A Paleontologist Reacts to Ice-Age Animals in the Movies

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Canadian Museum of Nature

Canadian Museum of Nature

Рік тому

Canadian Museum of Nature palaeobiologist Danielle Fraser shares insights about ice-age animals shown in the movies "10,000 BC", "Alpha" and "Ice Age". Not every animal during the Pleistocene had sabre teeth!
00:30 "10,000 BC"
04:23 "Alpha"
11:53 "Ice Age"
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КОМЕНТАРІ: 199
@preyasmanthedemopan2854
@preyasmanthedemopan2854 11 місяців тому
Fun fact; Blue Sky didn't want to add dodos at all, but Fox said they'd cut funding if they were excluded, hence why they're all shown to die at the end, and never show up in the franchise again besides one dying in the second film
@LincolnDWard
@LincolnDWard 11 місяців тому
That's a weird hill for Fox to want to die on.
@preyasmanthedemopan2854
@preyasmanthedemopan2854 11 місяців тому
@@LincolnDWard that's Fox for you though, lol
@RoseNZieg
@RoseNZieg 10 місяців тому
they were not aiming for accuracy. it's for comedic effects.
@merafirewing6591
@merafirewing6591 9 місяців тому
​@@RoseNZieg and those comedic affects were pure gold.
@tm43977
@tm43977 Рік тому
Finally a Paleotology react to Ice Age
@monkeybrain0212
@monkeybrain0212 11 місяців тому
When it comes to ice age 3 and beyond, all scientific accuracy is out of the window 😅🙄
@garrettdonovan8238
@garrettdonovan8238 11 місяців тому
There was actually another video of a paleontologist who pointed out that Manny, Sid, Diego and the human baby represented the four main groups of placental mammals (Afrotheria, Xenarthra, Laurasiatheria and Euarchontoglires)
@KitsukiiPlays
@KitsukiiPlays 11 місяців тому
@@garrettdonovan8238 that’s actually v interesting!
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 10 місяців тому
Great observation
@nickofriant8512
@nickofriant8512 11 місяців тому
9:33 According to the creators of Alpha, the large cat was a cave lion. They just added the oversized fangs to make it look cooler. 🦁
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 10 місяців тому
I figured it was a lion based on its tail
@henryJBonaparte
@henryJBonaparte 11 місяців тому
The last mammoth still lived on Wrangler Iclands in Siberia, at the same time as King Khufu/Cheops instructed his great architect Imhothep to build him the first Egyptian pyramid. Like 4500 years ago.
@etienneporras7252
@etienneporras7252 10 місяців тому
Khufu's was not the first Pyramid built in Egypt. It IS true that Imhotep designed the first Pyramid but it was not for Khufu, but for Djoser several hundred years earlier.
@hubertdenise3100
@hubertdenise3100 Рік тому
Issues with movies depicting ice age animals: 1) wooly mammoth is oversized frequently.I noticed in 10,000BC the mammoths seem to be somewhere in the region of 5m tall or more, whereas in reality they were as big as a asian elaphent. 2)humans are portrayed as being able to frequently hunt mammoths and other huge megafauna frequently, whereas in reality we know that not only is there limited evidence for hunting, but that the wooden spears may have broken on impact due to the sheer size of the animal and fragility of the wood and stone weapons. 3)Terror birds depicted alongside people, this is false, none alive by 1million years. 4)Sabre tooths are often depicted too sleek and cat like, they would have been stocky as fuck, they took down huge megafauna.
@Elephant-Puppet
@Elephant-Puppet 11 місяців тому
Steppe Mammoths The Cousins Of Woolly Mammoths We’re estimated to have had a shoulder height of 4.5 metres (15 ft) and a weight of 14.3 tonnes (14.1 long tons; 15.8 short tons).
@Slurptacular64
@Slurptacular64 11 місяців тому
Also humans very regularly hunted mammoths, there are mammoth pits where we dumped their bones that have evidence of hundreds of mammoths, we just usually hunted late adolescents, or teenage mammoths. They existed alongside us when we had access to stone and early metal tools, and things like flint and obsidian arrow/spear tips have been found embedded in mammoth bones.
@mageofdoomsie1598
@mageofdoomsie1598 11 місяців тому
There’s more evidence that humans chased mammoths off cliffs versus actually chasing and spearing them. There are gigantic wooly mammoth “death pits” full of bones left behind by the hunters. They’d pick all the meat and skin off and just leave them there (maybe taking some bones for decoration/accessories)
@shanibromage943
@shanibromage943 11 місяців тому
That was fun I will probably forget everything I just learnt but fun anyway
@vlara9139
@vlara9139 11 місяців тому
Last terror birds extincted around 40k years ago... they could meet with the people. 😅
@chrisgraham2904
@chrisgraham2904 11 місяців тому
Although not accurate, the creation of the saber tooth squirrel in Ice Age was absolute genius. I could watch that little guy chase his nuts all day long.
