The Mystery Of The Mashed-Up Dinosaurs
Ойын-сауық
How the therizinosaurs lived and evolved ended up being just as weird as their mixed-up anatomy.
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Пікірлер: 366
The possibility of more lineages of dinosaurs is fascinating, but at the same time obvious given only 1% of all life has fossilized.
@chheinrich8486
Жыл бұрын
Imagine the billions of species of insects we will never know lived in past Times, heck we barely know all about the ones living today
@callumbush1
Жыл бұрын
More like only 0.00001%
@melodi996
Жыл бұрын
@@chheinrich8486 species are not as interesting, but orders that could've existed and we know nothing about, that is cool.
@AspireGMD
Жыл бұрын
Keep in mind the vast, vast majority of those species are microscopic organisms, insects, and plants.
@xemiii
Жыл бұрын
Jakapil is a great example of this. It brought a whole new family of ornithiscians to light, and it being a thyreophoran isn't even garuanteed. Teeth similar to it have been found in other formations (the kem kem beds for example), and alongside the fact jakapil has a lot of basal thyreophoran traits it could be an indicator that a whole ghost lineage has been hiding under our noses, just waiting to be found!
Therizinosaurs are a perfect example of how nature can be weirder than science fiction.
@aidanbutler8406
Жыл бұрын
@@EnyoStudio to say what?
@AL-fl4jk
Жыл бұрын
@@aidanbutler8406 this
@kacbcd
Жыл бұрын
Of course, science fiction has to be on some level believable. Nature is subject no such restriction.
@aidanbutler8406
Жыл бұрын
@@kacbcd that’s true
@aidanbutler8406
Жыл бұрын
@volklied Absolutely 👍🏻
I'm kind of reminded of pandas, bears that became primarily herbivorous in order to fill a niche with little competition.
@kyrab7914
Жыл бұрын
Which... We've actually recently figured out too, come to think of it. Well as figured as anything is... But as this show memorably taught me "pandas are like vegan gym bros" that eat the most protein packed parts of the plant throughout the year. I wonder both if that was the case for therizinosaurs, and if ppl in the future will find a panda bear fossil and be like "what is this?!"
@krokuta3355
10 ай бұрын
@@kyrab7914 How would you know that pandas were herbivorous? As far I know... the teeth won't tell you the truth. 😅
Speaking of which, a video discussing the evolutionary origins of the sauropods and how they descend from more theropod looking dinos would be interesting.
@icollectstories5702
Жыл бұрын
Have older episodes not covered this?
@devinsmith4790
Жыл бұрын
@@icollectstories5702 Early sauropods are discussed a little in their video "A Short Tale About Diplodocus' Long Neck", but that was more about how sauropods themselves got huge. I'm referring to the early evolution of Sauropodomorphs (the clade which sauropods derived from), specifically basal examples like Panphagia, Eoraptor and Saturnalia tupiniquim.
Therizinosaurus is one of the most fascinating dinosaurs I’ve ever seen tbh
@Tiberon098
Жыл бұрын
I agree, when I first saw it I thought it was fake or something, then I read more about it and the discoveries, the cooler it became.
@godzillagamingboy4785
Жыл бұрын
@volklied true
@godzillagamingboy4785
Жыл бұрын
@@Tiberon098 Jurassic world got it accurate ngl.
@abrqzx
Жыл бұрын
For me, it’s the birds. It still fascinates me till this day that only the birds survived the asteroid impact in Mexico. 99% of the dinosaur family went extinct, only the birds on the Dinosaur family survived. Eating seeds really saved the birds from experiencing extinction
@godzillagamingboy4785
Жыл бұрын
@@abrqzx yeah
An Eons episode about my favorite Dinosaur, LETS GO!!
I just love how therizinosaurs and deinocheirus both trended towards herbivory and obscenely large claws/hands. Plus they were contemporaries! Another fantastic video.
@cassiopeiasfire6457
Жыл бұрын
:o I just looked up Deinocheirus bc of this comment, I didn't know that the mystery had been solved! That's it at 5:11. Interesting.
@Thulgore
Жыл бұрын
I was so bummed when I found out the Terrible Hand was an herbivore lol.
@lb540
Жыл бұрын
Omnivore, ate fish and insects and small vertebrates too.
