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Introduction to Paleontology

Temporada 1
Embark on a thrilling journey from a lifeless planet to initial bursts of life, from extinctions to recovery, and ultimately to our world today. Relying considerably on the National Museum of Natural History’s curatorial expertise and extensive collections, this series reveals how paleontology helps us better understand the history of life on our constantly changing planet.
201624 episódios
TV-PG
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Episódios

  1. T1 EP.1History on a Geological Scale
    10 de novembro de 2016
    33min
    TV-PG
    Take an exciting virtual walk from the Washington Monument to the US Capitol to explore the 4.54 billion-year history of Earth, with each of your strides representing 1 to 2 million years. Along the way, fossils will paint a picture of life on Earth, from the earliest known bacteria to our world today. #Science & Mathematics
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  2. T1 EP.2Life Cast in Ancient Stone
    10 de novembro de 2016
    34min
    TV-PG
    Learn about the fascinating individuals and showmen whose curiosity about the Earth and its fossils led to the development of the science of paleontology. But how easy is it to find fossils? Learn about the geographic, climatic, and chemical requirements for a living organism to leave behind its fossilized record.
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  3. T1 EP.3Tools of the Paleontological Trade
    10 de novembro de 2016
    33min
    TV-PG
    In addition to the basic mechanical tools still used in the field today, paleontologists now have an exciting digital tool chest. What can we learn from dispersive x-ray spectroscopy and x-ray computer tomography when they are used to examine fossils from the size of pollen to the bones of Tyrannosaurus rex?
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  4. T1 EP.4How Do You Fossilize Behavior?
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    While we rarely, if ever, find the fossilized remains of certain types of organisms, we can find evidence of their existence as they interacted with the environment. Learn how these trace fossils (e.g., fossilized burrows, tracks, ripples, nests, feces) help us understand the early evolution of the biosphere and the diversification of animal life.
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  5. T1 EP.5Taxonomy: The Order of Life
    10 de novembro de 2016
    29min
    TV-PG
    How much does the scientific name of an animal, past or present, really matter? From Carl Linnaeus' Systema Naturae to the modern system of cladistics, you'll be amazed how much we can learn about the history of life on Earth simply from our ongoing efforts at classification.
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  6. T1 EP.6Minerals and the Evolving Earth
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    Paleontology provides a different lens to view how our planet's 4,400 minerals developed over billions of years - both influencing and being influenced by our evolving biosphere. Learn how Earth's few primordial minerals interacting with liquid water, plate tectonics, and eventually photosynthesis would create an explosion of mineral species seen nowhere else in our solar system.
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  7. T1 EP.7Fossil Timekeepers
    10 de novembro de 2016
    33min
    TV-PG
    Our planet's fossil record reveals that the natural cycles we take for granted today were previously quite different. Learn how biostratigraphy, sclerochronology, Carbon-14 dating, and other tools reveal a historic Earth with a day as short as six hours and a year as long as 455 days.
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  8. T1 EP.8Fossils and the Shifting Crust
    10 de novembro de 2016
    34min
    TV-PG
    Why do we find life on Earth exactly where it is today? Why are some species found only in isolated pockets while others are spread across multiple continents? Learn what fossils tell us about our planet's exciting historic migrations - of flora, fauna, and the continents themselves.
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  9. T1 EP.9Our Vast Troves of Microfossils
    10 de novembro de 2016
    32min
    TV-PG
    When we think of fossils, we tend to visualize large shells or bones. Microfossils, though, can reveal a more complete and dynamic picture of the past, including some of the most ancient history of life on Earth and details of climate change over hundreds of millions of years with a resolution just not possible from large "macro" fossils.
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  10. T1 EP.10Ocean Fire and the Origin of Life
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    For centuries, scientists believed all life on Earth was powered by the sun via photosynthesis. That was before ecosystems, powered by chemosynthesis, were found at volcanic oceanic ridge systems. Paleontologists have now found examples of fossilized vent systems over a billion years old and the life that lived around them.
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  11. T1 EP.11The Ancient Roots of Biodiversity
    10 de novembro de 2016
    30min
    TV-PG
    What is the Cambrian explosion? Why did Charles Darwin find the apparent sudden emergence of complex life so puzzling, and what have paleontologists today revealed about this period of Earth's history? Learn what the very latest findings tell us about how the stage might have been set for such rapid adaptation and diversification of life on Earth.
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  12. T1 EP.12Arthropod Rule on Planet Earth
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    Arthropods live successfully all around the Earth today, but it was an extinct group of arthropods, the trilobites, that dominated the globe following the Cambrian explosion. With the benefits of exoskeletons and their well-developed eyes, trilobites were a significant presence in Earth's oceans for 250 million years, evolving into more than 20,000 species with a variety of life styles.
