These Ancient Animals Scarier Than Dinosaurs
2024 ж. 27 Қаң.
696 575 Рет қаралды
Are there many who know what was BEFORE the dinosaurs? What animals lived 100 million years before them? Or what fearsome beasts lived 50 million years after them?
We bet there are far fewer experts here.
But there must have been some creatures living on the planet at those times, right?
And some of those creatures were scarier than the dinosaurs. If not in size, then in appearance.
Today you're going to discover:
What ancient fish had a bite force twice stronger than a modern polar bear?
What ancient bird had a wingspan almost as large as an F16 fighter jet?
What monster had the body of a bull and the head of a boar?
And many more interesting things!
Ancient animals scarier than dinosaurs.
I love the dunkleosteus and their guillotine mouths. They are one of my favorite ancient animals.
Ditto. Glad it's not just me
Me too 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
Same. I just wish ARK devs knew about its speed...
I like them also. If you've ever played ark, you can ride them. Lol
@@MrNeedshelpedu that is so freaking cool!
3:43 "they found that the jaws [of dunkleosteus] could open so quickly they sucked water in like a pump. This works well while hunting smaller prey." Meanwhile on screen: Dunkleosteus failing miserably at hunting ammonites.
That's with pretty much most fish.
Yeah, nearly every predatory fish gulps in smaller prey, just like a grouper.
If you look closely, it is sucking the creature out of the shell.
@@amieleblanc1803 I saw that. I'm no idiot.
@@TheThrivingTherapsid Never said you were. Just thought you might have missed it. Cheers
Imagine a spider the size of a bus
If there was a cute lil spider the size of a bus. It probably would not even bother trying to turn the humans insides into a yummie stew..
no
god no I'm from Australia and seeing one over a metre wide is enough [they are up in the trees under the bark and they ambush prey on the birds reptiles snakes rats small animals and mammals}
Didn't happen, mate.
@@Yomam_Sophat yer it did come over I'll show ya where to find 'em. You can tell the four other people there that saw it too. lol didnt happen go f yourself mate
If we understood the length of time that was involved of ancient animals it may make better sense to our senses.
That's what you get when AI makes videos
100,000,000,000 years before dinosaurs it tells you twice when the video starts
I was having visions of this stuff days before coming across this video. The great continent and everything.
The Dunkleosteus reminds me of an episode of River Monsters with Jeremy Wade, where he investigates what kind of fish that castrated two men in New Guinea.
Ah, fairly certain that was an Offyourcockus.
He never finds anything except an occasional piranha
@@Dusk.EighthLegion i think it was just a large foreskinsnapper
@@Dusk.EighthLegionoffyurbollox
The P in pterodactyl and pterosaur are silent, there I said it! That was driving me nuts.
What is more ridiculous, words with letters that are not to be pronounced or pronouncing a word exactly like it is spelled? Do you also get irritated if people drive on a parkway or park in a driveway?
@@michaelcrispin1879 it's called English, the pronunciation is part of the language. do I pronounce your name mi-ch-ay-el or mike-al?
Simply put, all languages have rules. "Everybody does it" is no defense for bad grammar. Our education system is woefully failing our young, though many older people who should know better do it too. It isn't rocket science, we are (at least used to be) taught this by third grade.
@lancerevell5979 absolutely! In a time where everyone literally has access to a small computer that can spell check with a 2 minute search, many are too lazy to even do that let alone learn from the mistake when corrected.
thenwhy the f if P there? tell your goverment to remove it
kuddos to the cameramen
How did he get so close to them
I love how they added two of my most favorite childhood memories: Walking with Beasts and ARK Survival😂
Always fascinating. We were not there. It’s amazing how paleontologists and other scientists using only fossil remains, many times incomplete, can explain how an extinct species lived, ate and otherwise survived during their time on our planet.
Paleontologists have good fantasy. This is amazing. Having only sculls they imagine whole body and presents their imagination as truth. It reminds me so called Nebraska man.😂
It’s called speculation Of course they don’t really know
I always loved watching these videos in junior high and high school in the mid 90s along with the planetarium always fun to listen to these folks even if alot of its theory
Well it's no wonder why we didn't live at that time. We would have been essentially chicken McNuggets to these beasts.
I do most certainly love 💕 all of the animals/fish that lived during all of the periods of the earth 🌍, and I do wish that I could have lived when they lived 😮
Great video, thanks.