@smurfyday
Жыл бұрын
@@Thulgore We'll be truly civilized when meat-eating rather than plant-eating is frowned upon.
@therongjr
Жыл бұрын
I was fascinated to find that therizosaurs were related to the bizarre segnosaurs!
“How confusing should this Dino be?” “Yes”
It's so interesting that evolution has converged twice on giant, slow, big-clawed herbivores more than once (therizinosaurs and giant ground sloths). I wonder if they'll find a third example of it?
@Dragrath1
Жыл бұрын
Well we kind of do know of other counterparts from evolutionary history a third example of this niche is chalicotheres (the AfroEurasian counterparts of the giant ground sloths as well as some of the prosauropods of the Triassic
@salemsaberhagan
Жыл бұрын
With how many people are switching to vegan diets these days, I'd say the third example invented the internet lol
@Ozraptor4
Жыл бұрын
Some of the largest bipedal "prosauropods" like Jingshanosaurus could fall into this category.
@davidsmith8997
Жыл бұрын
@@Dragrath1 Those are great examples, thanks! I guess there really is a recurring niche then.
@sydhenderson6753
Жыл бұрын
@@Dragrath1 My first thought was that the claws reminded me of chalicotheres, then I thought of ground sloths five seconds before our host named them. There's a niche for animals who grab branches and chow down on the leaves.
I remember having dinosaur books depicting therizinosaurs as partially quadrupedal and questioned if they were some sort of link between prosauropods and theropods. I love therizinosaurs and all their weirdness. The first depiction I can ever remember of them in media was Nothronychus in When Dinosaurs Roamed America, where it was described as looking like "a half plucked turkey that walked like a pot bellied bear".
I love how we're learning that dinos are a lot weirder than we first thought
My sisters first paper in school was a story set in the near future and was about how the penguins had forgotten to pay the electric bill which resulted in the dinosaurs thawing roaming the earth. The end was a scene in which the Danish prime minister (of the mid 90s) was 90 years old and sitting in a wheelchair in a nursing home being helped by a nurse with bright green hair. He died from choking on his toothbrush when a T-rex showed up. The end
Therizinosaurs is like the weird cousin that exists but the family ignores 😂
I remember in the dinosaur book I bought in the early 90's, _Dinosaurs: A Global View_ by the husband and wife team of (the late) Stephen and Sylvia Czerkas, _Axlasaurus_ had not yet been discovered, and they classified _Therizinosaurus_ and its relatives as segnosaurs, after _Segnosaurus_ as possible aberrant prosauropod descendants.
Thank you, Eons. Seriously, anything PBS has unfailingly amazed since inception.
I really have a nice sympathy for Therizinosauridae, they seem like type of geese with the hands of the "Edward Scissorhands" or the claws of "Wolverine" in the "X-Man"
While the turtle-themed species named may be off based on its initial speculation, at least the genus name still suits this unique dinosaur. It's hard to go wrong with calling something with massive claws a 'scythe lizard.' Although, could you imagine these guys cosplaying as the Ninja Turtles? And I do mean any incarnation.
Most every kid has a space and/or a dinosaur phase, right? I think mine's lasting a bit longer than usual 😋
@Makabert.Abylon
Жыл бұрын
Same! Mine been going on for about 30 years, and i suspect another 40-50 years of it will come.
@DFloyd84
Жыл бұрын
Dinosaurs are cool. That means they're for everyone.
@mcstabba
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm not growing out of those phases anytime soon either. I can't imagine how dull life would be if I lost the curiosity and wonder of childhood.
@martijn9568
Жыл бұрын
I've recently been getting back into mine after getting stuck in my airplane phase for about 10 years😅
You guys have to be the best timed videos ever I really needed the distraction today of all days !!!!!! Thanks eons !!!!
When I was a kid in the early 90s, I was always struck by those big mystery claws.. and the weirdness of what were called "segnosaurs" at the time. Or the mystery giant "toe" claws of Megaraptor .. which ended up being hand claws. Or the other set of mystery claws that ended up being even weirder, Dinocheirus. It was sooo satisfying seeing the mysteries of those fossils solved. It turns out that Therizinasaurus, megaraptor, and dinocheirus were even weirder than kid me could have imagined. I'd love to see an episode on the Megaraptor. It's just as interesting as this or dinocheirus
I bet those claws helped avoid predation on some occasions too. Much the way giant anteaters defend themselves, at least it's a possibility.