@prasetyodwikuncorojati2434
@prasetyodwikuncorojati2434 11 місяців тому
Scrat incidentally pretty similar with treeshrew, an obscure squirrel like mammal which really exist till modern time, although it only live in Southeast Asian jungle and of course this animal ill suited for icy landscape
@michaelhallman9032
@michaelhallman9032 11 місяців тому
The apparent flanges on the lower jaws of the saber-toothed creatures in Ice Age strongly suggest the marsupial saber-tooth, Thylacosmilus, rather than the metatherian Smilodon. But considering the liberties the animators took through the whole movie, it would be pretty hard to pin down a particular species in any case.
@thecanadiandane7262
@thecanadiandane7262 11 місяців тому
They made the executive decision for the sabretooths design to be as freaky and weird as possible, they talk about it in the behind the scenes. Sid looked more like a ground sloth in earlier concepts and models, but they chose a more cartoony and outlandish design instead
@pondfishdream
@pondfishdream 11 місяців тому
I personally would LOVE a series of this scientist just watching and pausing movies to comment on wether the animal is moving accurately or looks accurate that’s my FAVORITE I LOVE picking apart media in that specific way
@canadanaturemuseum
@canadanaturemuseum 10 місяців тому
Any movie or expert suggestions? We're looking to expand this series!
@meghangildelamadrid5869
@meghangildelamadrid5869 11 місяців тому
That's so cool about the coloring of mammoths. I had no idea that they varied so much. Neat! Thanks for this great video!
@canadanaturemuseum
@canadanaturemuseum 10 місяців тому
You are so welcome! Thanks for watching!
@kamion53
@kamion53 11 місяців тому
not only is the sabetooth in 10.000 BC oversized, the Smilodon lived in the America's only and not in a pseudo Egyptian setting, the sabertooth living in Europe and Asia was the Homotherium, but it's canines were [robabvbly not large enough to impress the audience. There was a hyena species living in the Yukon, but I think it was Chasmaporthetes, the "running hyena", build more wolflike and not Crocuta, the spotted hyena.
@simonj3413
@simonj3413 10 місяців тому
Correct
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 2 місяці тому
Not to mention the tail length and the cheeks being too wide and the nose slopes down. That’s just a tiger.
@kevinnorwood8782
@kevinnorwood8782 Рік тому
Were there only a select few specific "tribes" of humans that specialized in hunting Mammoths? I know the Clovis people were famous for doing so, but were there any other notable ones?
@GallowglassVT
@GallowglassVT 11 місяців тому
It's difficult to say for certain, but the findings we do have indicate that mammoth hunts weren't a common thing. It was probably a once in a blue moon thing, potentially involving multiple tribal groups coming together, including Paleo-American groups like the Clovis culture. It's possible that it was a major event, as findings in the UK have shown. It's on the coast now, but one of the sites in question used to be a cliff overlooking grassland and the site is loaded with butchered mammoths among other large creatures, so it's likely that they scared them into falling over before finishing them off (assuming they didn't die on impact).
@ArawnsFire
@ArawnsFire 11 місяців тому
Most the pity not one mention of the Phorusrhacos scene in 10,000BC. These “ Terror Birds “ were apex predators and lived in the Americas during the Pleistocene. Not known from the more northern latitudes but, definitely present in the southern US.
@dwightehowell8179
@dwightehowell8179 11 місяців тому
Actually the last mammoth lived on an island off the coast of Siberia at about the same time as pyramid building in Egypt if that actually matters to anyone.
@lillykawaiifox
@lillykawaiifox 11 місяців тому
I'm glad she mentioned that Sid should be much bigger. I've seen a statue in person here in Brazil that is supposed to represent the actual size of the sloth.... And it was HUGE. 😂😂
@ShiningAndStarstruck
@ShiningAndStarstruck 10 місяців тому
Also, if it was actually accurate, sid would've worn Diego's ass like a coat
@kitsune2284
@kitsune2284 11 місяців тому
Scrat the Sabertooth squirrel was just a creature the studio wanted to do just for the fun of it. They knew that sabertooth squirrel didn't exist lol
@doodlemunchkin2222
@doodlemunchkin2222 11 місяців тому
I wonder if the coat colors of wolves were even that diverse that far back in the Ice Age like what Alpha shows. From my knowledge, black coats in wolves didn’t exist until pretty recently as a result from wolves breeding with dogs who carried over that black-coat gene to dogs. Black wolves now, as a result of that, are often more genetically diverse and healthier b/c of it, and also have more tamer personalities and temperaments, whereas grey-coat wolves (which range from white and grey, to brown to red and anything in-between that isn’t black) are more aggressive. So I wonder if Alpha took that into account or not or if I just didn’t know some older species of wolf at the time carried that black coat gene before dogs introduced it to them.