The fact is is that none of this is fact .its all a guess . And a decietful guess to undermined God
@@richardcoble9498 bible speaks of large creatures and "leviathans" that once roamed the earth and seas though😅
Ok immediately I had to pause and rewind on that saw toothed shark turtle clam monster and I hope rest of video is about that creature.
Dunkleosteus AKA The Giant Aquatic Bolt Cutter creature
How did the scientists figure out these animal behaviors from a few fossilized bones?
yes..im wondering too
There is a Dunkleosteus skull at the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller, Alberta, Canada. Highly recommend checking it out if you plan a trip there!
Also there's one at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago. Impressive.
A video about the Licalotapus would be a sight to behold.
if it was for real , how does anyone know what anything looked like millions of years ago even before the dinosaurs?
@@freetheworld12very true. I heard not long ago that a lot more prehistoric creatures had feathers than archeologists once thought so just imagining the intense & bright color variations that could have been on some of these beast is mind blowing but I was being silly with the "Lic-alot-a-pus", a lesbian dinosaur 😁
Have to say I had no idea. Makes me wonder. During evolution everything gets smaller. How small will lifeforms be in 100 million years and what odd stuff will they discover about us?
Less resources. When food in particular, is less available a smaller size allows one to make use of what is available. And another thought. Being small may let one hide easier. Just thinking.
I think it probably used an electric currant to stun it's victim's with that saw like protrusion, or even swished it about in the silt to find food
So many species have gone extinct it's just mind boggling. Also discomforting knowing we will as well be extinct one day. We may even contribute to the cause.
Thank You For This Video .. Very Interesting ✌🏾❤️💡🌍
"They fed on sharks...", let that sink in.
This channel always seems to be right on point, despite leaving that one species, who knew with all of the money, pouring into “endangered species campaigns,” that there out there somewhere, “living fossils” still exist! #KudosTsuki
Crocodiles have the most powerful bite of any animal alive recorded, it would've been more impressive to talk about ancient Crocodilians
The serrations on the small doriospus were possibly a defense mechanism in the event a larger predator tried to swallow it. It also could have been poisonous.
We need a god dam fucking time machine to study them personally
We need to further study more simple creatures first.
Real bro. ARK SURVIVAL and Jurassic Park irl. Where my platform saddle
@R3DWOLFY96 no we don't need a time machine we don't need to mess up the past like we've messed up the present and Future we've done enough damage we don't need to do more especially when it's connected to us if we were to make a time machine we'd most definitely ruin the past it would affect the future greatly
They’d use the Time Machine for evil purposes as we all know
6:21 'He aint heavyy, he's mah brotherrrrrrrr'
Me an ARK player: Is the first one a fricking Ferrox in monster form? YES! Argentavis!
What if Dunkleosteus actually had fleshy lips? We tend to perceive fossils as face values. From the skeletons alone, Hippos are so goddamn scary. Beefy looking build, terrifying teeth... It'd be interesting if the giant terrifying fish actually had lips... Imagine the horror.
Maybe the Doryaspis moved like a Lung fish?
. Doriaspis, Like an alligator, the fins probably had multiple uses. Steering, digging, maybe even crawling on land.
5:30 Ammonites not amenities. LOL
Yo this video is chock full of horrid pronunciation - i mean - Dunk-lee-osteus? Come on. hahaha
In addition to their pseudoteeth (a serrated lining of the mouth, not embryonically or histologically equivalent structures), the tiny beady eyes of Dunkleosteus spp. contribute in giving them a truly terrifying head. They are so disproportionately small they accentuate their alien physiognomy.
The age of the vertebrates were off for a great start. RIP invertebrates as apex predators.
Lmao @00:58 that’s the werewolf from Bad Moon… solid lower-budget flick. Stars the kid from the 90’s Dennis the Menace. Great animatronics but terrible CGI transformation scene. Good jump scares. Definitely recommend it.
As a guy named Dennis I approve this message
I'd say anything during the era when there were giant insects running around are more terrifying than the dinosaurs
It sticks it's tongue out which looks like a chain saw... would make an interesting pet.
These creatures resemble animals around right now because there are forms that are manifesting on Earth in the form of these species. E.g. the vulture form, elephant form, shark form, etc.
