Late Cretaceous sauropod dinosaur genus
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Scientists in Australia just discovered a huge Megaraptor, and it's a total game-changer. This dinosaur had massive claws and was way bigger than anyone thought lived there during that time. Before, most people believed Australia didn't have giant predatory dinosaurs like the ones found in other parts of the world. But this Megaraptor proves that ferocious, massive hunters were roaming the ancient Aussie landscape too. It also hints that Australia's dinosaur history is way more connected to South America and Antarctica than we realized. Basically, everything we thought we knew about dinosaurs Down Under just got flipped! Credit: CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... seagull: by Julian Johnson-Mortimer, https://skfb.ly/6SIsY Tapejara: by TheAquaticSpinosaurid, https://skfb.ly/pqKSB Ornithocheirus: by Digital3dWorld, https://skfb.ly/6WVtA JWA Brachiosaurus: by TheAquaticSpinosaurid, https://skfb.ly/pqZ7Y Dinosaur: by arqdehr, https://skfb.ly/6QZVN Carcharodontosaurus: by Julian Johnson-Mortimer, https://skfb.ly/6RUtB austroraptor: by seth the yutyrannus, https://skfb.ly/prDYV Megaraptor: by Ivaskiv Grigory, https://skfb.ly/oyYw8 Natural History Museum: by Larry D. Moore, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Megaraptor claw: by Duffymeg, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Megaraptor mount: by ケラトプスユウタ, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Cryolophosaurus caudal: by Jens Lallensack, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Zigong Dinosaur: by Zhangzhugang, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Dreadnoughtus: by ArcaneHalveKnot, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Pterosaur remains: by Etemenanki3, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... CC BY 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/... Megaraptor hand: by raffaele sergi, https://flic.kr/p/5MxtJV, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Tropeognathus fossil: by Tim Evanson, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Diplodocus: by James St. John, https://flic.kr/p/2hcbP4t Titanosaur Skull: by Eden, Janine and Jim, https://flic.kr/p/DVSPpa CC0 1.0 https://creativecommons.org/publicdom... Pterosaur Skeleto: by Gary Todd, https://flic.kr/p/goegB9, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Megaraptor skeleton: by ケケケノケ, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi... Plesiosaur vertebrae: by Digital Atlas of Ancient Life, https://skfb.ly/6XrFp Animation is created by Bright Side. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Music from TheSoul Sound: https://thesoul-sound.com/ Check our Bright Side podcast on Spotify and leave a positive review! https://open.spotify.com/show/0hUkPxD... Subscribe to Bright Side: https://goo.gl/rQTJZz ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Our Social Media: Facebook: / brightplanet Instagram: / brightside.official TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@brightside.of... Stock materials (photos, footages and other): https://www.depositphotos.com https://www.shutterstock.com https://www.eastnews.ru ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- For more videos and articles visit: http://www.brightside.me ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This video is made for entertainment purposes. We do not make any warranties about the completeness, safety and reliability. Any action you take upon the information in this video is strictly at your own risk, and we will not be liable for any damages or losses. It is the viewer's responsibility to use judgement, care and precaution if you plan to replicate. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Job 40:15-24 Behemoth is the 12th of 13 beasts God uses to paint a picture in His Job discourse. Was behemoth a dinosaur like Dreadnoughtus that dwelt with man? Why is there grammatical disagreement between behemoth and his pronouns? And … Continue reading → The post Bible Study, Job: Behemoth appeared first on Conservative Talk - The Weekly Worldview.
Today, Digger Rex is in the Southern Patagonia region of Argentina, a land where dinosaurs once roamed and modern wildlife thrives. Get ready to DIG, DIG, DIG as Digger Rex uncovers the enormous femur of the mighty Dreadnoughtus, a dinosaur that lived over 77 million years ago! Learn about this colossal creature, stretching longer than two school buses and weighing more than a Boeing 747.