@twistedtachyon5877
5 ай бұрын
And yet, not a single image of dinos T-posing in the video art. Clearly an oversight.
I just thought they were Dino giant sloths/ anteaters cause how weird they look. NIce to hear more what they actually are
As usual, I am a satisfied and now more educated viewer and I am truly enjoying this channel. Thank you to everyone who continues to allow this channel to form and develop.
@zyxw2000
10 ай бұрын
A PBS video is always worthwhile. Thanks for your intelligent comment. A lot of silliness in some of the other comments.
Therinzosaur feels like a Triassic family just happened to make it to the Cretaceous lol. So weird and interesting!
I like how he uses t rex arms unconsiously when he talks.
Fascinating video! This is definitely a weird looking dinosaur.. it’s amazing how much variety there is in dinosaurs
Blake is especially adorable in this episode.
They actually did my recommendation from the marsupial lion video! Thank you PBS Eons!
“How will we ever learn and know what the therizinosaurs looked and behaved like?” Nigel Marvin: This gives me an idea for a time travel expedition!
one of the many Mesozoic creatures introduced to me by Dinosaur Train. I have many great memories of that show and the sheer number of dinosaurs and other prehistoric life they featured. the episodes that featured the Dimetrodon and Mammoth had a lot of potential for spinoffs about Paleozoic and Cenozoic creatures.
@Neme112
Жыл бұрын
I just looked that up and saw a video of it.... dinosaurs.... on a train? WHY? BUT WHY?! 😂😂
Unhinged Blake is what we love to see!
Yes. Give me dinosaur knowledge, you glorious nerds.
Nice to see that Blake's finally starting to make peace with the puns.
Apropos nothing but that was a beautiful opening scene!..........wonderful shot indeed & really drew me in....
That brings up the question: how many major lineages are unknown due to the a total lack of fossils?
@rickkwitkoski1976
Жыл бұрын
Ummmm... and how would you know?
@azrielmoha6877
Жыл бұрын
Depends, what level of "major lineage you're talking here"? Does major lineage means another group of vertebrates parallel to reptiles, amphibians, mammals, etc, or simply a missing major lineage of dinosaurs?
I first heard of Therizinosaurus from Dinosaur King. I thought it was super weird as a kid, but I loved it.
Always a good day when eons uploads
Awesome episode, thanks alot for this! Therizinosaurus has been one of my favorite dinosaurs since seeing it the fist time in the 2002 Chased by Dinosaurs episode "The Giant Claw". Speaking of that, it would be amazing to see PBS Eons and Nigel Marven do some kind of collab :)
I love that our favorite Tickle Chicken got their own video!
Therizinosaurus is my fav dinosaur. Its just so random, and I love that.
I'm in love with this chanel so much, I always liked paleontology but i would like to go deep into this subject. Any suggestions how can i start? Like book recomendation
Thus was super interesting. I love this page!
Weird body posture. For some insane reason, it reminds me of the chalicotherium, the unrelated but just as bizarre extinct mammal.
The ecological niche of therizinosaurs, chalicotheres, and ground sloths was once described to me as "the kind of herbivore that bench-presses anvils in its sleep".
@SIC647
Жыл бұрын
Dino-hippo.
@crookedshephard6710
Жыл бұрын
If I were transported back to the mesozoic, its not velociraptor I'd be scared of... it's therizinosaurus. Herbivores don't need to hunt, so therizinosaurus has plenty of energy to waste turning you into a kebab for looking at it funny.
this just makes me wish y'all do a video on herrerasaurus! another weird dino that paleontologist can't decide where it fits
The best word in this episode is: Herbivory. 5:35 It's what it sounds like when you try to order a latte but you sneeze instead.
This was actually really cool, thanks for making this guys
Therizinosaurs give the platypus comfort when it comes to WTF appearances.
Aren't they also called "tickle chicken"?
I really appreciate the little acknowledgement at the end Nice going guys!
The fossil fuel comment definitely gave me a legitimate chuckle at the end lol
Super Nice, love Therizinosaurus!
A video about my favorite dinosaur! Excellent!
Big thanks for the final paragraph. It's still very contentious to this day.