@sarahr8311
@sarahr8311 10 місяців тому
I'm no geneticist, but doesn't the fact that some dogs have black coats mean that the black coat gene existed in wolves? Like, in order to breed dogs with black coats, darker fur genes must exist in their wolf ancestors somewhere?
@doodlemunchkin2222
@doodlemunchkin2222 10 місяців тому
@@sarahr8311 idk but I know that’s what wolf genealogists say when it comes to Yellowstone wolves. Probably because dogs are so vastly different looking in colors and sizes it’s possible to have them go back and introduce stuff into the pure wolves’ genes. Not everything comes directly from wolves. Otherwise all dogs would still look like wolves today. Black coats were probably eventually bred in or popped up in dogs at some point. There are things that are distinctly related and unique to dogs. So that’s why I’m thinking it didn’t occur super far back in their heritage like seen in the movie.
@sarahr8311
@sarahr8311 10 місяців тому
@@doodlemunchkin2222 fair enough. I didn't know they said that about the Yellowstone wolves, that's cool.
@molly1949
@molly1949 7 місяців тому
Syd and the squirrel thingy are my favorite wee characters. I have many children n grandchildren and now great grands.i watch this movie all the time
@scottriddell3514
@scottriddell3514 10 місяців тому
Gosh heck ice age was a highlight of my childhood And sid looked pretty strange with his eyes stretched out
@tracygardner6318
@tracygardner6318 22 дні тому
Absolutely fascinating thank you
@stevethomas9320
@stevethomas9320 11 місяців тому
What about the terror bird from 10,000 BC?
@MossyMozart
@MossyMozart 11 місяців тому
This was a fun episode. I wish I knew even more about the Ice Age(s).
@jalejablonsky2396
@jalejablonsky2396 11 місяців тому
So what you're telling me is Sid should have worn Diego as a hat?
@FingerGamers3
@FingerGamers3 11 місяців тому
If sid was a giant ground sloth than yes he would had easily been able to take on diego
@Rubiastraify
@Rubiastraify 10 місяців тому
Very interesting! Yes - I burst out laughing at the galloping mammoths in 10,000 BC!
@canadanaturemuseum
@canadanaturemuseum 10 місяців тому
Glad you enjoyed it 😂
@icarusbinns3156
@icarusbinns3156 11 місяців тому
Spotted and brown hyenas are more African animals but… I’m pretty sure the striped hyena is more of an Asian resident, alongside tigers and rusty-spotted cats (just look them up, they are adorable!)
@jabbarmuhammad8804
@jabbarmuhammad8804 11 місяців тому
Ice age animals need more recognition
@bkjeong4302
@bkjeong4302 11 місяців тому
It should be noted that Smilodon was, ironically, poorly adapted for ice age conditions; it did much better during the warmer interglacials (the Pleistocene was NOT one cold period$.
@pranavarvind4281
@pranavarvind4281 10 місяців тому
This is a very long shot, but are you u/iamnotburgerking?
@bkjeong4302
@bkjeong4302 10 місяців тому
@@pranavarvind4281 Yep.
@pranavarvind4281
@pranavarvind4281 10 місяців тому
@@bkjeong4302 Good to know you bust palaeontology misconceptions on UKposts too. Always appreciate your write-ups on the subreddit.
@Fablevill
@Fablevill 10 місяців тому
I think 10,000 bc should be called a genre of hypothetical science… a series of what ifs inspired by real world understandings of science peppered with a bit of whimsical fantasy. It’s fun.
@Ahonya666
@Ahonya666 11 місяців тому
I see a paleontology video, I click
@companylovesmisery1463
@companylovesmisery1463 10 місяців тому
The feline in Alpha is listed as being a cave lion in the Wikipedia entry. I wish more movies, realistically or not, would depict Arctodus simus. The first Ice Age will always be a favorite movie of mine (especially compared to the later movies) historical "accuracy" notwithstanding.
@kieferbrown6855
@kieferbrown6855 8 місяців тому
Nice thank you this is very interesting, as an australian i’ve heard and seen all about australian megafauna, nice change
@ShilohSmith
@ShilohSmith 11 місяців тому
Didn’t they actually find a fossil of a prehistoric squirrel like species with saver fangs AFTER the ice age movies? I’m sure I read something about that. Obviously if it’s true there’s only been one (and probably not a whole one) specimen found otherwise it’d be more well known.