We finally dive into our first ever episode discussing extinct species and boy is this a whopper. We welcome Dr. Darren Naish, the Chief Science Advisor for Apple TV+ groundbreaking series Prehistoric Planet. Season 1 of Prehistoric Planet aired in 2022 and all episodes of Season 2 are now airing as we release this podcast in 2023. This series looks, feels, sounds like an actual wildlife documentary on so many species that lived over 66 million years ago. We talk to Dr. Naish about how he and his fellow paleontologists surmise how these dinosaurs, reptiles, amphibians and other ancient species lived, traveled, raised their young and exhibit all the behaviors documented in this series. The series includes all your favorites like T Rex, Velociraptors, sauropods like Dreadnoughtus, and even the giant Devil Toad (Frog) Beelzebufo makes an appearance. Was such a fascinating interview and watch Prehistoric Planet, you will not be disappointed. The series deserves all the hype it is receiving from around the world. You can learn more about Prehistoric Planet on Apple TV+ HERE You can learn more about Dr. Darren Naish HERE Thanks HelloFresh! Go to HelloFresh.com/creatures16 and use code creatures16 for 16 free meals plus free shipping! Please considering supporting us at Patreon HERE. Please contact us at advertising@airwavemedia.com if you would like to advertise on our podcast You can also visit our website HERE. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we have news of the UK banning single-use plastics and the amazing evolutionary gains of a group of tiger snakes. Then meet the animal that feared nothing, Dreadnoughtus! All this and more. The cupboard is open, come on in!
Dreadnoughtus, aka “fears nothing” is the most massive terrestrial vertebrate known to mankind. And seeing that many of us have to face fears daily - why not learn from the best!Kenneth Lacovara is a world-leading paleontologist and discovered this titanosaurian dinosaur in Argentinian Patagonia in 2005. What Kenneth discovered has re-set the course of science - captured in the 2017 Nautilus Awarded book, “Why Dinosaur's Matter” and gaining him the Explorers Club Medal, the highest honor bestowed by The Explorers Club.Join us and hear what nature has to offer us before our time to become extinct becomes a reality.
The long awaited dinosaur documentary Prehistoric Planet is finally here! The Apple TV+ show unveils the spectacular habitats and inhabitants of ancient Earth in an immersive digital experience. Using modern science and CGI, it gives us a possible look at the earth millions of years ago. Trey and Miles break down the show, the science, and what they thought about the story telling. There is no Monster Quest this episode. Instead there is coverage of the following two Prehistoric Planet Epoxides"Coasts": A father Tyrannosaurus and his offspring swim across a perilous seaway to feed on a dead giant turtle. Alcione hatchlings take their first flight through a gauntlet of predatory pterosaurs, Barbaridactylus and Phosphatodraco. Tuarangisaurus travel to a bay in search of gastroliths. A male Mosasaurus hoffmanni is cleaned by reef denizens and defends his territory from a rival. Scaphitid ammonites perform an elaborate mating display. A distressed pregnant Tuarangisaurus is targeted by Kaikaifilu."Deserts": Dreadnoughtus males compete for the right to mate. Lizards are hunted by Velociraptor among a group of sleeping Tarbosaurus. A Mononykus forages for termites and investigates new food options after a brief rainstorm. Several types of dinosaurs congregate around a watering hole in Mongolia. Barbaridactylus males compete for females atop a remote plateau. A herd of Secernosaurus brave the harsh gypsum dunes in search of nourishment.Support the show
The giant and mysterious titanosaur known as Dreadnoughtus doesn't just make the menacing T-Rex look small in comparison. It makes it look downright puny.
