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  • - [Narrator] Right now, paleontologists discover

  • a new species of dinosaur every week, and it's no wonder.

  • Dinosaurs dominated the planet for 135 million years,

  • but they didn't start out on top.

  • The first dinosaurs emerged around 230 million years ago,

  • during the Triassic Period.

  • Back then, Earth looked very different.

  • Instead of seven continents, there was just one, Pangaea.

  • Even early dinosaurs

  • were nothing like those Hollywood giants.

  • Eoraptor, possibly the first true dinosaur, was puny,

  • especially compared to top predators of the day,

  • like some of the giant Rauisuchians.

  • Over the next 30 million years,

  • new species of dinosaurs and amphibians developed,

  • along with the first mammals.

  • Life was flourishing.

  • Then, 201 million years ago, everything changed.

  • Pangaea began to tear apart.

  • The shifting tectonic plates sparked volcanic eruptions,

  • which, over tens of thousands of years,

  • tripled the amount of greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere,

  • and warmed the planet by three to four degrees Celsius.

  • It vanquished at least 30% of all life in the process.

  • But for some reason, maybe luck, or some helpful adaptation,

  • the dinosaurs sailed on through

  • to the dawn of the Jurassic Period,

  • and over the next 135 million years,

  • they continued to spread, diversify, and evolve

  • into some familiar faces.

  • For example, the first Tyrannosaurus

  • sprouted up some time around 170 million years ago.

  • But don't get your hopes up.

  • These guys were no T-Rex.

  • The real sovereign of the era was the Allosaurus.

  • It dined on sauropods with its meat cleaver teeth.

  • Meanwhile, Pangaea continued to pull apart.

  • By 145 million years ago,

  • it began to resemble what we see today,

  • forming isolated pockets

  • where dinosaurs grew increasingly different.

  • It was the heyday of dinosaur diversity,

  • and a new period, the Cretaceous.

  • In Argentina, giants like Petagotitan,

  • the biggest dinosaur on record,

  • turned up around 100 million years ago.

  • But the most frightening of all appeared in the western US,

  • around 68 million years ago.

  • T-Rex, the largest carnivore in history.

  • On its own, it was a formidable predator.

  • But it turns out the T-Rex likely hunted in packs,

  • and where T-Rex did not roam,

  • other pack hunters filled the niche.

  • In Asia, the small yet cunning Velociraptor roamed.

  • It was a bad time to be a mammal.

  • And then, 66 million years ago,

  • the Chicxulub asteroid wiped out all the dinosaurs.

  • Well, almost all of them.

  • One group remained.

  • Their descendants might be sitting outside your window

  • right now.

  • Birds.

  • That's right, modern birds are dinosaurs.

  • Turns out the legacy of these titans today is, well, dinner.

  • This video is made in large part

  • thanks to Steve Brusatte,

  • and the information in his new book,

  • The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs.

  • What interesting dinosaur facts do you want to know about?

  • Let us know in the comments.

- [Narrator] Right now, paleontologists discover

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