@GiordanDiodato
@GiordanDiodato 11 місяців тому
they did, but it lived at the time of Dinosaurs
@merafirewing6591
@merafirewing6591 9 місяців тому
​@@GiordanDiodato there is still a possibility that there could be an offshoot of that spieces, but it's definitely a big stretch.
@iron_side5674
@iron_side5674 10 місяців тому
I can never see or hear anything about Ice Age without thinking about that one thing that Casual Geographic said so very eloquently and truthfully. If Ice Age was real, Sid would´ve worn Diego like a Furcoat.
@morganrobinson2436
@morganrobinson2436 11 місяців тому
I am from Washington State, and used to love visiting the Grabd Coulee area, which has the well known ‘Blue Rhino’ fossil. What is the difference between this and the Wooly Rhino? Amd im so curious that only one of these fossils have been found here!
@anorthosite
@anorthosite 11 місяців тому
Wasn't "Blue Rhino" also the name for a strain of Cannabis (asking for a friend) ? ;)
@TheMoises1213
@TheMoises1213 10 місяців тому
Love her!!!! She’s awesome
@dr.zoidberg8666
@dr.zoidberg8666 10 місяців тому
Take a shot every time she says "Yukon."
@Luredreier
@Luredreier 11 місяців тому
Never knew about "Alpha" I'll have to look that up.
@Valeska687
@Valeska687 11 місяців тому
The only real thing I didn't like about this movie is that the characters in the movie spoke in a made up language similar to what they think people of the time might have spoken. I understand English didn't exist at the time, I just hate subtitles.
@Luredreier
@Luredreier 11 місяців тому
@@Valeska687 Why? Oo In my country we prefer subtitles to dubbing or reshooting.
@Valeska687
@Valeska687 11 місяців тому
@@Luredreier I find I can't enjoy the movie as much because I'm too busy reading subtitles. I miss newonces (sorry, I can't spell to save my life) in the story line, facial expressions, and who knows what else because I'm reading subtitles instead of paying attention to what's happening in the movie. Plus, I'm a fairly slow reader so if the characters are speaking to each other rapidly, like for instance they're having an argument, I tend to miss at least some of the conversation because I can't read as fast as the text is flowing across the screen. I just find it all very annoying and will avoid movies with subtitles. I'll go see a dubbed movie before I'd see one with subtitles. I love the concept of Alfa, but if I had known there were subtitles I never would have gone to see it.
@autistictreasures72
@autistictreasures72 11 місяців тому
Can you do the Fun on a Bun episode of Futurama?
@msjrockqueen2011
@msjrockqueen2011 Місяць тому
How about on TikTok when the videos say that the ancestors were powerful, frightening wolves that stalked their prey - & this dog is on its way to Starbucks for a pup cup. 😆
@DevlinBlake
@DevlinBlake 11 місяців тому
But I've always heard less than 10% of animals actually fossilize. So the truth is we don't know what could have been out there that didn't have any fossils at all.
@richardr2555
@richardr2555 11 місяців тому
It's less than 1%.
@DevlinBlake
@DevlinBlake 10 місяців тому
​@@richardr2555 Wow. So we really don't know as much as we think we do. That gives movies/books a lot of leeway on what 'could' have existed.
@richardr2555
@richardr2555 10 місяців тому
@@DevlinBlake 2.5 billion t-rexes have ever lived. 32 fossils of them have been found. That's one fossil for every 80 million t-rexes. See how rare it is to fossilize.
@AvanOs-qr9xf
@AvanOs-qr9xf 10 місяців тому
There are two species of bison living today: the American bison ( Bison bison) and the European bison (Bison bonasus).
@daviddimitrov3696
@daviddimitrov3696 11 місяців тому
It's always cool to see these giant animals. Especially since all the animals that we have now are pretty pathetic by comparison. (Personally I'm a dinosaur person but i still like seeing later megaphawna)
@benjaminwalters2188
@benjaminwalters2188 10 місяців тому
If you haven't figured it out by now the part where Eddie is flying and suddenly crashing down and the other glyptodon said some breakthrough meaning Eddie has literally broken half when he fell to the ground hence the sound of a thud /cracking😳
@ritakaryne6224
@ritakaryne6224 10 місяців тому
Her not calling Diego "saber tooth tiger" makes me so angry! I just can't explain why😂😂
@Gabrielnobre
@Gabrielnobre 11 місяців тому
Well, the age of the Pyramids are not 100% estabilished. There are some theories suggesting that the Pyramids were already there when the ancient egypgians found them.