Perhaps the single most notable feature of dinosaurs is the quite extraordinary sizes that many of them achieved. We have talked before about some of the issues surrounding being big, but before now we have not tackled the most obvious question in all of this: what is the biggest dinosaur? Well as you may expect by now this isn't a simple question to answer and between fragmentary fossil remains, uncertain scaling and growth issues there is no easy answer, but we'll at least try. We are joined this time out by comedian Laura Lexx who has a question about dinosaur families (eventually, there's yet more taxonomy talk first). Links: An old Guardian article by Dave about they then announced largest dinosaur ever : https://www.theguardian.com/science/lost-worlds/2014/may/19/have-we-reached-peak-dinosaur The first of a series of articles on the great SV-POW blog about various giants in North America and the problems of working out how big they are: https://svpow.com/2019/06/13/supersaurus-ultrasaurus-and-dystylosaurus-in-2019-part-1-what-we-know-now/ Laura has a podcast called treasures pod lauralexx.co.uk
This butterfly is excited to be speaking with Dr. Kenneth Lacovara. Dr. Lacovara has unearthed some of the largest dinosaurs ever to walk the earth, including the massive 65-ton Dreadnoughtus. He is a recipient of The Explorers Club Medal, previously awarded to pioneers such as Neil Armstrong, Jane Goodall, and Sir Edmond Hillary. His 2016 TED talk has been viewed by over two million people, and his book, Why Dinosaurs Matter, published by Simon & Schuster, is a winner of the Nautilus Book Prize. Lacovara discoveries have landed him three times in Discover magazine's 100 Top Science Stories of the Year, and he has appeared in over 13 television documentaries. Currently, he is researching the extinction of the dinosaurs. He is the founding dean of the School of Earth & Environment at Rowan University, and is Director of the Edelman Fossil Park, where he and his team are building a $75M museum designed to connect people to deep time, the contingencies of natural history, and the fragility of our planet. In this episode you will hear about his discovery of Dreadnoughtus schrani, a massive, plant-eating dinosaur, some of the misconceptions about dinosaurs, why the study of dinosaurs matters for climate change, and more. Some notes... More about 1treellion & Dr Kenneth Lacovara. To support planting all over the world, please check out this link. The great music is credited to Pixabay.
Life's Tough Media is pleased to announce the latest episode of our “Life's Tough: Explorers are TOUGHER!” podcast series. Hosted by Richard Wiese—explorer extraordinaire and President of The Explorers Club—this episode features Ken Lacovara, a Professor of paleontology and geology at Rowan University. Ken Lacovara is the founding Dean of Rowan University's School of Earth & Environment and the founding Director of the Rowan Fossil Park. Ken graduated with honors from Rowan University in 1984. Named Alumnus of the Year in 2002, he received a master's degree in Physical Geology from the University of Maryland and a PhD in Geology from the University of Delaware. Ken is the founding Director of the Edelman Fossil Park of Rowan University, a 65-acre property in southern New Jersey that preserves a K/Pg bonebed of vertebrate fossils and serves as a site for STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Math) education and outreach. In the depths of its quarry, Ken and his team are uncovering thousands of fossils that provide an unprecedented view of the last pivotal, calamitous moments of the dinosaurs. Ken first learned about this site—located behind a Lowe's Hardware store—from a friend in 2003. It was a great site for his students to practice excavating, but it also held a surprise—a layer of fossils that were still articulated, suggesting that the creatures in that layer had died suddenly, all at once, and settled to the bottom. This discovery holds evidence and answers for questions that paleontologists have long debated. The Dreadnoughtus In 2005, Ken gained the world's attention when he revealed the discovery of a new supermassive sauropod dinosaur species unearthed in southern Patagonia, Argentina, the Dreadnoughtus (Latin for “fears nothing”). To this date it is one of the largest dinosaurs ever discovered. Dreadnoughtus schrani is also the most complete skeleton ever found of a supermassive dinosaur. The most complete skeleton found prior to Dreadnoughtus was 26 percent complete and the Dreadnoughtus is over 70 percent complete and includes 145 bones. In life it would have measured 85 feet long and weighed 65 tons, as much as thirteen African elephants or more than seven Tyrannosaurus rex. Ken has worked on successful projects in remote places including the Egyptian Sahara and the Gobi Desert of China. “In the field you are never comfortable, you are always hot or cold, tired or hungry. But when you hammer at the rock with a chisel [and reveal] something that no human has ever seen in history, you know that you've made an unassailable contribution to the stock of reality. It's addictive!” says Ken. Join Richard and Ken for an exciting discussion about the record-breaking discoveries and important projects Ken has been involved with and learn more about why dinosaurs matter.
