Sunday, April 22, 2018

Youtube daily report Apr 22 2018

[♪INTRO]

Sharks bigger than a city bus.

Snakes twice as long as anyone alive has ever seen.

Go to a natural history museum, and it's populated with giants so huge, everything

alive today seems small by comparison.

Unless, of course, you're a blue whale.

Those hold the title of being the largest animal to ever exist.

Still, whales aside, what made it possible for certain species to grow so large in the

past, when their modern equivalents are so modest?

What changed between then and now, and, more importantly, why can't I hug a sloth the

size of an elephant?

Well, there's no "one size fits all" reason for ancient animals to have been bigger.

Instead, evolution works with what it's got -- and it's had different conditions

to work with throughout history.

Here are seven of the biggest versions of today's animals -- and how they got to be giants.

Long before giant land vertebrates, arthropods had their chance to reach enormous sizes.

They ruled during the Carboniferous and Permian periods, or from about 360 to 251 million

years ago.

And if you aren't a fan of bugs, you'll be happy you weren't around back then.

One of these Permian arthropods was Meganeuropsis permiana, likely the largest insect to ever

be capable of flight.

Although it technically belonged to a group known as griffinflies, it closely resembled

a dragonfly, and it had a wingspan up to 75 centimeters.

That's larger than some hawks, and more than ten times that of a modern dragonfly.

Meganeuropsis probably lived the same way dragonflies do today, scooping prey out of

the air at the water's edge -- although it was likely a lot less agile since it was

so huge.

What many scientists think made this insect so large is a commodity that was probably

far more common in the Permian: oxygen.

Back in the Carboniferous, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere skyrocketed thanks to massive

plant growth.

It went from around 20% -- which is close to what it is today -- to at least 30%, and

stayed high well into the Permian.

That really helped out these critters.

See, insects rely on tubes called tracheae to allow diffusion of oxygen into their bodies.

And this process is limited by the insect's size.

If it gets too large, a healthy amount of oxygen won't be able to make it all the

way down the tracheae.

But if there's more oxygen available, it can diffuse further.

And since there was more oxygen in the Permian, it, according to one popular hypothesis, allowed

Meganeuropsis to grow much bigger than modern insects.

Of course, like a lot of things in natural history, it's still not totally settled.

Another idea states that so much oxygen might have actually been poisonous to Meganeuropsis' larvae.

So they could have quickly grown to large sizes to decrease their surface area to volume ratio.

That would have allowed their bodies to more easily handle all that extra oxygen.

Flash forward a few million years, and Cretaceous North America was a playground for giant dinosaurs.

But between 83 and 72 million years ago, before the evolution of T. rex, the largest predator

around may have actually been… an early alligator.

Deinosuchus, whose name appropriately means "terrible crocodile", was a type of crocodile

that's a cousin of modern alligators.

Its fossil remains are too fragmentary for us to be sure exactly how big it got, but

estimates hover around eight to ten meters or more.

That's almost twice as long as a pickup truck.

Compare that to today's American alligator, which usually hovers around three to four meters.

Like modern alligators, this creature probably used its massive jaws to ambush prey from

beneath the water.

But unlike modern alligators, which reach more or less full size within ten years or

so, Deinosuchus kept growing up to the age of thirty-five.

We know that from counting growth rings in the bony plates in its skin, almost like counting

tree rings.

Without more complete remains, we can't be totally sure why it kept growing for so long.

But scientists think it could have been to compete with dinosaurs or even to eat them.

After all, teeth marks in dinosaur bones -- including a duck-billed hadrosaur and a smallish type

of tyrannosaur -- are proof of confrontations with Deinosuchus.

Just because it bit dinosaurs, though, doesn't mean it hunted them regularly.

Fossilized poop, officially known as coprolites, provides better evidence of what something ate.

And Deinosuchus coprolites contain bits of shell from large turtles.

So that could be another reason for it to grow to such sizes -- in order to crunch through

those thick shells.

Deinosuchus likely required a large hunting area, so they probably tended to have smaller

populations than some other animals.

And ultimately, that could be one reason why they were vulnerable to extinction.

Besides having enormous alligator-like animals, the Cretaceous also featured giant sea turtles

that put their modern cousins to shame.

Archelon lived about 74 million years ago, and was more than 4 meters from nose to tail.

Meanwhile, a modern leatherback turtle -- today's largest sea turtle -- is usually closer to

2 meters.

Like leatherbacks, Archelon also had a much thinner shell than other turtles, and it was

supported by a relatively light framework of bone.

This may have been to help it maintain buoyancy despite its huge size.

Right now, scientists know very little about Archelon.

Like, it could've been so large to make it hard for predators -- like mosasaurs -- to

eat it, but we aren't sure.

More fossil remains might help, though, since we haven't dug up many of them in recent

decades.

We're also still putting together the pieces about Archelon's diet, but one idea says

that it was too large to chase after quickly-swimming prey.

So it might've just hung out and snacked on whatever was around.

We do know it had a ferociously powerful bite, though, but it may have still favored soft

prey like squid or some plants.

But one thing's for sure: I really wouldn't want to mess with one.

This list wouldn't be complete without mentioning Megalodon, the largest shark that ever lived.

It was alive during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, or from 15.9 to just 2.6 million years

ago -- and no, Discovery Channel, they aren't somehow still alive.

Megalodon was once thought to be so closely related to the modern great white shark that

it was placed in the same genus.

Most scientists no longer think that should be the case, but its exact taxonomic placement

is extremely unclear.

It doesn't help that Megalodon is mostly just known from teeth and a vertebra here

and there.

Shark skeletons are made of cartilage, which doesn't fossilize as well as bone, though

it still can.

Still, we do know that it was probably about 18 meters in length -- three times the length

of a modern great white.

It was so big, it could -- and did -- eat whales.

Specializing in big prey is a good reason to grow to big sizes.

But like any good predatory shark, Megalodon was an opportunist that probably ate whatever

it could sink its teeth into -- like fish, squid, and turtles.

Usually, the abundance and diversity of large prey is cited as the reason this shark grew

so big.

But recently, another explanation has been proposed for Megalodon's fast-swimming,

predatory, super-giant lifestyle: It could have been sort of warm-blooded.

Some fish, including great white sharks, have evolved a way to conserve body heat.

Specialized blood vessels warm certain parts of the body, like the brain and eyes, by running

blood vessels carrying hot blood past colder ones -- a bit like a radiator.

It's called regional endothermy.

If Megalodon was closely related to white sharks, it might make sense for it to have

this ability as well.

Warm-blooded creatures are generally more active than cold-blooded ones.

So endothermy may have aided Megalodon in pursuing its huge prey, and given it a competitive

edge in an ocean full of giants.

The Paleocene epoch, which happened right after the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million

years ago, was a bit lacking in large vertebrates.

But despite the lack of huge dinosaurs running around, it did have a snake at least thirteen

meters long.

It was called Titanoboa, and was from Paleocene Colombia.

Green anacondas, the largest modern snake by body weight, also hail from South America.

But they only reach 6 meters in length on average.

Meanwhile, Titanoboa, even according to more conservative estimates, would have been double

that length.

They make anacondas look cute and tiny by comparison.

So what does a thirteen to fifteen meter snake eat?

Anything it wants to.

If it lived like a modern anaconda, as researchers believe, it probably wasn't picky.

It's been found alongside fossils of turtles, crocodilians, and lungfish, and its discoverers

believe these crocodiles may have been its favorite meal.

Yeah.

A snake that eats crocodiles.

Besides being enormous, Titanoboa's huge size also has been interpreted as a clue about

the climate of Paleocene South America.

See, snakes are poikilothermic, meaning their body temperatures fluctuates with the temperature

of their environment.

And the maximum body size of poikilothermic vertebrates is known to be limited by temperature.

Based on its size, researchers think the jungles Titanoboa lived in must have been a toasty

annual average temperature of at least 27° Celsius -- definitely warmer than today.

Which means the Paleocene hothouse probably made monster snakes possible.

Before we leave South America, there's another meat-eating giant we should mention: the largest

flightless bird.

In most places, following the extinction of the dinosaurs, mammals evolved to be top predators.

But in South America, for whatever reason, most mammals were vegetarians.

That means, 60 million years ago, there was an open slot for a big predator at the top

of the food chain.

And it was filled by terror birds.

These animals only went extinct around 2.5 million years ago, and had time to evolve

a variety of forms -- at least 17 species.

Some were long-legged, swift runners.

Others were more stocky, and built like ambush predators.

All of them had the hooked beak that's a signature of modern predatory birds, and the

biggest were easily taller than a modern ostrich, at perhaps 3 meters.

For South American prey animals, it's like the dinosaurs never left.

Terror birds are popularly shown dining on horses, although it's worth mentioning that

horses were smaller for most of their history.

And the exact feeding style and favored prey of terror birds is hotly debated.

Their closest relatives alive today are 80 centimeter tall birds called seriemas, which

feed by slamming their prey against the ground to break their bones.

It's hypothesized that terror birds might have followed a similar strategy.

Since there were so many different kinds, though, they probably also had more than one

way of getting a meal.

Sloths are cute.

This is internet fact.

So scale one up to the size of an elephant and it's just that much cuter, right?

Megatherium was the biggest of the giant ground sloths, and it lived during the Pliocene and

Pleistocene epochs, 5 million years ago to almost, but not quite, the present day.