@merafirewing6591
@merafirewing6591 9 місяців тому
That part is more plausible that the great pyramids have always been there.
@Gabrielnobre
@Gabrielnobre 9 місяців тому
@@merafirewing6591 Yeah....they found them (the 3 perfect pyramids) for sure...if not...why there aren't any more of them? Why all the rest are imperfect? So, they did 3 perfect ones and then said: "Ok, now we can stop doing this alright?"
@user-ox6ip8ie7d
@user-ox6ip8ie7d Місяць тому
The Spirit Cave mummy is the oldest human mummy found in North America. It was discovered in 1940 in Spirit Cave, 13 miles east of Fallon, Nevada, United States, by the husband-and-wife archaeological team of Sydney and Georgia Wheeler. Wikipedia Miracinonyx is an extinct genus of felids belonging to the subfamily Felinae that was endemic to North America from the Pleistocene epoch and morphologically similar to the modern cheetah, although its apparent similar ecological niches have been considered questionable due to anatomical morphologies of the former that would have limited the ability to act as a specialized pursuit predator. Wikipedia
@latexu9589
@latexu9589 10 місяців тому
9:19 I also find it very interesting, how different modern dog breeds were originally born. Pretty unbelievable that all the different looking dogs of the world hailed from a singular canine species, the wolf. (Unless they domesticated some other wild canines, like coyotes or jackals, in parts of the world where wolves don't usually reside.) In my knowledge, some of the oldest still existing dog breeds are salukis from Egypt and Arabia, most likely breeded from African end Eurasian jackals, and pugs, that have been around for about 400-500 years. Do you know any other very old dog breeds around the world?🐺🐶
@franciscorosa1498
@franciscorosa1498 11 місяців тому
The 10,000 BC smilodon reminds me of a liger
@flightlesslord2688
@flightlesslord2688 10 місяців тому
OK... whilst Im not saying they used them to make the pyramids, the mammoths on Wrangel Island (and possibly Northern Siberia I think) survived up until 4000 years ago, when Egyptians were building pyramids.
@benjaminwalters2188
@benjaminwalters2188 10 місяців тому
Sid the sloth is supposed to represent the giant ground sloth
@mezozoicman5613
@mezozoicman5613 10 місяців тому
I'm pretty sure those "glyptodons" were actually doedicurus because of their spikey tail clubs they had
@latexu9589
@latexu9589 10 місяців тому
3:38 So, is that where smilodon's popular incorrect name, "saber-tooth tiger", came from? Because that really looks like a tiger's head with giant fangs sticking out of it. Nowadays we know that smilodons and tigers are not related to each other in any way, and smilodon is often referred to simply as "saber-tooth cat".😉🐯
@williamblansett5786
@williamblansett5786 10 місяців тому
She as assumes in the 1st movie that humans were her size, probably not true. Also the is some debates because newer findings suggest their may have been civilizations, even Egyptian civilizations that MAY have been older than previously thought though no confirmed.
@sully8754
@sully8754 11 місяців тому
So what youre saying is we had blonde mammoths and technically super saiyan mammoths. Thats awesome
@ratgirl34
@ratgirl34 11 місяців тому
I will watch movies with you anytime.
@tyrannotherium7873
@tyrannotherium7873 11 місяців тому
Wait, I thought that Glyptodons are closely related to armadillos not sloths
@joshuathomas3220
@joshuathomas3220 11 місяців тому
I think they’re all in the same family. But yeh I’m pretty sure they’re armadillos
@tyrannotherium7873
@tyrannotherium7873 11 місяців тому
@@joshuathomas3220 interesting
@bhuggins6059
@bhuggins6059 11 місяців тому
Glyptodonts were giant armadillos, there were giant ground sloths tho, that may be what ur thinking of Edit: sorry I read that wrong now I too am confused
@tyrannotherium7873
@tyrannotherium7873 11 місяців тому
@@bhuggins6059 well, I didn’t know that’s pretty interesting
@bhuggins6059
@bhuggins6059 11 місяців тому
@@tyrannotherium7873 I red it wrongly lol
@demariejones3438
@demariejones3438 11 місяців тому
The screen puts at least 100 pounds on the cat from 10,000 BC…. Just saying
@molly1949
@molly1949 7 місяців тому
Dude buck teeth make him cute and explain his bilateral lisp
@brianmorton9419
@brianmorton9419 7 місяців тому
It would’ve been really funny if Ice Age just wasn’t one of the movies
@lavender-rosefox8817
@lavender-rosefox8817 10 місяців тому
was the cave lion really the biggest spicies of cat to have ever lived
@virtualatheist
@virtualatheist 9 місяців тому
How could a mammoth survive the heat of Egypt?
