species that have been discovered in and around China. Could have been a tarbosaurus, yutyrannus, qianzhousaurus, or something else completely different.
@Hugo-yz1vb
@Hugo-yz1vb 9 месяцев назад
​@@chriswhinery925One of those you mentioned is the so called Pinocchio Rex if I'm not mistaken, right?
@REAL2222ful
@REAL2222ful 9 месяцев назад
Makes a lot of sense that Chinese dragons have T-Rex like heads. I think it was pretty smart to envision the missing part of its body as a flying salamander.
@jeannerogers7085
@jeannerogers7085 8 месяцев назад
No need to imagine - the ancient Greeks built temples to hold fossil bones, mostly Pleistocene (?), mammoths and such. They interpreted these bones as those of giants and deities. Adrienne Mayor wrote about this very well.
@ooooooooooo9656
@ooooooooooo9656 9 месяцев назад
What a wonderful man, I loved the mention of the dinosaur that was named after him
@FPInvention
@FPInvention 3 месяца назад
I learnt so much! Thank you!
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