They're called ground sloths because, perhaps not surprisingly, they couldn't actually

live in trees like their modern counterparts.

A three toed sloth is well under a meter in length, but Megatherium might have measured

six meters from nose to tail.

But it was still a vegetarian, and probably exploited its size to reach into the treetops

and pull down vegetation that smaller competitors couldn't reach.

They could have been so big because there was plenty of land area available to support

their populations -- although not everyone agrees.

But it does seem clear that the dinosaurs left niches wide open for large herbivores

to fill.

Overhunting by humans is often blamed for driving the giant sloths to extinction.

But climate change at the end of the last glacial period, as well as other complex factors,

may have been involved as well.

Different animal groups have evolved extraordinary sizes for different reasons, whether it's

because of temperature or food or physiology.

The evolutionary circumstances are always different, and it's not like there's a

bias toward bigness in the past.

After all, the blue whale is still around today.

The big stuff does catch our attention, though.

There's a lot we can learn from these fossil giants about the what our planet used to be

like -- and the kinds of creatures that roamed it.

And as a bonus, these fossils also look pretty cool in a museum.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about natural history and the story of our world, you can check

out one of our sister channels, Eons, over at youtube.com/eons.

[♪OUTRO]

For more infomation >> The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

-------------------------------------------

次なる中国のパクりメーカ・Youxia。Zotyeに続き今度はマセラティをパクる? - Duration: 3:06.

For more infomation >> 次なる中国のパクりメーカ・Youxia。Zotyeに続き今度はマセラティをパクる? - Duration: 3:06.

-------------------------------------------

Właściwości Lecznicze Imbiru - Duration: 4:41.

Wewnętrzne zastosowania imbiru.Wspiera funkcjonowanie układu pokarmowego: jest to jeden z najbardziej popularnych sposobów wykorzystania imbiru.

Pobudza trzustkę, zwiększając poziom enzymów biorących udział w trawieniu i zapobiegających wchłanianiu zbędnych substancji.

Pomaga zapobiegać problemom jelitowym: ze względu na swoje właściwości antybakteryjne zapobiega zmianom flory bakteryjnej jelit.

Jest bardzo skutecznym środkiem przeciw mdłościom: wykazuje silne właściwości przeciwdziałania mdłościom wywołanym różnymi czynnikami. Może być stosowany przy chorobie lokomocyjnej (podczas podróży statkiem, autobusem, itp.) i w długiej podróży.

Mogą go stosować osoby poddawane chemioterapii, kobiety w ciąży w ciągu pierwszych kilku miesięcy od zapłodnienia (w tym przypadku zabieg ten nie powinien być stosowany zbyt długo) oraz pacjenci z mdłościami pooperacyjnymi.

Leczy wrzody: a także zapobiega ich rozwojowi. Ze względu na swoje właściwości przeciwbakteryjne, usuwa bakterie Helicobacter pyloriwydzielające amoniak. 

Imbir jest doskonałym lekarstwem na zapalenie błony śluzowej żołądka i naturalnym środkiem do neutralizacji nadmiaru kwasu w żołądku.

Zmniejsza biegunkę i zaparcia: usuwa szkodliwe bakterie i mikroorganizmy takie jak E. coli, powodujące biegunkę u dzieci, a także leczy zapalenia żołądka i jelit.Jednocześnie, zwiększa perystaltykę jelit, pomagając w wypróżnieniach przy zaparciach.

Zapobiega chorobom serca: czy to przy zatrzymaniu krążenia, chorobie wieńcowej, dusznicy klatki piersiowej czy zakrzepicy.

Usprawnia krążenie w kończynach: przede wszystkim likwiduje ból w nogach czy objawy w okolicy palców spowodowane przez chorobę Raynaurda.

Pomaga w regeneracji tkanek przy ranach i odmrożeniach.Jest przydatny w leczeniu objawów grypy: obniża gorączkę, zmniejsza uczucie zatkanego nosa, bóle spowodowane grypą.

Przy przeziębieniu, likwiduje ciśnienie w klatce piersiowej wywołane nagromadzeniem śluzu. Wykazuje podobne działanie u chorych na zapalenie zatok i nieżyt nosa.

Łagodzi chroniczne zmęczenie: syndrom chronicznego zmęczenia jest dość częstym problemem w dzisiejszym świecie, człowiek czuje się zawsze zmęczony i słaby, pomimo dużej ilości snu i odpoczynku.

Wykazuje silne działanie przeciwzapalne i przeciwbólowe: pomocny przy artretyzmie, chorobie zwyrodnieniowej stawów, bólu stawów, jak również przy zapaleniach w następstwie urazów. Redukuje ból i zapalenie.

Jest także przydatny u osób z zespołem cieśni nadgarstka.Zewnętrzne zastosowania imbiru.Na ból zębów trzonowych: zastosuj herbatę imbirową bezpośrednio na szczękę lub żuj bardzo cienki plasterek imbiru.

Usuwa nieprzyjemny zapach z ust: imbir był przez długi czas używany do leczenia nieprzyjemnego oddechu.

Ta orientalna technika odświeża jamę ustną po posiłku, a ponieważ zwiększa ona wydzielanie śliny, może być również z powodzeniem stosowana przez osoby, które odczuwają suchość w ustach.

 Jest silnym afrodyzjakiem: niektórzy twierdzą, że imbir stymuluje pożądanie seksualne i podnosi poziom libido zarówno u mężczyzn jak i kobiet. Mogą go także stosować mężczyźni, miewający problemy z erekcją.

Jak można spożywać imbir?Aby móc korzystać ze wszystkich możliwych właściwości imbiru, musisz poznać różne sposoby na jego spożywanie.

Niektóre metody wymagają określonego sposobu spożywania imbiru, ale generalnie możesz wybrać tę, która Ci najbardziej odpowiada, albo taką która jest najprostsza w przygotowaniu.

W zależności od tego, co Ci dolega, możesz przygotowywać napary ze świeżych lub suszonych bulw, kapsułki, koktajle, olejki do masażu, itp.

Możesz również korzystać z innych roślin leczniczych w celu wzmocnienia korzyści i uzyskania lepszych rezultatów.

Jeśli masz zamiar spożywać świeży korzeń imbiru, wykonaj następujące kroki: po pierwsze, dobrze go umyj i obierz. Następnie, zetrzyj go lub pokrój w kostki, aby dodać do zup, sosów i gulaszu (imbir jest gotowany wraz z tymi potrawami).

Możesz też namoczyć suche korzenie w bulionie, wodzie lub soku i dodać go do swoich przepisów. Jeśli lubisz sushi, imbir może być do niego doskonałą przystawką, podobnie jak do innych potraw orientalnych.

Do marynowania korzenia stosuje się ocet. Przechowując go dłużej, warto również posypać go cukrem, solą i octem, lub oliwą.Można też jeść starty korzeń imbiru ze słodyczami, curry, frytkami, ciastkami i sosami.

I na koniec, imbir można skrystalizować poprzez gotowanie go w wodzie przez 30 minut, następnie  odcedź imbir i  doprowadź do wrzenia trzy łyżki wody i trzy łyżki cukru w garnku. Gotuj, aż płyn odparuje.

Jedną z najczęstszych alternatyw spożywania imbiru jest ta w formie naparu. Jest ona nieco ostra w smaku. Będzie Ci potrzebne około 85 gramów korzenia, 700 ml wody i słodzik do wyboru (stewia, miód, syrop klonowy lub brązowy cukier).

Umyj korzeń i dobrze go osusz, obierz i pokrój w cienkie plasterki. Zagotuj wodę i dodaj imbir, pozostawiając na ogniu przez kilka minut. Innym rozwiązaniem jest umieszczenie korzenia w misce, a następnie, zalanie go wrzątkiem i przykrycie.

Zaczekaj 5 minut. Dla każdego z powyższych przepisów: odcedź i pij. Wielu ludzi dodaje do płynu kilka plasterków cytryny lub soku z cytryny w przypadku przeziębienia.

I finalnie, w pilnych przypadkach, można użyć imbiru w formie surowej lub zmiażdzonej.

For more infomation >> Właściwości Lecznicze Imbiru - Duration: 4:41.

-------------------------------------------

VWグループ大丈夫?ポルシェのパワートレイン開発ボスが詐欺と虚偽広告の罪で逮捕 - Duration: 2:46.

For more infomation >> VWグループ大丈夫?ポルシェのパワートレイン開発ボスが詐欺と虚偽広告の罪で逮捕 - Duration: 2:46.

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Nach Sturz: "Let's Dance Dance"-Partner sorgt sich um Vanessa Mai! - Duration: 2:06.

For more infomation >> Nach Sturz: "Let's Dance Dance"-Partner sorgt sich um Vanessa Mai! - Duration: 2:06.

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Avengers: Infinity War

For more infomation >> Avengers: Infinity War

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The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

[♪INTRO]

Sharks bigger than a city bus.

Snakes twice as long as anyone alive has ever seen.

Go to a natural history museum, and it's populated with giants so huge, everything

alive today seems small by comparison.

Unless, of course, you're a blue whale.

Those hold the title of being the largest animal to ever exist.

Still, whales aside, what made it possible for certain species to grow so large in the

past, when their modern equivalents are so modest?

What changed between then and now, and, more importantly, why can't I hug a sloth the

size of an elephant?