@zedbee2736
@zedbee2736 11 місяців тому
As far as mammoths building the pyramids, it seems like animals adapted to cold weather climates like the Yukon would do fairly poorly in a desert no?
@fluffybirdy
@fluffybirdy 10 місяців тому
My partner knows to just let me pause and babble about animals constantly in various media we watch. If they don't then they have me talking their ear off while they're trying to concentrate on something else.
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 10 місяців тому
The attacking big cat in alpha looked like a Lion
@wenthulk8439
@wenthulk8439 10 місяців тому
And Sid was stated to be a ground sloth.
@oliviapellicer7376
@oliviapellicer7376 11 місяців тому
what about the mammoths on Wrangel island? Didn't they persist into around when the Egyptian pyramids were being built?
@LincolnDWard
@LincolnDWard 11 місяців тому
Yes, and she mentions this and other similar enclaves at 3:09
@TrollsbandtogetherFan350
@TrollsbandtogetherFan350 10 місяців тому
I think smilodons were spotted
@sl7722
@sl7722 10 місяців тому
Interesting video and lovely lady, but their patreon, Canada, was advertised too much. Nonetheless, we also had a great time, thank you!
@Quickbite2
@Quickbite2 11 місяців тому
omg watch all the movies with me i need your comentary!!! you would be great
@RopeDad1
@RopeDad1 6 місяців тому
I thought glyptodonts were armadillos. Well I mean I *know* they are but the way she worded that was weird. Sloths, armadillos, etc are all related but why bring up sloths when armadillos are what they are and they’re more closely related to modern day armadillos.
@John-qu8zv
@John-qu8zv 2 місяці тому
They didn't find terror birds as same time as humans.
@GathKingLeppbertI
@GathKingLeppbertI 10 місяців тому
1. The earth is only about 7k yrs old. 2. Animals don't have hands.
@Andy_-so9yk
@Andy_-so9yk 10 місяців тому
I just wanna know if sid is a megatherium or not 😭
@aliyahpulido953
@aliyahpulido953 10 місяців тому
According to Google, he is. He's supposed to be a giant ground sloth, although technically he should've been much closer to Manny's size since giant ground sloths weren't that much smaller than mammoths. I'm guessing they made him smaller so other creatures could bully him all the time. Poor Sid!
@btsxanime81
@btsxanime81 Рік тому
Was there any evidence that wolves and humans worked together during the ice age?
@kamion53
@kamion53 11 місяців тому
I think it is more likely the first wolves at the root of the dogs were kept for food. Dogs have been eaten al over the world and still today bush animals are kept as pets fed on scraps to grow big ( and fat) enough to become main dish. Probably the most feral of a litter of abandonded wolf pups went into the stew first, will the more docile were kept longer and even manage to breed. Nowadays most wolves have a fear of humans and keep there distance, I think that wolves not fearing humans and came close to human settlement were far too dangerous to become domesticated.
@peterdrieen6852
@peterdrieen6852 11 місяців тому
There are hints that wolf's domesticated themselves, moving closer to human camps to feed of the remains of their hunt. At least for the middle-east there is no direct evidence if and when wolfs/dogs first worked together on hunting.
@mageofdoomsie1598
@mageofdoomsie1598 11 місяців тому
I think there’s some cave paintings that could showcase wolves and humans coexisting together
@ceciland18
@ceciland18 11 місяців тому
So when we’re dire wolves around?
@rosswiseman5991
@rosswiseman5991 10 місяців тому
Smilodon was North American, right? Are they closer related to pumas? That would make sense to me, in terms of what their coat looked like, but I am absolutely no kind of scientist.
@AVDB95
@AVDB95 9 місяців тому
The modern day cats are more closely related to eachother than too sabre toothed cats. Interestingly enough the puma would be grouped with the small cats. This means they are more closely related to cheetahs, housecats, ocelots, lynxes etc than too the big cats like lions, tigers and leopards. We don't know what the coat off smilodon looked like. But even the coat looked like one of a modern day cat it is not that abnormal for totally unrelated species to look alike. We call this convergent evolution. This basicly means that you start seeing the same adaptations in unrelated species because the environment and/or there niche are simular. A beautiful example is how counter shading is common in aquatic animals.
@rosswiseman5991
@rosswiseman5991 9 місяців тому
@@AVDB95 Thank you
@VicariousReality7
@VicariousReality7 6 місяців тому
We are still in the ice age.
@williamblansett5786
@williamblansett5786 10 місяців тому
Interesting but she doesn't give much room for artistic interpretation. There was a Homotherium type beast type is believed to be larger than some if not most Smilodons including Smilodon fatalis.