Grab a shovel for episode seventy of The Presentation Boss Podcast. Today we're going hunting for actual dinosaurs and along the way will learn about the science and maths of evolution and the morality of our ecosystem. In this breakdown, Thomas selected this Talk from the TED Talks Daily podcast and we play it for you while we make comment along the way about what works so well in this speech.Not only will you meet the recently discovered ‘Dreadnoughtus', but will hear the beautifully scripted speech presented here. Kate and Thomas discuss the speech patterns, the use of visuals and the literary genius of this engaging talk. It's a fascinating speech, well crafted and with loads to learn about presentation skills. Also, dinosaurs!What You'll Learn • A ‘through the front door' approach to introducing the structure for your presentation• Building curiosity by asking questions of your audience; even if they've never considered them before• The power of simplicity, even in otherwise complex topics• Use of metaphor and anchoring in your presentation to crystallise ideas• How a well crafted script, and careful preparation can sound when done brilliantly• Why you should show your passion and love in presentations• Using PowerPoint and imagery to provide context and backdrop to your topic• Imagery animations to add visual interest• An easy and simple way to add humour and lightness to presentations• Being aware of repetitive speaking patterns and ensuring it doesn't become distracting• The ‘sudden stop' speaking technique for contrast and intensityMentioned In The Show• Kenneth Lacovara | “Hunting for dinosaurs showed me our place in the universe” Resources and Links • Email us: podcast@presentationboss.com.au• The Presentation Boss Podcast: https://presentationboss.com.au/podcast/• Kate on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kate-norris/• Thomas on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomas-krafft/• Presentation Boss on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/presentationboss/• Presentation Boss on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/presentation-boss
Facts About Dreadnoughtus! Credits: Executive Producer: Chris Krimitsos Voice: Jimmy Murray "Upbeat Forever", "Winner Winner!" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Facts from Wikipedia Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
What happens when you discover a dinosaur? Paleontologist Kenneth Lacovara details his unearthing of Dreadnoughtus -- a 77-million-year-old sauropod that was as tall as a two-story house and as heavy as a jumbo jet -- and considers how amazingly improbable it is that a tiny mammal living in the cracks of the dinosaur world could evolve into a sentient being capable of understanding these magnificent creatures. Join him in a celebration of the Earth's geological history and contemplate our place in deep time. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What happens when you discover a dinosaur? Paleontologist Kenneth Lacovara details his unearthing of Dreadnoughtus -- a 77-million-year-old sauropod that was as tall as a two-story house and as heavy as a jumbo jet -- and considers how amazingly improbable it is that a tiny mammal living in the cracks of the dinosaur world could evolve into a sentient being capable of understanding these magnificent creatures. Join him in a celebration of the Earth's geological history and contemplate our place in deep time.
(image source: http://images.dinosaurpictures.org/_a922.jpg) Host Matthew Donald and guest co-host Stephen Curro discuss Dreadnoughtus, the titanic lumberer that might have been the biggest dinosaur ever, but who knows really? From the Late Cretaceous, this 100-foot sauropod fear very little. In fact, getting it to dread would be for naught. Ohhhhh, Dreadnoughtus, I get it! Also, you can purchase Matthew Donald's dinosaur book "Megazoic" on Amazon by clicking here, its sequel "Megazoic: The Primeval Power" by clicking here, its third installment "Megazoic: The Hunted Ones" by clicking here, or its final installment "Megazoic: An Era's End" by clicking here.