Well, there's no "one size fits all" reason for ancient animals to have been bigger.

Instead, evolution works with what it's got -- and it's had different conditions

to work with throughout history.

Here are seven of the biggest versions of today's animals -- and how they got to be giants.

Long before giant land vertebrates, arthropods had their chance to reach enormous sizes.

They ruled during the Carboniferous and Permian periods, or from about 360 to 251 million

years ago.

And if you aren't a fan of bugs, you'll be happy you weren't around back then.

One of these Permian arthropods was Meganeuropsis permiana, likely the largest insect to ever

be capable of flight.

Although it technically belonged to a group known as griffinflies, it closely resembled

a dragonfly, and it had a wingspan up to 75 centimeters.

That's larger than some hawks, and more than ten times that of a modern dragonfly.

Meganeuropsis probably lived the same way dragonflies do today, scooping prey out of

the air at the water's edge -- although it was likely a lot less agile since it was

so huge.

What many scientists think made this insect so large is a commodity that was probably

far more common in the Permian: oxygen.

Back in the Carboniferous, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere skyrocketed thanks to massive

plant growth.

It went from around 20% -- which is close to what it is today -- to at least 30%, and

stayed high well into the Permian.

That really helped out these critters.

See, insects rely on tubes called tracheae to allow diffusion of oxygen into their bodies.

And this process is limited by the insect's size.

If it gets too large, a healthy amount of oxygen won't be able to make it all the

way down the tracheae.

But if there's more oxygen available, it can diffuse further.

And since there was more oxygen in the Permian, it, according to one popular hypothesis, allowed

Meganeuropsis to grow much bigger than modern insects.

Of course, like a lot of things in natural history, it's still not totally settled.

Another idea states that so much oxygen might have actually been poisonous to Meganeuropsis' larvae.

So they could have quickly grown to large sizes to decrease their surface area to volume ratio.

That would have allowed their bodies to more easily handle all that extra oxygen.

Flash forward a few million years, and Cretaceous North America was a playground for giant dinosaurs.

But between 83 and 72 million years ago, before the evolution of T. rex, the largest predator

around may have actually been… an early alligator.

Deinosuchus, whose name appropriately means "terrible crocodile", was a type of crocodile

that's a cousin of modern alligators.

Its fossil remains are too fragmentary for us to be sure exactly how big it got, but

estimates hover around eight to ten meters or more.

That's almost twice as long as a pickup truck.

Compare that to today's American alligator, which usually hovers around three to four meters.

Like modern alligators, this creature probably used its massive jaws to ambush prey from

beneath the water.

But unlike modern alligators, which reach more or less full size within ten years or

so, Deinosuchus kept growing up to the age of thirty-five.

We know that from counting growth rings in the bony plates in its skin, almost like counting

tree rings.

Without more complete remains, we can't be totally sure why it kept growing for so long.

But scientists think it could have been to compete with dinosaurs or even to eat them.

After all, teeth marks in dinosaur bones -- including a duck-billed hadrosaur and a smallish type

of tyrannosaur -- are proof of confrontations with Deinosuchus.

Just because it bit dinosaurs, though, doesn't mean it hunted them regularly.

Fossilized poop, officially known as coprolites, provides better evidence of what something ate.

And Deinosuchus coprolites contain bits of shell from large turtles.

So that could be another reason for it to grow to such sizes -- in order to crunch through

those thick shells.

Deinosuchus likely required a large hunting area, so they probably tended to have smaller

populations than some other animals.

And ultimately, that could be one reason why they were vulnerable to extinction.

Besides having enormous alligator-like animals, the Cretaceous also featured giant sea turtles

that put their modern cousins to shame.

Archelon lived about 74 million years ago, and was more than 4 meters from nose to tail.

Meanwhile, a modern leatherback turtle -- today's largest sea turtle -- is usually closer to

2 meters.

Like leatherbacks, Archelon also had a much thinner shell than other turtles, and it was

supported by a relatively light framework of bone.

This may have been to help it maintain buoyancy despite its huge size.

Right now, scientists know very little about Archelon.

Like, it could've been so large to make it hard for predators -- like mosasaurs -- to

eat it, but we aren't sure.

More fossil remains might help, though, since we haven't dug up many of them in recent

decades.

We're also still putting together the pieces about Archelon's diet, but one idea says

that it was too large to chase after quickly-swimming prey.

So it might've just hung out and snacked on whatever was around.

We do know it had a ferociously powerful bite, though, but it may have still favored soft

prey like squid or some plants.

But one thing's for sure: I really wouldn't want to mess with one.

This list wouldn't be complete without mentioning Megalodon, the largest shark that ever lived.

It was alive during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, or from 15.9 to just 2.6 million years

ago -- and no, Discovery Channel, they aren't somehow still alive.

Megalodon was once thought to be so closely related to the modern great white shark that

it was placed in the same genus.

Most scientists no longer think that should be the case, but its exact taxonomic placement

is extremely unclear.

It doesn't help that Megalodon is mostly just known from teeth and a vertebra here

and there.

Shark skeletons are made of cartilage, which doesn't fossilize as well as bone, though

it still can.

Still, we do know that it was probably about 18 meters in length -- three times the length

of a modern great white.

It was so big, it could -- and did -- eat whales.

Specializing in big prey is a good reason to grow to big sizes.

But like any good predatory shark, Megalodon was an opportunist that probably ate whatever

it could sink its teeth into -- like fish, squid, and turtles.

Usually, the abundance and diversity of large prey is cited as the reason this shark grew

so big.

But recently, another explanation has been proposed for Megalodon's fast-swimming,

predatory, super-giant lifestyle: It could have been sort of warm-blooded.

Some fish, including great white sharks, have evolved a way to conserve body heat.

Specialized blood vessels warm certain parts of the body, like the brain and eyes, by running

blood vessels carrying hot blood past colder ones -- a bit like a radiator.

It's called regional endothermy.

If Megalodon was closely related to white sharks, it might make sense for it to have

this ability as well.

Warm-blooded creatures are generally more active than cold-blooded ones.

So endothermy may have aided Megalodon in pursuing its huge prey, and given it a competitive

edge in an ocean full of giants.

The Paleocene epoch, which happened right after the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million

years ago, was a bit lacking in large vertebrates.

But despite the lack of huge dinosaurs running around, it did have a snake at least thirteen

meters long.

It was called Titanoboa, and was from Paleocene Colombia.

Green anacondas, the largest modern snake by body weight, also hail from South America.

But they only reach 6 meters in length on average.

Meanwhile, Titanoboa, even according to more conservative estimates, would have been double

that length.

They make anacondas look cute and tiny by comparison.

So what does a thirteen to fifteen meter snake eat?

Anything it wants to.

If it lived like a modern anaconda, as researchers believe, it probably wasn't picky.

It's been found alongside fossils of turtles, crocodilians, and lungfish, and its discoverers

believe these crocodiles may have been its favorite meal.

Yeah.

A snake that eats crocodiles.

Besides being enormous, Titanoboa's huge size also has been interpreted as a clue about

the climate of Paleocene South America.

See, snakes are poikilothermic, meaning their body temperatures fluctuates with the temperature

of their environment.

And the maximum body size of poikilothermic vertebrates is known to be limited by temperature.

Based on its size, researchers think the jungles Titanoboa lived in must have been a toasty

annual average temperature of at least 27° Celsius -- definitely warmer than today.

Which means the Paleocene hothouse probably made monster snakes possible.

Before we leave South America, there's another meat-eating giant we should mention: the largest

flightless bird.

In most places, following the extinction of the dinosaurs, mammals evolved to be top predators.

But in South America, for whatever reason, most mammals were vegetarians.

That means, 60 million years ago, there was an open slot for a big predator at the top

of the food chain.

And it was filled by terror birds.

These animals only went extinct around 2.5 million years ago, and had time to evolve

a variety of forms -- at least 17 species.

Some were long-legged, swift runners.

Others were more stocky, and built like ambush predators.

All of them had the hooked beak that's a signature of modern predatory birds, and the

biggest were easily taller than a modern ostrich, at perhaps 3 meters.

For South American prey animals, it's like the dinosaurs never left.

Terror birds are popularly shown dining on horses, although it's worth mentioning that

horses were smaller for most of their history.

And the exact feeding style and favored prey of terror birds is hotly debated.

Their closest relatives alive today are 80 centimeter tall birds called seriemas, which

feed by slamming their prey against the ground to break their bones.

It's hypothesized that terror birds might have followed a similar strategy.

Since there were so many different kinds, though, they probably also had more than one

way of getting a meal.

Sloths are cute.

This is internet fact.

So scale one up to the size of an elephant and it's just that much cuter, right?

Megatherium was the biggest of the giant ground sloths, and it lived during the Pliocene and

Pleistocene epochs, 5 million years ago to almost, but not quite, the present day.

They're called ground sloths because, perhaps not surprisingly, they couldn't actually

live in trees like their modern counterparts.

A three toed sloth is well under a meter in length, but Megatherium might have measured

six meters from nose to tail.

But it was still a vegetarian, and probably exploited its size to reach into the treetops

and pull down vegetation that smaller competitors couldn't reach.

They could have been so big because there was plenty of land area available to support

their populations -- although not everyone agrees.

But it does seem clear that the dinosaurs left niches wide open for large herbivores

to fill.