@kalijanecooper4514
@kalijanecooper4514 11 місяців тому
I think another thing that Ice Age got wrong was they used Brontotheriums for Carl and Frank's species, but that species went extinct before the Ice Age. It would have been more appropriate to use a Woolly Rhinoceros.
@dblaska
@dblaska 10 місяців тому
My understanding is that modern dogs do not descend from wolves. That wolves and dogs have a common ancestor that split into modern canines and wolves.
@bradenhoefert2109
@bradenhoefert2109 10 місяців тому
You're half right. Dogs don't descend from modern populations of grey wolves, but they do descend from grey wolves. The grey wolves that dogs descended from were genetically distinct from modern grey wolves, but not enough to form a separate species. So it is still true to say that dogs are descended from grey wolves. In fact dogs are a subspecies of grey wolf themselves, Canis lupus familiarus.
@dblaska
@dblaska 10 місяців тому
@@bradenhoefert2109 ahh that makes sense. Thank you for expanding my understanding of the issue.
@scriptorpaulina
@scriptorpaulina 10 місяців тому
Might as well mention that the near-extinction of bison in NA was part of a purposeful hunt to separate American Indians from their land
@cerberaodollam
@cerberaodollam 10 місяців тому
The real question is: where are the chalicothere movies?!
@canadanaturemuseum
@canadanaturemuseum 10 місяців тому
Maybe we'll have to do a part 2 👀
@SaptaTechEnthusiast
@SaptaTechEnthusiast 11 місяців тому
I want her to identify what kind of dog Gru has from "Despicable Me"
@tell-me-a-story-
@tell-me-a-story- 11 місяців тому
Is he really a dog? I always thought Gru was lying, just like how he called the minions his "Cousins".
@partyzombie6211
@partyzombie6211 10 місяців тому
I HAVE FOUND THE DINO NERD HUB I AM FINALLY HOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@speedracer2008
@speedracer2008 9 місяців тому
I thought glyptodonts were close relatives of armadillos
@AVDB95
@AVDB95 9 місяців тому
They absolutly are. Sloths and anteaters are also related to glyptodonts but not as closely as armadillos.
@Elephant-Puppet
@Elephant-Puppet 11 місяців тому
May I Till You A Fact Steppe Mammoths The Cousins Of Woolly Mammoths We’re estimated to have had a shoulder height of 4.5 metres (15 ft) and a weight of 14.3 tonnes (14.1 long tons; 15.8 short tons).
@MechaShadowV2
@MechaShadowV2 10 місяців тому
I thought there where two species of bison? The American one and the European one.
@AVDB95
@AVDB95 9 місяців тому
That's correct. The wisent are just not that well know and almost went extinct at one point. Breeding programs have brought the numbers back up to a few thousand.
@justwaltmore7584
@justwaltmore7584 11 місяців тому
I wanna work for you... Even just highlighting things for you lol
@Fatherofheroesandheroines
@Fatherofheroesandheroines 11 місяців тому
Where wolf..where wolf...7:14...there wolf. There man in tree.
@matthings4133
@matthings4133 11 місяців тому
11:51 Alan Grant?
@Agadendro
@Agadendro 11 місяців тому
Hahaha love it, "well we're gonna start with 10000 BC" you got my curiosity right there. Probably the worst movie i have seen.
@bricksammler
@bricksammler 11 місяців тому
Kind of questioning her "expert" insights. Mammoths were very much still alive, when the pyramids were build. It´s just, that they didn´t live in Egypt. However, remains of a population on Wrangel island have been discovered, that was still existent 4000 years ago.
@ettinakitten5047
@ettinakitten5047 11 місяців тому
She admits to not being an Egyptologist, so she probably didn't know off the top of her head when the pyramids were built.
@theman9048
@theman9048 11 місяців тому
Wasn't that the spinx not the pyramid
@LincolnDWard
@LincolnDWard 11 місяців тому
She mentions this and other similar enclaves at 3:09. Also, it is not incorrect to say that the wooly mammoth went extinct in most of the world at the end of the last Ice Age, and this is often colloquially used as the species' extinction date, even among scientists (since the ecosystems they left behind didn't care that there were still a few mammoths on isolated islands in the Arctic)
@anorthosite
@anorthosite 11 місяців тому
If memory serves, weren't the Wrangel mammoths also an example of Insular Dwarfism ?
@latexu9589
@latexu9589 10 місяців тому
12:33 They do however resemble giant armadillos more, but maybe that's because modern day sloths and armadillos (as well as anteaters) belong to the same "clade" of mammals known as xenarthra. 😉🦥
@Wolfie54545
@Wolfie54545 2 місяці тому
Nah that 10,000 bc Smilodon is trash. That’s just an upscale Roger with saber teeth. Didn’t even mention the tail.