Dreadnoughtus Schrani & The EnvironmentLIVE at Lund Comedy Festival!In this Scandinavian special of Secret Dinosaur Cult, we discuss the great Scandinavian rivalry, Jodie's first time on a plane, being a teacher's pet, crafting dangerous presents, the environment and as always, try and fill our daddy holes.Hosted by Sofie Hagen and Jodie Mitchell.Produced by Justine McNichol for Dying Alone Ltd.Jingle by Harriet Braine.Photo by Gavin Smart.Logo by Annaliese Nappa.Recorded at The Lund Comedy FestivalFollow Secret Dinosaur Cult:Twitter: https://twitter.com/secretdinocultInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/secretdinosaurcult/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SecretDinosaurCult/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(repeat) Dinosaurs are once again stomping and snorting their way across the screen of your local movie theater. But these beefy beasts stole the show long before CGI brought them back in the Jurassic Park blockbusters. Dinosaurs had global dominance for the better part of 165 million years. Compare that with a measly 56 million years of primate activity. We bow to our evolutionary overlords in this episode. Our conversation about these thunderous lizards roams freely as we talk with the paleontologist who discovered Dreadnoughtus – the largest land lizard unearthed to date. Kenneth Lacovara asks that we please stop using the term “dinosaur” to refer to something outmoded, when in fact the dinos were among the most well-adapted, long-lived creatures ever. Plus, intriguing dino facts: if you like eating chicken, you like eating dinosaurs, and how T-Rex's puny arms helped him survive. Also, with dozens of new species unearthed every year – nearly one a week – why we've entered the golden age of dinosaur discovery. Guest: Kenneth Lacovara– Paleontologist who unearthed the largest land dinosaur known: Dreadnoughtus. He is also founding dean of the School of Earth and Environment at Rowan University, director of the Jean and Ric Edelman Fossil Park, and author of “Why Dinosaurs Matter.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Nude selfies? Artificial Intelligence? Also, lots of blockchain technology talk, fake cell towers, nerdy stuff, S/MIME, and much, much more… Special Guest: None Stories of the Week:--Rapidfire Stories: Keenevention 2014, Coins in the Kingdom and Inside Bitcoins Vegas, Dreadnoughtus, iPhone 6 will have a wallet, Star Wars: A New Dawn, Star Trek on Showtime, Terminator Genisys trilogy, Bitcoin and Paypal, and Microsoft defies a federal court order.--”The Selfie Meltdown” Link: goo.gl/PwKxdI Tech Roulette:--”HitchBOT” Link: goo.gl/PMWQMB--”Google Building an AI” Link: goo.gl/jL34Q0 Game of Choice:--”Ouya” Link: goo.gl/rjHDhc Important Email:--”Should I use S/MIME? Bitcoin 2.0 elaboration? Counterwallet?” Website of the Week:--”Greenaddress Bitcoin Wallet” Link: greenaddress.it/--”Worldmeters.info” Link: www.worldometers.info/ Hacksec:--”Rogue Cell Towers” Link: goo.gl/5Zyooh--”CryptoPhone 500” Link: goo.gl/iLduy2 Software of the Week:--”Tox” Link: www.wired.com/2014/09/tox/ The Climax:--”ThinkPad Edge E545” APPENDIX:--”Coins in the Kingdom” Link: launch.coinsinthekingdom.com/--”Keenevention 2014” Link: keenevention.info/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2BLACKCOIN: BP88JtwY9xLev5RKbxpZVuwyhtVdChrADNAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFaLITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9WBITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: sovryntech@riseup.netYou can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brian Sovryn prefers RetroShare! Below is the certificate to find and connect with the show on RetroShare (Username: SovrynTech) 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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also contact the show through BitMessage at the address: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------And