Overhunting by humans is often blamed for driving the giant sloths to extinction.

But climate change at the end of the last glacial period, as well as other complex factors,

may have been involved as well.

Different animal groups have evolved extraordinary sizes for different reasons, whether it's

because of temperature or food or physiology.

The evolutionary circumstances are always different, and it's not like there's a

bias toward bigness in the past.

After all, the blue whale is still around today.

The big stuff does catch our attention, though.

There's a lot we can learn from these fossil giants about the what our planet used to be

like -- and the kinds of creatures that roamed it.

And as a bonus, these fossils also look pretty cool in a museum.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about natural history and the story of our world, you can check

out one of our sister channels, Eons, over at youtube.com/eons.

[♪OUTRO]

For more infomation >> The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

-------------------------------------------

Lartiste : Marwa Loud est-elle à l'origine de son passage à tabac ? - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Lartiste : Marwa Loud est-elle à l'origine de son passage à tabac ? - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

ゆっくり工魔クラフトS5 Part45【minecraft1.10.2】0161【ゆっくり実況】 - Duration: 10:07.

For more infomation >> ゆっくり工魔クラフトS5 Part45【minecraft1.10.2】0161【ゆっくり実況】 - Duration: 10:07.

-------------------------------------------

The fate of Talos is in your hands ... PREY / Xbox One - Duration: 9:33.

Hello friends on this chance

I come to show you a 📦

of a game called 🎮

What does it mean: DAM

to whom we have the game 💿

from behind

let's remove the packaging that is here

oh, it's time

on time if not so much vata

as other occasions

there are

that

I believe

let's remove the seal that is here

let's see if it has some code

let's see if it has some code

but it is 🔇

secret

😆

this on this side

we'll see

do not see

let's see first is

Dishonored 2

very good game

highly recommended too

and on the back is Morrowind

as well

excellent game the 2

on this side we have

the game itself

how to play it

hat is it PREY

which means dam

how to jump like shoot

also on this side we have

what does it say

pack from shotgun of

¿ ?

Cosmonaut

it's like a

what could this do

it's a shotgun

it seems that it is a

pistols as

I do not know what else else

but

here it is

let's leave this here

there is also a cover on the back

I personally love the covers of the games

let's do it a bit so they can see it

You control Morgan, 👤

while you explore 👣

the Talos 1 space station, 🌐

in orbit 🌌

around the Earth and the Moon 🌎🌑

where is it carried out

the investigation 🔬

of an alien collective 👽

called Typhoon.

When the Typhoon escapes from confinement,

you use a variety of weapons

and skills 💢

derived from the Typhoon

to prevent the aliens from killing you 💥

while you're looking for a way to escape 💨

of the space station. 🌌

Mode (s) Single player

Developer

Managing Director 📢

Graphics engine:

Release 📅: MAY 4

of 2017

Genre (s) Action and Adventure

Classification:

M

Platforms Xbox One ,

PlayStation 4 and

In the description I will leave you more

information of this game 🎮

friends gamers I want to send you a greeting

to all of you to follow

with me in this fantastic world of video games

Thank you

Well I hope you liked the video.

Do not forget to subscribe 🔴

Go ahead 👍

SHARE 💬

SUBSCRIBE 🔴

Remember to follow me on all my Social Networks.

📲

and to whom on YouTube.

Activate the bell for. 🔔

Your friend says goodbye

Cook of Games

¡ See you later !

SUBSCRIBE 🔴

For more infomation >> The fate of Talos is in your hands ... PREY / Xbox One - Duration: 9:33.

-------------------------------------------

The Original 'Dream Team' Make Their Mark in Barcelona | Olympics On The Record - Duration: 6:10.

Summer, 1992.

Barcelona was all set.

Ready to welcome thousands of athletes and the world's media.

Ready for the biggest event it had ever hosted.

Ready for three weeks

that would ultimately change the city for ever.

Yep, Barcelona was ready for its very first Olympic Games.

But was it ready for the Dream Team?

The Dream Team -

the finest collection of basketball players

ever assembled.

Superstars and superheroes, playing together on one team

for one reason and one reason only -

payback.

You see, despite the USA's

dominance of Olympic basketball,

the Olympic Games in Seoul, 1988 hadn't exactly

gone according to plan.

Team America was used to winning at the Olympics,

particularly in basketball.

Especially in basketball.

Winning an Olympic bronze medal would represent

a landmark achievement for most athletes.

Not for the USA basketball team.

It was time to call in the cavalry.

How are the cavalry going to help?

If anything, they should call more basketball players.

When Team USA decided to get the NBA professionals involved,

it was Magic Johnson...

I couldn't pass up that opportunity.

It was the greatest moment of my life.

..who sensationally came out of retirement

to answer the call,

and Boston Celtics' legend Larry Bird got on board first.

Other big names were quick to follow.

Scottie Pippen, one of the toughest defenders in the game.

John "The Pastey Gangster" Stockton - widely regarded

as one of the best point guards of all time.

The 14-time NBA all-star, Karl "Mailman" Malone.

New York Knicks' legend Patrick "The Warrior" Ewing,

who was coming off one of the best seasons of his career.

David "The Admiral" Robinson, who had played as an amateur

in the 1988 Olympics.

And the prolific

Charles "The Round Mound of Rebound" Barkley,

an 11-time NBA All-Star.

But it was one player, the most successful and gifted of all,

who was one of the last to sign on -

Michael "Air" Jordan,

at the summit of an extraordinary career.

In 1992, he was working towards his hat-trick of championships.

I never had the opportunity to play with Larry Bird,

never had the opportunity to play with Magic Johnson,

Karl Malone, Charles Barkley.

And while cynics would argue that a Mongolian fruit bat

would have been able to manage their interstellar collection

of talent, Chuck Daly, who was appointed coach,

was no slouch either, taking the Detroit Pistons

to back-to-back NBA titles a few years prior to Barcelona.

The question was not if they

were going to win the Olympic gold,

it was more - by how many points

would they crush the competition

on their inevitable swaggering stomp to victory?

It was like travelling with 12 rock stars.

They stayed in a luxury Barcelona hotel,

instead of with the rest

of the athletes in the Olympic Village...

to work on their moves.

A-list off the court,

A-list on the court.

First up was Angola.

Team USA blew them away, winning by 68 points.

It wasn't about them being close.

We didn't want any close games.

We wanted to go out and just put it to them,

to really show them

that we were the world's best.

Angola don't stand a chance!

He is on fire!

Team USA steam-rolled their way to the gold medal game,

beating every team by over 40 points en route.

Spain...

Puerto Rico...

Lithuania...

They scored 100 points in every game -

the first team in Olympic history to do so.

Coach Daly enjoyed the view from the touchline.

He didn't bother to call a single time out throughout

the competition - another first.

Rival teams had their moments.

They were trying, they really were.

But some players were more concerned

about getting their photos taken

with their basketball heroes.

The gold medal match threatened an upset.

No, seriously, it really did.

Towards the end of the first quarter,

Croatia held a respectable lead.

And then the Dream Team found its groove.

Gotta make it interesting, right?

Jordan piled in with 22 points,

his highest score of the tournament.

Seven American players scoring ten points or more.

They won all eight games, with an average winning margin

of 43.8 points.

The sporting success was followed

by the commercial success.

The 1992 Dream Team triggered basketball's switch

from American enterprise to global marketing phenomenon.

Across the world, TV rights exploded.

Sneaker sales soared.

And international participation leapt.

The presence of these professional superstars

on the Olympic stage would be a game-changer,

bringing other sports into the Olympic family.

The Olympics Games would never be the same again.

And nor would basketball.

That's the highlight of my career. It always will be.

For more infomation >> The Original 'Dream Team' Make Their Mark in Barcelona | Olympics On The Record - Duration: 6:10.

-------------------------------------------

Minute Vlog: Day Thirtyfive - Duration: 1:17.

Minute Vlog: Day Thirty-five

Hi to all!

Today is Earth Day. Do you keep our planet safe?

#ifyouknowwhatimean

For Earth Day this quote is very convinient

This is what you shall do; Love the earth and sun and the animals,

despise riches,

give alms to every one that asks,

stand up for the stupid and crazy,

devote your income and labor to others,

hate tyrants...

it was said by Walt Whitman

We have only one planet

It needs to be kept. do you agree?

Tell me in the comments and see you tomorrow.

By!

For more infomation >> Minute Vlog: Day Thirtyfive - Duration: 1:17.

-------------------------------------------

Channing Tatum et Jenna Dewan séparés, l'acteur regrette-t-il d'avoir demandé le divorce ? - Duration: 2:08.

For more infomation >> Channing Tatum et Jenna Dewan séparés, l'acteur regrette-t-il d'avoir demandé le divorce ? - Duration: 2:08.

-------------------------------------------

iPhone SE 2 is Coming!!! - Duration: 1:47.

iPhone SE 2 is Coming!!!

Apple can present the second generation of the iPhone SE 2 smartphone in May 2018.

According to the source, iPhone SE 2 will lose 3,5-mm headphone jack.

In this case, iPhone SE Smartphone will retain the same size, the fingerprint reader's fingerprint ID, support for Apple Pay with NFC.

The basis is the A10 Fusion processor, like the iPhone 7 and 7 Plus. It is 40% faster than the A9 in the original iPhone SE.