EONS VIDEO YAYYYYY
Finally! a dinosaur video on eons.....
Excellent episode!
By far my my favorite Host 🤙🤌🤌
I love this one!
Nicely done
Problem: Not enough meat. Too much competition. Solution: Become Giraffe.
wonderful episode!
The dinosaur version of the platypus? Wonder if any species had the intelligence to look at these guys like, *_whiskey tango foxtrot?!_*
Therizinosaurs are one of my favorite groups of dinosaur’s, wonderful video guys!
Therizinosaurus used look like nightmare feul back in the day
For a second I thought this was going to be about Chilesaurus, but Therizinosaurus are cool too.
Hello I wonder is there a classification for animals species that seemed to mutate and adapt this much because it seems some species maintain relatively the same body type for millennia and other body types like crabs happen again and again while others seem to mutate more than is readily accountable by environmental pressure alone ? Also I really enjoyed this episode thank you.
@LimeyLassen
Жыл бұрын
I think the principle is that specialized animals tend to stay specialized and more opportunistic animals like omnivores, scavengers and weeds and vermin tend to evolve really fast.
@arthurmartin4616
Жыл бұрын
They already did an episode on that. It's the carcinisation episode.
Wow, i'm early, nice! Always happy with more dino stuff
Going from omni- to herbi makes it sort of the Giant Panda of the dino world. Hopefully with a wider range of plants to eat, a higher libido, and the ability to survive childhood without dying of constipation for lack of a stomach massage.
Ah, who can ever forget the epic cameo of a therizinosaurus in the last Jurassic Park movie roaming the rain forests of... Italy? 🤣🤣🤣
a cool part of these videos is the end where they recognize the rightful owners of the land where the discoveries were made. it would be interesting if they talked a bit more about it in the video.
@Summer-xe6in
Жыл бұрын
I concur with all of this. I think if there was information given about the rightful owners of the land and their insights, stories, and wisdom they could share would be more then welcomed by myself and many others. A wonderful video despite this missing link. :)
@martijn9568
Жыл бұрын
I agree, but it does seem to be limited to the American and Australian continents. Or did they also do it for other continents with displaced peoples too?
@zyxw2000
10 ай бұрын
There were several shows on PBS TV recently where the Native Americans went along with the archaeologists and discussed the discoveries. It was either on "Nature" or "Nova."
An amazing story.
You're such a fun host I love you
Very nice graphics.
Thank you!
That was fun!!!! I didn't even know such dinosaurs even existed.
Great episode what a weird dino
These dinosaurs could make an awesome addition to any horror movie.
Falcarius was discovered in Utah that's so awesome Utah has some good dinosaur fossils!
I really would like to know the evolution of manatees and seacows.
Omg welcome back
I LOVE therozinsaurs they are my favorite dinosaur.
saw art of one in a Dinotopia book and had to look it up :)
So wait, now we’re identifying dinosaurs by how thicc the hips are? "Those are PLANT-EATING hips!"
Nothing like seeing Therizinosaurus as the thumbnail!
When is the next podcast coming out?? I’ve been loving them, but was disappointed when i finished them!
Big fan of the smooth jazz in the background of this video on our large knife turkey friends
Nothing is more beautifull then coming home,taje a shower, lift your tired body in ur bed and discover pbs uploaded.... amazing
love those "Tickle Chickens" [especially in the game ARK that features them.]
these drawings need a tape measure in ground photos with a tool for ref would not hurt
YESSSS A DINO VIDEO
therizinosaurus and deinocheirus are hands (wakawaka) down the coolest dinosaurs out there. or at least they're my favorites!
Therizinos are so weird that Greg Paul refused to say they were theropods,he thought they were late surviving prosauropods
What u find most fascinations about Therizinosaurs is how similar they look to Prosauropds.
Ahhh, therizinosaurus.. One of the most baffling dinosaur species
"I don't get paid by the hour." is probably the funniest thing I've seen on Eons. Can relate as a salaried employee. Good gig, but getting the giggles and extending the work day is never fun.
Hey I remember this dino from walking with dinosaurs with Nigel, such a great show.
Wow a real life Gen VIII Jumbled Fossil Pokemon! Neat!
First! Therizinosaurus is my favorite dinosaur so it's great to see a video on them!
Please Bring the Podcast back.