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  13. T1 EP.13Devonian Death and the Spread of Forests
    10 de novembro de 2016
    30min
    TV-PG
    Today, we look at forests as a sign of a healthy biosphere. But is it possible that the earliest forestation of our planet (as plants became larger; developed seeds, roots, and wood; and expanded away from the shoreline) could be responsible for mass extinction towards the end of the Devonian period?
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  14. T1 EP.14Life’s Greatest Crisis: The Permian
    10 de novembro de 2016
    32min
    TV-PG
    What could have caused the Permian mass extinction, when around 90 percent of all species became extinct in the geological blink of an eye? Learn what paleontology reveals about the cascading series of events that led to runaway global warming and the greatest catastrophe faced on Earth since the evolution of complex life.
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  15. T1 EP.15Life’s Slow Recovery after the Permian
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    Although after most mass extinctions, the biosphere is well on its way to recovery within several hundred thousand years, recovery took many times longer after the Permian extinction. Eventually though, life adapted and diversified into a wide variety of exciting new plants and animals. Enter the dinosaurs.
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  16. T1 EP.16Dinosaur Interpretations and Spinosaurus
    10 de novembro de 2016
    32min
    TV-PG
    Learn how a recent discovery might answer "Romer's Riddle" and give us a new picture of Spinosaurus, the largest carnivorous dinosaurs to have ever lived. With an elaborate sail on his back and an interpretation that this dinosaur may have been semi-aquatic, Spinosaurus is at the center of much debate in the paleontological community today.
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  17. T1 EP.17Whales: Throwing Away Legs for the Sea
    10 de novembro de 2016
    30min
    TV-PG
    Learn how descendants of a small, raccoon-sized animal that lived in India evolved into modern marine whales. From this small herbivore, within the geological blink of an eye, the power of natural selection would generate a whole array of wonderful creatures including the blue whale, possibly the largest animal to have ever lived on Earth.
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  18. T1 EP.18Insects, Plants, and the Rise of Flower Power
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    We owe a lot to the angiosperms. Not only do their flowers create a world of beauty, but their fruits helped drive human civilization. But did flowers first appear in water or on land? And what is the history and origin of the wonderful partnership between insects and flowering plants?
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  19. T1 EP.19The Not-So-Humble Story of Grass
    10 de novembro de 2016
    30min
    TV-PG
    With the evolution of grasses came the grassland biomes: the prairies, pampas, and steppes that cover almost 40 percent of Earth's land surface today. Learn how this biome impacted animal evolution, including our own ancestors as they moved out of Africa and around the planet, facilitated by a carpet of grasses.
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  20. T1 EP.20Australia’s Megafauna: Komodo Dragons
    10 de novembro de 2016
    28min
    TV-PG
    Meet the Komodo dragon, a 200-pound lizard found on several relatively small Indonesian islands today. Paleontologists now know these specimens are a relic population of a lineage of giant monitor lizards once common in Australia. But exactly how did these animals make that trip? And how much longer is their species likely to survive?
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  21. T1 EP.21Mammoths, Mastodons, and the Quest to Clone
    10 de novembro de 2016
    30min
    TV-PG
    When the Mastodon became the first extinct species to be discovered, much that the Western world knew to be true (i.e., the Biblical description of the creation timeline) was suddenly called into question. Today, the Mastodon offers us another major ethical challenge: Would it be possible for scientists to use their DNA and "bring them back?"
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  22. T1 EP.22The Little People of Flores
    10 de novembro de 2016
    29min
    TV-PG
    Although little folk are common characters in mythology, scientists had never thought they actually existed, until a team of archaeologists made a fascinating discovery on the Indonesian island of Flores in 2003. But who exactly is Homo floresiensis? And through what lineage could we be related?
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  23. T1 EP.23The Neanderthal among Us
    10 de novembro de 2016
    31min
    TV-PG
    For years, we thought of Neanderthals as brutish, ignorant, distant cousins we could mostly ignore. Not any longer. As revealed by The Neanderthal Genome Project, modern humans and Neanderthals were sufficiently similar to have interbred and produced viable offspring. As much as 30 to 40 percent of the Neanderthal genome may be spread the human population today.
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  24. T1 EP.24Paleontology and the Future of Earth
    10 de novembro de 2016
    41min
    TV-PG
    What paleontologists have learned about Earth's history so far reveals that change is just about our only constant. Given that only a minute fraction of the information held in the Earth's crust has been discovered so far, paleontology will continue to be a significant gateway to understanding the past and present, and perhaps provide insight into the future of our planet.
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Detalhes

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Idiomas de áudio
English
Legendas
English [CC]
Produtores
The Great Courses
Atores principais
Stuart Sutherland
Estúdio
The Great Courses
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