According to earlier leaks, the so-called iPhone SE 2 will not inherit the frameless design of the iPhone X,

but will retain the look similar to the original iPhone SE with a metal back panel and side frame,

significant bands above and below the display, and a proprietary home button.

The iPhone SE 2 flagship for 2018 design created by Phone Industry, based on latest leaks and rumors.

For more infomation >> iPhone SE 2 is Coming!!! - Duration: 1:47.

-------------------------------------------

Il tue sa fille et va en prison. Le sort que lui réserve les prisonniers est terrible - Duration: 6:06.

For more infomation >> Il tue sa fille et va en prison. Le sort que lui réserve les prisonniers est terrible - Duration: 6:06.

-------------------------------------------

Les chercheurs ont découvert 8 choses qui attirent les hommes à tous les coups ! - Duration: 8:10.

For more infomation >> Les chercheurs ont découvert 8 choses qui attirent les hommes à tous les coups ! - Duration: 8:10.

-------------------------------------------

Le syndrome d'Asperger : qu'est-ce réellement ? - Duration: 8:09.

For more infomation >> Le syndrome d'Asperger : qu'est-ce réellement ? - Duration: 8:09.

-------------------------------------------

TWİTCH'DEYİZ ARTIK !!!! : D - Duration: 0:23.

For more infomation >> TWİTCH'DEYİZ ARTIK !!!! : D - Duration: 0:23.

-------------------------------------------

Channing Tatum et Jenna Dewan séparés, l'acteur regrette-t-il d'avoir demandé le divorce ? - Duration: 2:08.

For more infomation >> Channing Tatum et Jenna Dewan séparés, l'acteur regrette-t-il d'avoir demandé le divorce ? - Duration: 2:08.

-------------------------------------------

The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

[♪INTRO]

Sharks bigger than a city bus.

Snakes twice as long as anyone alive has ever seen.

Go to a natural history museum, and it's populated with giants so huge, everything

alive today seems small by comparison.

Unless, of course, you're a blue whale.

Those hold the title of being the largest animal to ever exist.

Still, whales aside, what made it possible for certain species to grow so large in the

past, when their modern equivalents are so modest?

What changed between then and now, and, more importantly, why can't I hug a sloth the

size of an elephant?

Well, there's no "one size fits all" reason for ancient animals to have been bigger.

Instead, evolution works with what it's got -- and it's had different conditions

to work with throughout history.

Here are seven of the biggest versions of today's animals -- and how they got to be giants.

Long before giant land vertebrates, arthropods had their chance to reach enormous sizes.

They ruled during the Carboniferous and Permian periods, or from about 360 to 251 million

years ago.

And if you aren't a fan of bugs, you'll be happy you weren't around back then.

One of these Permian arthropods was Meganeuropsis permiana, likely the largest insect to ever

be capable of flight.

Although it technically belonged to a group known as griffinflies, it closely resembled

a dragonfly, and it had a wingspan up to 75 centimeters.

That's larger than some hawks, and more than ten times that of a modern dragonfly.

Meganeuropsis probably lived the same way dragonflies do today, scooping prey out of

the air at the water's edge -- although it was likely a lot less agile since it was

so huge.

What many scientists think made this insect so large is a commodity that was probably

far more common in the Permian: oxygen.

Back in the Carboniferous, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere skyrocketed thanks to massive

plant growth.

It went from around 20% -- which is close to what it is today -- to at least 30%, and

stayed high well into the Permian.

That really helped out these critters.

See, insects rely on tubes called tracheae to allow diffusion of oxygen into their bodies.

And this process is limited by the insect's size.

If it gets too large, a healthy amount of oxygen won't be able to make it all the

way down the tracheae.

But if there's more oxygen available, it can diffuse further.

And since there was more oxygen in the Permian, it, according to one popular hypothesis, allowed

Meganeuropsis to grow much bigger than modern insects.

Of course, like a lot of things in natural history, it's still not totally settled.

Another idea states that so much oxygen might have actually been poisonous to Meganeuropsis' larvae.

So they could have quickly grown to large sizes to decrease their surface area to volume ratio.

That would have allowed their bodies to more easily handle all that extra oxygen.

Flash forward a few million years, and Cretaceous North America was a playground for giant dinosaurs.

But between 83 and 72 million years ago, before the evolution of T. rex, the largest predator

around may have actually been… an early alligator.

Deinosuchus, whose name appropriately means "terrible crocodile", was a type of crocodile

that's a cousin of modern alligators.

Its fossil remains are too fragmentary for us to be sure exactly how big it got, but

estimates hover around eight to ten meters or more.

That's almost twice as long as a pickup truck.

Compare that to today's American alligator, which usually hovers around three to four meters.

Like modern alligators, this creature probably used its massive jaws to ambush prey from

beneath the water.

But unlike modern alligators, which reach more or less full size within ten years or

so, Deinosuchus kept growing up to the age of thirty-five.

We know that from counting growth rings in the bony plates in its skin, almost like counting

tree rings.

Without more complete remains, we can't be totally sure why it kept growing for so long.

But scientists think it could have been to compete with dinosaurs or even to eat them.

After all, teeth marks in dinosaur bones -- including a duck-billed hadrosaur and a smallish type

of tyrannosaur -- are proof of confrontations with Deinosuchus.

Just because it bit dinosaurs, though, doesn't mean it hunted them regularly.

Fossilized poop, officially known as coprolites, provides better evidence of what something ate.

And Deinosuchus coprolites contain bits of shell from large turtles.

So that could be another reason for it to grow to such sizes -- in order to crunch through

those thick shells.

Deinosuchus likely required a large hunting area, so they probably tended to have smaller

populations than some other animals.

And ultimately, that could be one reason why they were vulnerable to extinction.

Besides having enormous alligator-like animals, the Cretaceous also featured giant sea turtles

that put their modern cousins to shame.

Archelon lived about 74 million years ago, and was more than 4 meters from nose to tail.

Meanwhile, a modern leatherback turtle -- today's largest sea turtle -- is usually closer to

2 meters.

Like leatherbacks, Archelon also had a much thinner shell than other turtles, and it was

supported by a relatively light framework of bone.

This may have been to help it maintain buoyancy despite its huge size.

Right now, scientists know very little about Archelon.

Like, it could've been so large to make it hard for predators -- like mosasaurs -- to

eat it, but we aren't sure.

More fossil remains might help, though, since we haven't dug up many of them in recent

decades.

We're also still putting together the pieces about Archelon's diet, but one idea says

that it was too large to chase after quickly-swimming prey.

So it might've just hung out and snacked on whatever was around.

We do know it had a ferociously powerful bite, though, but it may have still favored soft

prey like squid or some plants.

But one thing's for sure: I really wouldn't want to mess with one.

This list wouldn't be complete without mentioning Megalodon, the largest shark that ever lived.

It was alive during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, or from 15.9 to just 2.6 million years

ago -- and no, Discovery Channel, they aren't somehow still alive.

Megalodon was once thought to be so closely related to the modern great white shark that

it was placed in the same genus.

Most scientists no longer think that should be the case, but its exact taxonomic placement

is extremely unclear.

It doesn't help that Megalodon is mostly just known from teeth and a vertebra here

and there.

Shark skeletons are made of cartilage, which doesn't fossilize as well as bone, though

it still can.

Still, we do know that it was probably about 18 meters in length -- three times the length

of a modern great white.

It was so big, it could -- and did -- eat whales.

Specializing in big prey is a good reason to grow to big sizes.

But like any good predatory shark, Megalodon was an opportunist that probably ate whatever

it could sink its teeth into -- like fish, squid, and turtles.

Usually, the abundance and diversity of large prey is cited as the reason this shark grew

so big.

But recently, another explanation has been proposed for Megalodon's fast-swimming,

predatory, super-giant lifestyle: It could have been sort of warm-blooded.

Some fish, including great white sharks, have evolved a way to conserve body heat.

Specialized blood vessels warm certain parts of the body, like the brain and eyes, by running

blood vessels carrying hot blood past colder ones -- a bit like a radiator.

It's called regional endothermy.

If Megalodon was closely related to white sharks, it might make sense for it to have

this ability as well.

Warm-blooded creatures are generally more active than cold-blooded ones.

So endothermy may have aided Megalodon in pursuing its huge prey, and given it a competitive

edge in an ocean full of giants.

The Paleocene epoch, which happened right after the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million

years ago, was a bit lacking in large vertebrates.

But despite the lack of huge dinosaurs running around, it did have a snake at least thirteen

meters long.

It was called Titanoboa, and was from Paleocene Colombia.

Green anacondas, the largest modern snake by body weight, also hail from South America.

But they only reach 6 meters in length on average.

Meanwhile, Titanoboa, even according to more conservative estimates, would have been double

that length.

They make anacondas look cute and tiny by comparison.

So what does a thirteen to fifteen meter snake eat?

Anything it wants to.

If it lived like a modern anaconda, as researchers believe, it probably wasn't picky.

It's been found alongside fossils of turtles, crocodilians, and lungfish, and its discoverers

believe these crocodiles may have been its favorite meal.

Yeah.

A snake that eats crocodiles.

Besides being enormous, Titanoboa's huge size also has been interpreted as a clue about

the climate of Paleocene South America.

See, snakes are poikilothermic, meaning their body temperatures fluctuates with the temperature

of their environment.