we are on Twister! The P2P microblogging platform: @sovryntech -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------If you wish to send me a PGP-encrypted e-mail, the public key is below, and please send your e-mail to: brian@freetalklive.com (note: this also works for KryptoKit) -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----Version: SKS 1.1.4Comment: Hostname: pgp.mit.edu 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=aZrF-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------www.sovryntech.comwww.twitter.com/sovryntechplus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/liberty.me/members/briansovryn/
Nude selfies? Artificial Intelligence? Also, lots of blockchain technology talk, fake cell towers, nerdy stuff, S/MIME, and much, much more… Special Guest: None Stories of the Week:--Rapidfire Stories: Keenevention 2014, Coins in the Kingdom and Inside Bitcoins Vegas, Dreadnoughtus, iPhone 6 will have a wallet, Star Wars: A New Dawn, Star Trek on Showtime, Terminator Genisys trilogy, Bitcoin and Paypal, and Microsoft defies a federal court order.--”The Selfie Meltdown” Link: goo.gl/PwKxdI Tech Roulette:--”HitchBOT” Link: goo.gl/PMWQMB--”Google Building an AI” Link: goo.gl/jL34Q0 Game of Choice:--”Ouya” Link: goo.gl/rjHDhc Important Email:--”Should I use S/MIME? Bitcoin 2.0 elaboration? Counterwallet?” Website of the Week:--”Greenaddress Bitcoin Wallet” Link: greenaddress.it/--”Worldmeters.info” Link: www.worldometers.info/ Hacksec:--”Rogue Cell Towers” Link: goo.gl/5Zyooh--”CryptoPhone 500” Link: goo.gl/iLduy2 Software of the Week:--”Tox” Link: www.wired.com/2014/09/tox/ The Climax:--”ThinkPad Edge E545” APPENDIX:--”Coins in the Kingdom” Link: launch.coinsinthekingdom.com/--”Keenevention 2014” Link: keenevention.info/ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2BLACKCOIN: BP88JtwY9xLev5RKbxpZVuwyhtVdChrADNAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFaLITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9WBITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: sovryntech@riseup.netYou can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brian Sovryn prefers RetroShare! Below is the certificate to find and connect with the show on RetroShare (Username: SovrynTech) 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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also contact the show through BitMessage at the address: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------And we are on Twister! The P2P microblogging platform: @sovryntech -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------If you wish to send me a PGP-encrypted e-mail, the public key is below, and please send your e-mail to: brian@freetalklive.com (note: this also works for KryptoKit) -----BEGIN PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK-----Version: SKS 1.1.4Comment: Hostname: pgp.mit.edu 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=aZrF-----END PGP PUBLIC KEY BLOCK------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------www.sovryntech.comwww.twitter.com/sovryntechplus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/liberty.me/members/briansovryn/
A swamp creature like a hippo described as a land animal, ancient earth, formation of chocolate hills in Carmen, Bohol.
The second episode of WDRG? FINALLY gets to the bottom of what dinosaur real good. Turns out it's BIG, too! Co-hosts and dino-pals Abe Epperson, Bridgett Greenberg and Michael Swaim debate the virtues of the Dreadnoughtus, the big one you don't wanna fu' wi'. Art by Small Beans members. Wicked guitar riff by Abe Epperson.
We talk to paleontologist, professor, expeditioner, and science communicator Ken Lacovara about his book Why Dinosaurs Matter. Ken has unearthed some of the largest dinosaurs ever to walk our planet, including the super-massive Dreadnoughtus, which at 65 tons weighs more than seven T. rex.