13:45 i think its a bottom dweller. The serated protrusion on its face and fins would be scraping up the sandy ocean floor to feed on other small fish and crustaceans. The protruding spikes on the back would be for protection from attack from above?
thank you
One must take into consideration that 99.9 percent of animals that die are not fossilized.
At around 16:40 it says the Mosasauru's main pray was sea turtles, but how do we know this? The shells of the sea turtles would be more evident than the soft bodies of octopuses and other cephalopods. And the beaks of a cephalopods would probably pass through the animal more easily than the shells of a tortus. I also now wonder what cephalopods might have existed back then, it would be very difficult to find evidence of cephalopods or jellys (or similar) from that time period.
Basically Andrewsarkus was a gigantic predatory *sheep* the size of the largest species of *horse* ever to exist; it was, simply put, a carnivorous lamb.
Would that make it a literal wolf in sheep's clothing? A real life version of the "Beware of false prophets" tale.
@@och70 No, more like a sheep in wolf's clothing to be exact, but one that'd *hunt* the wolves.
I think it looks like a GIANT modern-day hyena!
@@janicecole2722 Notice the feet: those're hooves, as in *sheep hooves* on Andrewsarkus; that is the giveaway: it is a carnivorous sheep.
@@janicecole2722 Then look at its *feet*, those give away its true family line: it is a carnivorous sheep.
I wonder if scientists thought of hot lava areas or places where it might be almost frozen and in very deep waters due to the smooth bottom and might have acted like a stingray
The ancestors of the modern elephants had short trunks. The lower shovel shaped jaw could also have been used to scoop up water to drink.
Könnt ihr das Scavenger-Geräusch auch hören ;D?
Dun-kil-os-te-us to be phonetic. The discover was named in hoonour of David Dunkle.
I imagine Doryaspis as something like the Tick of the seas, piercing larger animals with their rostrum and staying put with those serrated fins
That would make sense.
Doriospus, the snout resembles a sword fish, it might be used for defence from prediters and maybe even to cut down plant life in the seas, the protrusions on the fins may have been used in the same manner, from the small size of this creature it may have had a diet of plankton and maybe even shellfish, which could also be the reason for its protrusions, for example ammonites shells were tough and barnacles stick to things, meaning that it may have needed to break into the shells to get to its food
Not saying that's what it is, just taking what I know about current life and using that knowledge to make an educated guess
Yeah I hear ya - it's like wow this is Very detailed info... Can we know such details? I dunno... Forces me to be skeptical, but it seems mostly logical and reasonable.
It's interesting how life on Earth us always changing. I'm sure it will continue.
Another possible evolutionary example of the large flightless birds could also be the roadrunners of the American Southwest. I believe they hunt lizards and small snakes, meat sources for their food. Sound familiar? Just a thought.
цікава і пізнавальна інформація. але в частині, де фігурує дунклеостис, в воді вдруг побачив рештки якоїсь будівлі...так цікаво і оригінально!
Enjoyed the unbiased commentary that was scientifically driven and never offered up matter of fact conclusions that were just speculations. This is the opposite of cosmology shows that keep spilling nonsense theories that arent supported by scientific data as matter of fact laws. My son loves these shows and so do I.
do you think the earth is flat
😂 No. I know it's not flat. I was in the military. We had to look through very powerful scopes to see out up to 20 kilometer distances. Even on a what appears to be a flat stretch of land, you cannot see entire structures that were out past 10km. You could only see the tops of the structures or the heads of people that I knew were there, such as other teammates when we did split team operations. i.e.) because of the gentle curvature out at these close distances, only a percentage of the objects were visible instead of the entire person or structure as would be expected on a flat earth.
@@nrodas255ok good haha, I was unsure about your phrase "cosmology shows that keep spilling nonsense"
12:53 I surmise that the body protrusions and especially the serrations thereon may have been a defense mechanism to prevent larger predators from swallowing doryaspis.
Dunkleosteus was much smaller than depicted. Roughly three to four meters across.
why compare dunkleosteus biteforce to a polar bear and not a great white or at least a saltie (strongest bite force in the animal kingdom) seems like a really random comparison
Could the Doryaspis have been the Remora of it's time?
Diuretic Jurassic pirozhok was all very fascinating times in history
Exist one thing wrong with this video, that is the fact that all the birds are dinosaurs, it's means that putting birds on this list was a mistake.
This is why I love playing ark survival evolved
Ark Survival Evolved footage there for the Argy. 🦅
Good grief! Ever hear of the Cambrian explosion?