And the maximum body size of poikilothermic vertebrates is known to be limited by temperature.

Based on its size, researchers think the jungles Titanoboa lived in must have been a toasty

annual average temperature of at least 27° Celsius -- definitely warmer than today.

Which means the Paleocene hothouse probably made monster snakes possible.

Before we leave South America, there's another meat-eating giant we should mention: the largest

flightless bird.

In most places, following the extinction of the dinosaurs, mammals evolved to be top predators.

But in South America, for whatever reason, most mammals were vegetarians.

That means, 60 million years ago, there was an open slot for a big predator at the top

of the food chain.

And it was filled by terror birds.

These animals only went extinct around 2.5 million years ago, and had time to evolve

a variety of forms -- at least 17 species.

Some were long-legged, swift runners.

Others were more stocky, and built like ambush predators.

All of them had the hooked beak that's a signature of modern predatory birds, and the

biggest were easily taller than a modern ostrich, at perhaps 3 meters.

For South American prey animals, it's like the dinosaurs never left.

Terror birds are popularly shown dining on horses, although it's worth mentioning that

horses were smaller for most of their history.

And the exact feeding style and favored prey of terror birds is hotly debated.

Their closest relatives alive today are 80 centimeter tall birds called seriemas, which

feed by slamming their prey against the ground to break their bones.

It's hypothesized that terror birds might have followed a similar strategy.

Since there were so many different kinds, though, they probably also had more than one

way of getting a meal.

Sloths are cute.

This is internet fact.

So scale one up to the size of an elephant and it's just that much cuter, right?

Megatherium was the biggest of the giant ground sloths, and it lived during the Pliocene and

Pleistocene epochs, 5 million years ago to almost, but not quite, the present day.

They're called ground sloths because, perhaps not surprisingly, they couldn't actually

live in trees like their modern counterparts.

A three toed sloth is well under a meter in length, but Megatherium might have measured

six meters from nose to tail.

But it was still a vegetarian, and probably exploited its size to reach into the treetops

and pull down vegetation that smaller competitors couldn't reach.

They could have been so big because there was plenty of land area available to support

their populations -- although not everyone agrees.

But it does seem clear that the dinosaurs left niches wide open for large herbivores

to fill.

Overhunting by humans is often blamed for driving the giant sloths to extinction.

But climate change at the end of the last glacial period, as well as other complex factors,

may have been involved as well.

Different animal groups have evolved extraordinary sizes for different reasons, whether it's

because of temperature or food or physiology.

The evolutionary circumstances are always different, and it's not like there's a

bias toward bigness in the past.

After all, the blue whale is still around today.

The big stuff does catch our attention, though.

There's a lot we can learn from these fossil giants about the what our planet used to be

like -- and the kinds of creatures that roamed it.

And as a bonus, these fossils also look pretty cool in a museum.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about natural history and the story of our world, you can check

out one of our sister channels, Eons, over at youtube.com/eons.

[♪OUTRO]

For more infomation >> The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

-------------------------------------------

Lartiste : Marwa Loud est-elle à l'origine de son passage à tabac ? - Duration: 1:55.

For more infomation >> Lartiste : Marwa Loud est-elle à l'origine de son passage à tabac ? - Duration: 1:55.

-------------------------------------------

BluMaan Hybrid Cream Clay on Curly/Wavy Hair (How To) - Men's Long Hairstyles - Duration: 5:07.

- If you've been looking for a way

to keep your curls less frizzy, more defined,

and lasting longer, then you're watching the right video

because today, I'm gonna be showing you

how I've been keeping my curls looking fabulous

with a hair clay.

(horns trumpeting)

Hello everybody and welcome back to my channel.

My name's Thomas, if you're brand new here

and I make styling hair-related videos

every single week here on YouTube.

So if that's your kind of thing,

make sure you hit the subscribe button and come back.

So today we're talking about hair curling.

If you are brand new here,

I've been growing my hair out for over a year now

and my favourite thing to do is play with my curls.

Now, a couple of weeks ago I did a video

about a wash-and-go routine, with my friend Mike.

It actually was really cool.

Wash-and-go's have been great for,

especially for dry, frizzy hair types like mine.

It defined my curls a lot better and it kept it moisturised.

So in terms of products for wash-and-go's,

there was three products that I use.

There was the Aunt Jackie's Flax Seed Gel,

which I'm kind of a fan, not really.

It's not my favourite thing.

There's also the SheaMoisture Styling Lotion,

and there was also the Jane Carter Solution.

All three of these products mixed together

made a really good curl combination,

however, I wasn't too much of a fan

of the flax seed gel and I thought,

"How could I make this a little bit different?"

And in my curiosity, I was like, well,

I've got hair clays and I know hair clays are great

for adding texture, a bit of body.

I thought I would add in the Cavalier Clay first

to see if it would help define my curls.

It did indeed work, because the Cavalier Clay

is a solid hold product.

It really gave the curls that definition.

However, because it's such a hard hold product,

they were very stiff and they weren't bouncy

and beautiful like the ones I have today.

I thought about it a little bit more and I went,

"Hang on a minute.

"Hybrid Cream Clay is probably the best thing for this."

Because A, it's a cream, it's easy to apply,

it could probably mesh with the styling lotion

and the Jane Carter Solution very well.

But not only that, it has the clay properties as well

that are gonna give me nice texture.

The other thing on top of it, was the Hybrid Cream Clay

has a delayed hot activation in it,

which means once you've put it on the hair,

it actually starts to set within 15 minutes afterwards.

It's designed like that, so by rights,

I thought well, if I apply this to wet curls,

while my curls are drying, the delayed hold activation

will hold them in place and hopefully, decrease frizz,

which is exactly what you're seeing right now.

So now I've finally found something

that actually works for me.

There is a process to it, obviously,

like every hair routine that I do.

You don't need every single product in this range.

The products that I'm using here today are just pretty much

because I have such dry hair.

If your hair is not on the drier side,

you can probably get away without using the SheaMoisture

'cause this one really is for moisturising.

But, essentially, what I do to get

these curls rocking is I'll start off with a leave-in cream,

my Bhave leave-in cream.

It's my old faithful.

I pretty much use it every single day.

And then, once I've applied that,

I will part my hair down the middle.

So I do this in two sections.

I'll part it on this side, part it on that side,

and then I will merge all three of these products together.

So a tiny, tiny, tiny little bit

of the Jane Carter Solution.

You don't want too much of this

'cause if you use too much it gets very oily.

Then I'll put the SheaMoisture,

and then I'll put a lump of my Hybrid Cream Clay.

Once all of it is on my palm,

I'll just mix it all together

and then add it to my section of hair,

and then do the same on the other side.

And then all you have to do is let it air dry

and then you get this.

(bell dings)

And that's pretty much as easy as it needs to be.

Like, literally, you could probably get away

with just a leave-in conditioner and the clay.

Hybrid Cream Clay is probably your best bet

simply because of the delayed hold activation,

the texturizing properties

and the easiness of application.

It's really, really all-in-one product

and it's pretty much as simple as that.

I never thought like a clay

was gonna work so well for my hair.

I did use to think hair clays were just for people

with short, 50 hair styles

that wanted to make it look real swish.

But, I've actually defied that and you can as well

and I just really wanted to bring that

and share that with you today.

It's gonna be great for people with waves.

If you've got waves that frizz out all the time

or you've got real curls like I do,

I would definitely suggest doing something like this.

You don't need all the products that I've used.

I would probably, at minimum,

use like a leave-in conditioner and the cream clay.

That's probably your best bet.

And trust me, you will see a difference.

And if any of you do try this out as well,

please make sure you let me know

in the comment section below

because I'm always keen to hear about it.

And, yeah, I want to know more.

So that's pretty much all I have for you today.

I really hope you enjoyed this video

and I can't wait to hear about your rocking curls.

I do have a Facebook group as well

for anybody that is brand new.

It's called Hairstyles in Action

and what we do in there,

we just kind of encourage each other to have better hair

and stick through the growing out process.

So if that's something that you're into,

please make sure you visit that

and I'll see you next week for another video.

See you later.

(shotgun blasts)

For more infomation >> BluMaan Hybrid Cream Clay on Curly/Wavy Hair (How To) - Men's Long Hairstyles - Duration: 5:07.

-------------------------------------------

The Original 'Dream Team' Make Their Mark in Barcelona | Olympics On The Record - Duration: 6:10.

Summer, 1992.

Barcelona was all set.

Ready to welcome thousands of athletes and the world's media.

Ready for the biggest event it had ever hosted.

Ready for three weeks

that would ultimately change the city for ever.

Yep, Barcelona was ready for its very first Olympic Games.

But was it ready for the Dream Team?

The Dream Team -

the finest collection of basketball players

ever assembled.

Superstars and superheroes, playing together on one team

for one reason and one reason only -

payback.

You see, despite the USA's

dominance of Olympic basketball,

the Olympic Games in Seoul, 1988 hadn't exactly

gone according to plan.

Team America was used to winning at the Olympics,

particularly in basketball.

Especially in basketball.

Winning an Olympic bronze medal would represent

a landmark achievement for most athletes.

Not for the USA basketball team.

It was time to call in the cavalry.

How are the cavalry going to help?

If anything, they should call more basketball players.

When Team USA decided to get the NBA professionals involved,

it was Magic Johnson...