@gittevandevelde2208
@gittevandevelde2208 11 місяців тому
I find it funny how she mentions all the time whether an animal lived in canada or not as if it matters - when it comes to ice age media, most of it is situated in eurasia anyway.
@chrisgraham2904
@chrisgraham2904 11 місяців тому
She's from the Canadian Museum of Nature. The Canadian Museum of Nature resides on the traditional, unceded territory of the Anishinābe Algonquin people who have stewarded this land for thousands of years. The museum’s scientific research occurs across Canada-from coast to coast to coast-on the territories of the Métis and First Nations people and in Inuit Nunangat.
@UKfeath
@UKfeath 21 день тому
Alpha. I think I'm the only person in the world that loves that movie. Everything about it. I hate movies that have more than 1 ending. The story is done, move on. This is the only movie I've seen where I actually like each ending on it's own merret. What, there were four full 'ending' of this movie and I loved each one. Dang, now i got to go watch it again.
@eduardomorrone5692
@eduardomorrone5692 11 місяців тому
Wait a minute, why are there ancient egyptians in 10,000 b.c. they were here from 3600 b.c. so... Then mammoth abuse for blocks but for blocks there were people
@christiandryden2371
@christiandryden2371 11 місяців тому
Glyptodons are related to armadillo's , not sloths ; Don't want to say she's an idiot but will sayshe is wrong .
@cesarjr.candaten7712
@cesarjr.candaten7712 11 місяців тому
She is not wrong I can't explain but there is a video of Moth Light Media( the evolution of armadillos) that is about it and if I am not mistaken they are closely related to sloths than armadillos
@catpoke9557
@catpoke9557 11 місяців тому
They're related to both. Armadillos and sloths are closely related.
@bevandarke2300
@bevandarke2300 11 місяців тому
Mammoth lived till bout 2000 year ago on a tiny island
@mageofdoomsie1598
@mageofdoomsie1598 11 місяців тому
More like 4500 years ago
@danailmarinov7299
@danailmarinov7299 11 місяців тому
Bruh! Even Ice Age got a few things right. XD
@rickwrites2612
@rickwrites2612 10 місяців тому
10,000 BC is totally inaccurate regarding humans from what I see here. 12,000 yrs ago would've been the border of Upper Paleolithic right about before the Neolithic revolution. We are talking about stone age hunter gatherers. This means No farming, NO civilization, NO pyramids, NO keeping animals (besides an occassional dog-wolf who chooses to be there) NO surplus, NO trade, NO material culture. Hunter gatherers have NO property ownership, No classes/castes, NO slavery, NO inheritance or need for paternity, thus NO control of female sexuality and NO patriarchy. NO role rigidity (if a male is excellent at searching out sweet berries or dense edible plants you want him to doing just that ; if a female is an exceptional shot or tracker you want her hunting). NO chiefs except in the sense that the one or few people who contribute the most are generally seen as leader/s but they have NO power over anyone else. The only power is personal power. We lived in small egalitarian bands of maybe 50 up to maybe 80 ppl. Hunter gatherers wherever they are found both geographically and chronologically are among the most egalitarian societies on earth, an egalitarianism that is almost always includes women and children, which is unheard of in any post-agricultural society, until the very recent advent of modern democracy. Unlike modern democracies, hunter gatherers have no resource inequality/hierarchy/class; the one or few who contribute the most are seen as the chief or council. The chief has responsibility without power over others and early ethnographies of hunter gatherers are full of hilarious anecdotes where older men nominate ec other as chief because nobody wants to be chief
@legomattie3295
@legomattie3295 10 місяців тому
10000BC is correct at all: Smilodons lived in North America. This movie takes place in either southern Europe, or Northern Africa. Cant really tell, because geographicly this movie even sucks more. I even doubt smildons still existed at all 12000 yrs ago. Als the type om mammoth shown in this movie is North American. The mammoths shown combined with the pyramids is interesting though. Yes according do science the oldest pyramids are 6000 yrs old, may be a bit older. But there are still some theories, mostly ancient alien, that belive the pyramids are over 10000 yrs old. The movie hints on those theory, which I think is ok to do. At least the come up with a much more plausible theory how the pyramids were build, than is done in the ancient alien theories. Still a bad movie though. I didnt see Alpha, but what is seen in the scene shown are white people doing the chase in North America. That is wrong. Asian people crossed the Bering Street during the ice age. Definatly Europeans there back in the days. Chase however is done quite well and is depicted in some ancient cave drawings.
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