I WILL LIKE AND SUBSCRIBE AFTER I WATCH, JEEZ
In aircraft, forward swept wings create an "unstable" aerodynamic situation. Which makes controlled stable movement more difficult and less energy efficient, but also makes the vehicle more agile and responsive. Hydro and aero dynamics share many principles. If the same applies so water, then perhaps this fish evolved forward swept fins to better evade predators or better bring its "spear" to bear. The energy cost of less efficient hydrodynamics also implies a food rich environment. (Given that efficiency is a major component in most creatures.)
Peridoctals! Omg that made me laugh 24:53
Did he say antiodactyl as well? ) I heard petrosaurs too. Sadly, I did not hear dieselodontids.
Interesting
someone put antiquity ruins with the dunkleosteus good job man how confused childrens
Seems like a nightmare
Right On great video
The lack of good parenting and at home education of kids simply amazes me. I had a 10 or 11 year old boy next door who had no idea of what a mammoth or mastodon was. I was all over that when I was 7 or probably before that. The next time I was at my MD's office a science magazine in the waiting room had a rather detailed article on mammoths. I asked for and received the magazine explaining it was for a neighbor's kid. How pitiful can it get?
Knowing what a Mammoth is, is useless information.
@@johnyewtube2286 I believe scratching a curiosity itch is a good thing. Not being curious is a scary thought.
Wonder if Shortest Blockbuster knows ?
why no documentaries about the first fish with vertebrae that evolved into humans? i found only a handful of documentaries, and definitely not taught in school.
Id love to fish back then 😂
Greatest adventure and super
Roots seems like the logical use of a shovel mouth
Boy they had some wierd animals
What about the Haast eagle of New Zealand that died off about 800 years ago and fed off the giant Moa birds? these were supposedly the largest birds to ever fly
how do they breed? what makes them different from dinasours?
If these fish fed on each other, it must have made the reproduction process a bit of a challenge.
0.28 dinosaurs where dinosaurs not lizards
Yaaaaassss more dinosaurs MORE 🎉
Terror Birds like Phorosrochos were basically 10ft tall roadrunners; miniature tyrannosaurs in their behavior and anatomy that'd been upgraded to live on smaller-sized game.
Those birds aren’t as scary when on a big spit with a hot sauce rub with a bit of salt. Feed the whole village. Thank you.
@@r.d.sandman6474 In theory; yet those animals would be deadly game.
They glide on Ark with those small wings
@@anthonyjones9868 Well, seeing as "Ark" is a fantasy science game, it is meaningless.
They will certainly return, millions of years from now, when seriemas evolve into new species!!!
Not lizards. They shared a common ancestor.
100% Science Fiction
If you don’t have a full schedule your hypothesis on their behavior, speed, food, is all guess work.
Throughout the Æons, advanced life among the stars, avoided Earth. Naw, I'm good...
I still say that the dodo never disappeared but rather evolved and furthermore if the terror bird went extinct where did the ostrich and Emu come from?
My favorite is the Megalodon
Everybody likes dunkleosteus but im different i like. Mososeus play in the movie Jurassic world, mesoseus fish.🦈 now on land arginfeus largest bird,🦅 wooly mammoth 🦣 sabertooth tiger 🐆.
Dorispres. Lived life like a stingray or flathead. It wasn't pelagic due to shape and aerodynamics. The wings were used to help anker it to reefs and the sea bottom, hence why it also had ridges on the wings to give more traction, the nose is very similar to saw sharks and such, witch are usually marine animals that hunt from the bottom upwards. Where as stingrays hunt from on top of the prey so they just need surface area for broader chances of engulfing the prey....Just an assumption from someone who knows nothing about the creature.
The Doriaspus purpose was to keep the see floor clean of Unnecessary plant life..
There are sawfish living today. Also may go instinct by humans.
17:38 Wait. You’re telling me that whales evolved twice? Ha! Take that crabs!
They were offering duncleostius instead of cod or haddock at our local chip shop but they had to stop selling the because the kept eating your chips LOL
More like they'd not have sufficient customers before the fish rots; or the fishes would turn to dining *on* the customers!
I love it LOL
@@Jarial7 You love what, pray tell?
Couldn't we see the fossil remains that ked us to believe it existed and what it looked lije?
Think what if😮
Nothing more scarier than man
My mum was a t-Rex and my father was a hamster