I couldn't pass up that opportunity.

It was the greatest moment of my life.

..who sensationally came out of retirement

to answer the call,

and Boston Celtics' legend Larry Bird got on board first.

Other big names were quick to follow.

Scottie Pippen, one of the toughest defenders in the game.

John "The Pastey Gangster" Stockton - widely regarded

as one of the best point guards of all time.

The 14-time NBA all-star, Karl "Mailman" Malone.

New York Knicks' legend Patrick "The Warrior" Ewing,

who was coming off one of the best seasons of his career.

David "The Admiral" Robinson, who had played as an amateur

in the 1988 Olympics.

And the prolific

Charles "The Round Mound of Rebound" Barkley,

an 11-time NBA All-Star.

But it was one player, the most successful and gifted of all,

who was one of the last to sign on -

Michael "Air" Jordan,

at the summit of an extraordinary career.

In 1992, he was working towards his hat-trick of championships.

I never had the opportunity to play with Larry Bird,

never had the opportunity to play with Magic Johnson,

Karl Malone, Charles Barkley.

And while cynics would argue that a Mongolian fruit bat

would have been able to manage their interstellar collection

of talent, Chuck Daly, who was appointed coach,

was no slouch either, taking the Detroit Pistons

to back-to-back NBA titles a few years prior to Barcelona.

The question was not if they

were going to win the Olympic gold,

it was more - by how many points

would they crush the competition

on their inevitable swaggering stomp to victory?

It was like travelling with 12 rock stars.

They stayed in a luxury Barcelona hotel,

instead of with the rest

of the athletes in the Olympic Village...

to work on their moves.

A-list off the court,

A-list on the court.

First up was Angola.

Team USA blew them away, winning by 68 points.

It wasn't about them being close.

We didn't want any close games.

We wanted to go out and just put it to them,

to really show them

that we were the world's best.

Angola don't stand a chance!

He is on fire!

Team USA steam-rolled their way to the gold medal game,

beating every team by over 40 points en route.

Spain...

Puerto Rico...

Lithuania...

They scored 100 points in every game -

the first team in Olympic history to do so.

Coach Daly enjoyed the view from the touchline.

He didn't bother to call a single time out throughout

the competition - another first.

Rival teams had their moments.

They were trying, they really were.

But some players were more concerned

about getting their photos taken

with their basketball heroes.

The gold medal match threatened an upset.

No, seriously, it really did.

Towards the end of the first quarter,

Croatia held a respectable lead.

And then the Dream Team found its groove.

Gotta make it interesting, right?

Jordan piled in with 22 points,

his highest score of the tournament.

Seven American players scoring ten points or more.

They won all eight games, with an average winning margin

of 43.8 points.

The sporting success was followed

by the commercial success.

The 1992 Dream Team triggered basketball's switch

from American enterprise to global marketing phenomenon.

Across the world, TV rights exploded.

Sneaker sales soared.

And international participation leapt.

The presence of these professional superstars

on the Olympic stage would be a game-changer,

bringing other sports into the Olympic family.

The Olympics Games would never be the same again.

And nor would basketball.

That's the highlight of my career. It always will be.

For more infomation >> The Original 'Dream Team' Make Their Mark in Barcelona | Olympics On The Record - Duration: 6:10.

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La Villa 4 : Loana révèle son coup de coeur de l'aventure sur Instagram - Duration: 3:18.

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MÚSICA MEDICINA. Con Ana Hatun Sonqo y Jesús Hidalgo. - Duration: 27:31.

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Il tue sa fille et va en prison. Le sort que lui réserve les prisonniers est terrible - Duration: 6:06.

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How to get 100 FREE gems!!! | Roblox Flood Escape 2 - Duration: 1:36.

Intro Music Starts

Intro Music Ends

Video Music Starts: ♫Music Credits♫ ●Ryan Little - Amusement Park

Outro Music Starts

Outro Music Ends

For more infomation >> How to get 100 FREE gems!!! | Roblox Flood Escape 2 - Duration: 1:36.

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Les chercheurs ont découvert 8 choses qui attirent les hommes à tous les coups ! - Duration: 8:10.

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Gossip, Stefano De Martino racconta: L'amore, Santiago e... - Duration: 6:10.

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#1035 Mukbang ASMR - Ice Eating ASMR - Beautiful Girls Chewing Soft Ice, Frozen Milk - Duration: 12:01.

ICE Eating

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For more infomation >> #1035 Mukbang ASMR - Ice Eating ASMR - Beautiful Girls Chewing Soft Ice, Frozen Milk - Duration: 12:01.

-------------------------------------------

Volkswagen Plans to Update Its Logo to Something 'More Colorful' - Duration: 4:58.

Volkswagen is changing.

It's no longer the industrious brand that it was when founded in 1937, instead, it is

becoming a more refined and modern company focused on advancing itself through electromobility.

Now, the company's iconic "VW" logo is undergoing a change to make it "more colorful."

Just last week, Volkswagen announced that it would oust Matthias Müller as CEO in favor

of Herbert Diess, a management-level placement plucked from BMW in 2015.

Diess has historically favored Volkswagen's shift towards electrification and is a clear

pick for the way the company plans to head in the coming years.

In a company address, Diess called the shift to electromobility an "evolution rather than

a revolution," signaling the need for the company to update its image to reflect just

that.

The automaker's chief marketing officer, Jochen Sengpieh, confirmed in a press briefing that

the company's new logo would be presented next year, just as the company begins its

aggressive push of electrification onto the world.

The only hint dropped was that it would be updated to "work on car fronts as well as

smartphone screens, according to Bloomberg, which given the Material Design push of today's

age of technology, may mean that Volkswagen drops its logo's 3-D look.

Sengpieh also mentioned that it would be using digital and social media to market its products,

indicating that its new target audience for electric and intelligent cars could very well

be millennials and those who've lived their lives in the digital age.

"The big challenge is: How do we get people into the electric world?" said Sengpiehl,

"We want people to have fun with us, we need to get more colorful."

From the time it was launched, Volkswagen has always had a very marketable approach

to its use of branding in logo design.

The company itself has roots in pre-World War II Germany, stemming from a project Adolf

Hitler envisioned for "the people's car."

He sketched a quick drawing of the KDF-Wagen (KDF meaning "Kraft durch Freude," or "strength

through joy"), which would later be known to the world as the Volkswagen Beetle, and

handed it to Austrian automobile engineer Ferdinand Porsche.

The original logo embodied principal design features of the National Socialists movement,

resembling a swastika.

Being the symbol of the nation, and the thought behind the Volkswagen brand being one of the

keys to strengthening the dwindling 1930s German economy.

Prior to World War II, the logo shifted from a pseudo-political symbol to more of an industrious

one, surrounding the "VW" with symbolistic gear cogs.

After World War II, the British took control of the Volkswagen manufacturing plant and

its housing town was renamed Wolfsberg.

The logo was then altered to remove the gear cogs and invert the white and black lines

making up "VW."

In 1949, Volkswagen was handed back to the German government who would turn the company

in the direction of becoming a successful automaker.

The '60s added a box to the logo for some reason, which was then removed later in the

decade; this is when the logo starts to look a bit more familiar.

The logo was then thinned out and colored blue.

It changed in the late '70s to make the strokes broader, the mid-'90s changed its shade of

blue, the late '90s added a bit of gradient shading and depth, a year later in 2000 it

appeared in "3-D," and then its latest revision in 2015, which added some structure to remove

its cartoon-like appearance.

Volkswagen is currently the largest automaker by volume in the world, rivaled closely with

Toyota.

It's a household name that nearly every person is familiar with, and has grown with every

generation using its iconic "VW" logo pattern so it would be difficult to see the automaker

switch to anything else.

In a time where Volkswagen is looking to adopt future customers into an uncharted world of

electrificaton, anything is possible.

For more infomation >> Volkswagen Plans to Update Its Logo to Something 'More Colorful' - Duration: 4:58.

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New Medical Office Gadget

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The Biggest Sloth That Ever Lived, and 6 Other Gigantic Animals - Duration: 12:08.

[♪INTRO]

Sharks bigger than a city bus.

Snakes twice as long as anyone alive has ever seen.

Go to a natural history museum, and it's populated with giants so huge, everything

alive today seems small by comparison.

Unless, of course, you're a blue whale.

Those hold the title of being the largest animal to ever exist.

Still, whales aside, what made it possible for certain species to grow so large in the

past, when their modern equivalents are so modest?

What changed between then and now, and, more importantly, why can't I hug a sloth the

size of an elephant?

Well, there's no "one size fits all" reason for ancient animals to have been bigger.

Instead, evolution works with what it's got -- and it's had different conditions

to work with throughout history.

Here are seven of the biggest versions of today's animals -- and how they got to be giants.

Long before giant land vertebrates, arthropods had their chance to reach enormous sizes.

They ruled during the Carboniferous and Permian periods, or from about 360 to 251 million

years ago.

And if you aren't a fan of bugs, you'll be happy you weren't around back then.

One of these Permian arthropods was Meganeuropsis permiana, likely the largest insect to ever

be capable of flight.

Although it technically belonged to a group known as griffinflies, it closely resembled

a dragonfly, and it had a wingspan up to 75 centimeters.

That's larger than some hawks, and more than ten times that of a modern dragonfly.