Dr. Kenneth Lacovara has unearthed some of the largest dinosaurs ever to walk our planet, including the super-massive Dreadnoughtus, which at 65 tons weighs more than seven T. rex. We’re sure that Eva’s discussion with Dr. Lacovara about hunting for Dinosaurs will be fascinating to all our Big Dreamers -- young and old! For our show notes, visit DreamBigPodcast.com/94
SHOW NOTE คุยข่าวดังบรรพชีวินช่วงรอบปีที่ผ่านมา หางไดโนเสาร์ในอำพัน -1,2,3,4 หัวข้อคุย: ภาพลักษณ์ใหม่ไดโนเสาร์ - นอกจากปรับผิวเกล็ดเป็นขนแล้ว เดี๋ยวนี้ยังมีการรณรงค์ให้มีน้ำมีนวลมากขึ้น / วิธีคิด อย่างสัตว์ปัจจุบันเช่นแมว หรือวัว ถ้าเราวาดภาพจำลองโดยดูจากกระดูกอย่างเดียวเหมือนเวลาเราวาดไดโนเสาร์ เราอาจจะได้ภาพออกมาแบบนี้ (ข้างล่าง) ซึ่งเราจะเห็นว่าไม่เหมือนตัวจริงเลย ดังนั้นเวลาเราวาดภาพไดโนเสาร์ เราก็น่าจะคำนึงถึงชั้นเนื้อและไขมันให้มากขึ้นด้วย (ภาพจากหนังสือ All Yesterdays ) หรือกระทั่งความฟู รวมทั้งพวกอวัยวะต่างๆ ที่อาจจะมีอยู่แต่ไม่สะท้อนให้เห็นในโครงกระดูก ศิลปินหลายคน จินตนาการให้ดูว่าจริงๆ มันอาจจะเป็นแบบนี้ก็ได้นะ ข่าวเจอท่าตาย Psittacosaurus และขนแบบขนเม่น -1,2 จารย์ป้องค้นพบกระดูกประหลาด สันนิษฐานเป็น bacula กระดูกลึงค์ไดโนเสาร์? อันนี้ให้ดูกระดูกลึงค์ของตัวอะไรสักอย่างที่เป็นสัตว์ปัจจุบันก่อน สังเกตทรงและปลายข้างนึงจะเป็นร่องสองแฉก นี่คือชิ้นที่จารย์ป้องพบ มีความเหมือนมากๆ แล้วเจอเป็นคู่ เปเปอร์เก่าเคยเจอคล้ายๆ กันแต่สันนิษฐานว่าเป็น clavicle หรือกระดูกไหปลาร้า ผมเชียร์สมมติฐาน bacula ของจารย์ป้องมากกว่า 555 ข่าวเจอไข่ไดโนเสาร์ข้างถนนที่จีน -1 มีพูดเรื่อง Therizinosaurus ไดโนเสาร์เล็บ Wolverine ข่าวเจอโปรตีนไดโนเสาร์ล่าสุด -1,2 และข่าวก่อนหน้านี้ที่ด้อมบอกว่าใช้ระบุเพศ T-Rex ได้ -1 เล่าเรื่องความสนใจของน้องเฟิร์ส / สืบเรื่องราวจากการส่องดูเนื้อเยื่อไดโนเสาร์ในระดับละเอียด / การเรียงตัวผลึกในชั้นเคลือบฟันของไดโนเสาร์ บอกอะไรได้บ้าง ฟันฉลามแปลกๆ Dreadnoughtus ไดโนเสาร์ใหญ่ที่สุด ครึ่งหลัง วิวัฒนาการของ mammal เริ่มจากดูความสัมพันธ์สัตว์มีกระดูกสันหลังโดยรวม สัตว์เลื้อยคลานกลุ่ม synapsids บรรพบุรุษ mammal / อีกกลุ่มนึงแตกสายไปเป็น amniotes คือสัตว์เลื้อยคลานปัจจุบันต่างๆ ไดโนเสาร์ และนก สายสัตว์เลี้ยงลูกด้วยนมยุคแรกๆ ยังไม่ค่อยหลากหลายมาก และเป็นกึ่งสัตว์เลื้อยคลาน พวก cynodont เหมือนหนูมีเขี้ยว พวก therapsids หลักฐาน mammal แท้จริงตัวเก่าแก่ที่สุดคือ adelobasileus จากยุค Jurassic เจอทั้งที่อเมริกาเหนือและอียิปต์ ซึ่งเมื่อก่อนอยู่ติดกัน อีกตัวอย่าง จากยุค Jurassic ชื่อ juramaia sinensis เจอที่จีน หลังจบยุคไดโนเสาร์ คือประมาณ 55 ล้านปีก่อน พวกที่อยู่รอดมาเป็นกลุ่ม primate หน้าตาคล้ายหนู ต่อมากลายเป็นต้นตระกูลที่ให้กำเนิดวิวัฒนาการ mammal สายใหม่ๆ ยุค 45 ล้านปีเริ่มมีพวกกีบเดี่ยวกีบคู่ พอถึงยุคประมาณ 10-20 กว่าล้านปีก่อน (Miocene) เป็นยุครุ่งเรื่องที่ mammal มีความหลากหลายเยอะมาก มาดูตัวอย่างเด่นๆ กัน Chalicotherium เหมือนกอรริลล่าหัวม้า แต่จริงๆ เป็นญาติใกล้กับแรด (กีบคี่) ลิงค์ไปวิดิโอถ่ายทอด live ทางแฟนเพจ Arsinoitherium โคตรแรด แต่จริงๆ เป็นญาติใกล้กับสัตว์กีบคู่อย่างหมู กวาง ควาย มากกว่า Paraceratherium สัตว์บกที่ใหญ่ที่สุดในโลก รองจากไดโนเสาร์ หน้าคล้ายยีราฟ แต่จริงๆ เป็นสายแรด (ดูจากฟัน) platybelodon Gomphotherium ข้ามมาดูตัวเด่นๆ ยุคน้ำแข็ง Machauchenia Megatherium สล็อธยักษ์ smilodon เสือเขี้ยวดาบ วิวัฒนาการของม้า Terror Bird กินอะไรกันแน่ ยุคน้ำแข็งแถวเมืองไทยมีตัวอะไรบ้าง (12000 ปีก่อน) แพนด้า gigantopithecus Hyena ยีราฟคอสั้น ยุคไมโอซีน ทุกวันนี้เหลือ Okapi ยีราฟยุคก่อน มีหนอกประหลาดๆ เยอะมาก Prolibytherium Sivatherium Bramatherium โปรโมท เชิญร่วมงาน "บรรพชนชื่นชีวิน" 18-19 มีนาคม https://www.facebook.com/witcastthailand/posts/1396261173770050
Interview with Dr. Dave Varricchio from Montana State University about Troodon and dinosaur eggs. New dinosaur footprints discovered in Australia while new dinosaur footprints are going on display in New Zealand, "Back to Dinosaur Island" 1&2 reviews as well as a new VR video of Dreadnoughtus, balloon-like dinosaurs made of clay, dinosaurs playing sports, and more. Also dinosaur of the day Raptorex, a tyrannosaurid that some think may be a juvenile Tarbosaurus. Visit http://www.IKnowDino.com for more information including a map of dinosaur museums near you, and let us know if your favorite is missing! You can also visit https://www.patreon.com/iknowdino to get the inside scoop on I Know Dino.
Dreadnoughtus is the biggest dinosaur ever found. Dr. Ken Lacovara (Rowan University) is the paleontologist who discovered it. He tells comedians Aparna Nancherla, Hari Kondabolu, and Maeve Higgins all about tiny headed dinos, breaking rocks, and how he once intimidated Harrison Ford. Recorded at the Franklin Institute as part of the 2016 Philadelphia Science Festival. Hosted by Chris Duffy. Produced by Pretty Good Friends.
Dinosaur news, including illegally sold fossils at the Gem & Mineral Show in Tucson, AZ, a woman who is afraid of dinosaurs attacking, and two new dinosaur toys. Also, dinosaur of the day Dreadnoughtus, a dinosaur larger than nine T-rexes combined, that probably feared nothing. Visit http://www.IknowDino.com for more information including a link to dinosaur sites near you.
Internet slowdown day, a message is sent from one person's brain to another across the world, Paleontologists just unveiled the dinosaur Dreadnoughtus, the team from Internet Slowdown and Victoria from Reddit host AMAs, and more. Hosts: Sarah Lane and Chad (OMGchad) Johnson We invite you to check out our subreddit at reddit.com/r/redditup Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/shows/redditup. Thanks to Cachefly for the bandwidth for this show.
Internet slowdown day, a message is sent from one person's brain to another across the world, Paleontologists just unveiled the dinosaur Dreadnoughtus, the team from Internet Slowdown and Victoria from Reddit host AMAs, and more. Hosts: Sarah Lane and Chad (OMGchad) Johnson We invite you to check out our subreddit at reddit.com/r/redditup Download or subscribe to this show at twit.tv/shows/redditup. Thanks to Cachefly for the bandwidth for this show.