Meganeuropsis probably lived the same way dragonflies do today, scooping prey out of

the air at the water's edge -- although it was likely a lot less agile since it was

so huge.

What many scientists think made this insect so large is a commodity that was probably

far more common in the Permian: oxygen.

Back in the Carboniferous, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere skyrocketed thanks to massive

plant growth.

It went from around 20% -- which is close to what it is today -- to at least 30%, and

stayed high well into the Permian.

That really helped out these critters.

See, insects rely on tubes called tracheae to allow diffusion of oxygen into their bodies.

And this process is limited by the insect's size.

If it gets too large, a healthy amount of oxygen won't be able to make it all the

way down the tracheae.

But if there's more oxygen available, it can diffuse further.

And since there was more oxygen in the Permian, it, according to one popular hypothesis, allowed

Meganeuropsis to grow much bigger than modern insects.

Of course, like a lot of things in natural history, it's still not totally settled.

Another idea states that so much oxygen might have actually been poisonous to Meganeuropsis' larvae.

So they could have quickly grown to large sizes to decrease their surface area to volume ratio.

That would have allowed their bodies to more easily handle all that extra oxygen.

Flash forward a few million years, and Cretaceous North America was a playground for giant dinosaurs.

But between 83 and 72 million years ago, before the evolution of T. rex, the largest predator

around may have actually been… an early alligator.

Deinosuchus, whose name appropriately means "terrible crocodile", was a type of crocodile

that's a cousin of modern alligators.

Its fossil remains are too fragmentary for us to be sure exactly how big it got, but

estimates hover around eight to ten meters or more.

That's almost twice as long as a pickup truck.

Compare that to today's American alligator, which usually hovers around three to four meters.

Like modern alligators, this creature probably used its massive jaws to ambush prey from

beneath the water.

But unlike modern alligators, which reach more or less full size within ten years or

so, Deinosuchus kept growing up to the age of thirty-five.

We know that from counting growth rings in the bony plates in its skin, almost like counting

tree rings.

Without more complete remains, we can't be totally sure why it kept growing for so long.

But scientists think it could have been to compete with dinosaurs or even to eat them.

After all, teeth marks in dinosaur bones -- including a duck-billed hadrosaur and a smallish type

of tyrannosaur -- are proof of confrontations with Deinosuchus.

Just because it bit dinosaurs, though, doesn't mean it hunted them regularly.

Fossilized poop, officially known as coprolites, provides better evidence of what something ate.

And Deinosuchus coprolites contain bits of shell from large turtles.

So that could be another reason for it to grow to such sizes -- in order to crunch through

those thick shells.

Deinosuchus likely required a large hunting area, so they probably tended to have smaller

populations than some other animals.

And ultimately, that could be one reason why they were vulnerable to extinction.

Besides having enormous alligator-like animals, the Cretaceous also featured giant sea turtles

that put their modern cousins to shame.

Archelon lived about 74 million years ago, and was more than 4 meters from nose to tail.

Meanwhile, a modern leatherback turtle -- today's largest sea turtle -- is usually closer to

2 meters.

Like leatherbacks, Archelon also had a much thinner shell than other turtles, and it was

supported by a relatively light framework of bone.

This may have been to help it maintain buoyancy despite its huge size.

Right now, scientists know very little about Archelon.

Like, it could've been so large to make it hard for predators -- like mosasaurs -- to

eat it, but we aren't sure.

More fossil remains might help, though, since we haven't dug up many of them in recent

decades.

We're also still putting together the pieces about Archelon's diet, but one idea says

that it was too large to chase after quickly-swimming prey.

So it might've just hung out and snacked on whatever was around.

We do know it had a ferociously powerful bite, though, but it may have still favored soft

prey like squid or some plants.

But one thing's for sure: I really wouldn't want to mess with one.

This list wouldn't be complete without mentioning Megalodon, the largest shark that ever lived.

It was alive during the Miocene and Pliocene epochs, or from 15.9 to just 2.6 million years

ago -- and no, Discovery Channel, they aren't somehow still alive.

Megalodon was once thought to be so closely related to the modern great white shark that

it was placed in the same genus.

Most scientists no longer think that should be the case, but its exact taxonomic placement

is extremely unclear.

It doesn't help that Megalodon is mostly just known from teeth and a vertebra here

and there.

Shark skeletons are made of cartilage, which doesn't fossilize as well as bone, though

it still can.

Still, we do know that it was probably about 18 meters in length -- three times the length

of a modern great white.

It was so big, it could -- and did -- eat whales.

Specializing in big prey is a good reason to grow to big sizes.

But like any good predatory shark, Megalodon was an opportunist that probably ate whatever

it could sink its teeth into -- like fish, squid, and turtles.

Usually, the abundance and diversity of large prey is cited as the reason this shark grew

so big.

But recently, another explanation has been proposed for Megalodon's fast-swimming,

predatory, super-giant lifestyle: It could have been sort of warm-blooded.

Some fish, including great white sharks, have evolved a way to conserve body heat.

Specialized blood vessels warm certain parts of the body, like the brain and eyes, by running

blood vessels carrying hot blood past colder ones -- a bit like a radiator.

It's called regional endothermy.

If Megalodon was closely related to white sharks, it might make sense for it to have

this ability as well.

Warm-blooded creatures are generally more active than cold-blooded ones.

So endothermy may have aided Megalodon in pursuing its huge prey, and given it a competitive

edge in an ocean full of giants.

The Paleocene epoch, which happened right after the extinction of the dinosaurs 66 million

years ago, was a bit lacking in large vertebrates.

But despite the lack of huge dinosaurs running around, it did have a snake at least thirteen

meters long.

It was called Titanoboa, and was from Paleocene Colombia.

Green anacondas, the largest modern snake by body weight, also hail from South America.

But they only reach 6 meters in length on average.

Meanwhile, Titanoboa, even according to more conservative estimates, would have been double

that length.

They make anacondas look cute and tiny by comparison.

So what does a thirteen to fifteen meter snake eat?

Anything it wants to.

If it lived like a modern anaconda, as researchers believe, it probably wasn't picky.

It's been found alongside fossils of turtles, crocodilians, and lungfish, and its discoverers

believe these crocodiles may have been its favorite meal.

Yeah.

A snake that eats crocodiles.

Besides being enormous, Titanoboa's huge size also has been interpreted as a clue about

the climate of Paleocene South America.

See, snakes are poikilothermic, meaning their body temperatures fluctuates with the temperature

of their environment.

And the maximum body size of poikilothermic vertebrates is known to be limited by temperature.

Based on its size, researchers think the jungles Titanoboa lived in must have been a toasty

annual average temperature of at least 27° Celsius -- definitely warmer than today.

Which means the Paleocene hothouse probably made monster snakes possible.

Before we leave South America, there's another meat-eating giant we should mention: the largest

flightless bird.

In most places, following the extinction of the dinosaurs, mammals evolved to be top predators.

But in South America, for whatever reason, most mammals were vegetarians.

That means, 60 million years ago, there was an open slot for a big predator at the top

of the food chain.

And it was filled by terror birds.

These animals only went extinct around 2.5 million years ago, and had time to evolve

a variety of forms -- at least 17 species.

Some were long-legged, swift runners.

Others were more stocky, and built like ambush predators.

All of them had the hooked beak that's a signature of modern predatory birds, and the

biggest were easily taller than a modern ostrich, at perhaps 3 meters.

For South American prey animals, it's like the dinosaurs never left.

Terror birds are popularly shown dining on horses, although it's worth mentioning that

horses were smaller for most of their history.

And the exact feeding style and favored prey of terror birds is hotly debated.

Their closest relatives alive today are 80 centimeter tall birds called seriemas, which

feed by slamming their prey against the ground to break their bones.

It's hypothesized that terror birds might have followed a similar strategy.

Since there were so many different kinds, though, they probably also had more than one

way of getting a meal.

Sloths are cute.

This is internet fact.

So scale one up to the size of an elephant and it's just that much cuter, right?

Megatherium was the biggest of the giant ground sloths, and it lived during the Pliocene and

Pleistocene epochs, 5 million years ago to almost, but not quite, the present day.

They're called ground sloths because, perhaps not surprisingly, they couldn't actually

live in trees like their modern counterparts.

A three toed sloth is well under a meter in length, but Megatherium might have measured

six meters from nose to tail.

But it was still a vegetarian, and probably exploited its size to reach into the treetops

and pull down vegetation that smaller competitors couldn't reach.

They could have been so big because there was plenty of land area available to support

their populations -- although not everyone agrees.

But it does seem clear that the dinosaurs left niches wide open for large herbivores

to fill.

Overhunting by humans is often blamed for driving the giant sloths to extinction.

But climate change at the end of the last glacial period, as well as other complex factors,

may have been involved as well.

Different animal groups have evolved extraordinary sizes for different reasons, whether it's

because of temperature or food or physiology.

The evolutionary circumstances are always different, and it's not like there's a

bias toward bigness in the past.

After all, the blue whale is still around today.

The big stuff does catch our attention, though.

There's a lot we can learn from these fossil giants about the what our planet used to be

like -- and the kinds of creatures that roamed it.

And as a bonus, these fossils also look pretty cool in a museum.

Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow!

If you want to learn more about natural history and the story of our world, you can check

out one of our sister channels, Eons, over at youtube.com/eons.

[♪OUTRO]

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