WEBVTT 00:00:00.988 --> 00:00:05.701 These dragons from deep-time are incredible creatures. 00:00:05.701 --> 00:00:07.146 They're bizzarre, 00:00:07.146 --> 00:00:08.856 they're beautiful, 00:00:08.856 --> 00:00:11.841 and there's very little we know about them. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:11.841 --> 00:00:14.131 These thoughts were going through my head 00:00:14.131 --> 00:00:18.574 when I looked at the pages of my first dinosaur book. 00:00:18.574 --> 00:00:21.078 I was about 5-years-old at the time, 00:00:21.078 --> 00:00:23.031 and I decided there and then 00:00:23.031 --> 00:00:25.876 that I would become a paleontologist. 00:00:25.876 --> 00:00:29.213 Paleontology allowed me to combine my love for animals 00:00:29.213 --> 00:00:33.941 with my desire to travel to far-flung corners of the world. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:33.941 --> 00:00:36.964 And now, a few years later, I've led several expeditions 00:00:36.964 --> 00:00:42.146 to the ultimate far-flung corner on this planet, the Sahara. 00:00:42.146 --> 00:00:46.195 I've worked in the Sahara because I've been on a quest 00:00:46.195 --> 00:00:51.300 to uncover new remains of a bizarre, giant predatory dinosaur 00:00:51.300 --> 00:00:54.451 called Spinosaurus. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:54.451 --> 00:00:57.804 A few bones of this animal have been found 00:00:57.804 --> 00:00:59.184 in the deserts of Egypt 00:00:59.184 --> 00:01:04.537 and were described about 100 years ago by a German paleontologist. 00:01:04.537 --> 00:01:09.485 Unfortunately, all his Spinosaurus bones were destroyed in WWII. 00:01:09.485 --> 00:01:13.789 So all we're left with are just a few drawings and notes. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:13.789 --> 00:01:15.050 From these drawings, 00:01:15.050 --> 00:01:18.461 we know that this creature, which lived about 100 million years ago, 00:01:18.461 --> 00:01:20.012 was very big, 00:01:20.012 --> 00:01:23.425 it had tall spines on its back, forming a magnificent sail, 00:01:23.425 --> 00:01:28.172 and it had long, slender jaws, a bit like a crocodile, 00:01:29.542 --> 00:01:31.760 with conical teeth, 00:01:31.760 --> 00:01:36.647 that may have been used to catch slippery prey, like fish. 00:01:36.647 --> 00:01:38.704 But that was pretty much all we knew 00:01:38.704 --> 00:01:42.303 about this animal for the next 100 years. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:46.563 --> 00:01:51.365 My fieldwork took me to the border region between Morocco and Algeria, 00:01:51.365 --> 00:01:53.938 a place called the Kem Kem. 00:01:53.938 --> 00:01:56.251 It's a difficult place to work in. 00:01:56.251 --> 00:01:59.940 You have to deal with sandstorms, and snakes and scorpions, 00:01:59.940 --> 00:02:03.084 and it's very difficult to find good fossils there. 00:02:03.084 --> 00:02:05.900 But our hard work paid off. 00:02:05.900 --> 00:02:08.115 We discovered many incredible specimens. 00:02:08.115 --> 00:02:10.887 There's the largest dinosaur bone that had ever been found 00:02:10.887 --> 00:02:12.375 in this part of the Sahara. 00:02:13.475 --> 00:02:16.969 We found remains of giant predatory dinosaurs, 00:02:16.969 --> 00:02:19.632 medium sized predatory dinosaurs, 00:02:19.632 --> 00:02:25.231 and seven or eight different kinds of crocodile-like hunters. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:25.231 --> 00:02:28.233 These fossils were deposited in a river system. 00:02:28.233 --> 00:02:32.403 The river system was also home to a giant, car-sized coelacanth, 00:02:32.403 --> 00:02:35.863 a monster sawfish, 00:02:35.863 --> 00:02:39.563 and the skies over the river-system were filled with pterosaurs, 00:02:39.563 --> 00:02:41.591 flying reptiles. 00:02:41.591 --> 00:02:43.210 It was a pretty dangerous place, 00:02:43.210 --> 00:02:46.929 not the kind of place where you'd want to travel to if you had a time machine. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:48.159 --> 00:02:51.079 So we're finding all these incredible fossils of animals 00:02:51.079 --> 00:02:53.769 that lived alongside Spinosaurus, 00:02:53.769 --> 00:02:56.538 but Spinosaurus itself proved to be very elusive. 00:02:56.538 --> 00:02:58.285 We were just finding bits and pieces 00:02:58.285 --> 00:03:02.700 and I was hoping that we'd find a partial skeleton at some point. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:03.640 --> 00:03:05.357 Finally, very recently, 00:03:05.357 --> 00:03:08.467 we were able to track down a dig site 00:03:08.467 --> 00:03:13.431 where a local fossil hunter found several bones of Spinosaurus. 00:03:13.431 --> 00:03:16.291 We returned to the site, we collected more bones. 00:03:16.291 --> 00:03:20.364 And so after 100 years we finally had another partial skeleton 00:03:20.364 --> 00:03:22.525 of this bizarre creature. 00:03:22.525 --> 00:03:24.196 And we were able to reconstruct it. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:24.196 --> 00:03:26.090 We now know that Spinosaurus had a head 00:03:26.090 --> 00:03:27.886 a little bit like a crocodile, 00:03:27.886 --> 00:03:30.081 very different from other predatory dinosaurs, 00:03:30.081 --> 00:03:32.818 very different from the T-Rex. 00:03:32.818 --> 00:03:37.671 But the really interesting information came from the rest of the skeleton. 00:03:37.671 --> 00:03:39.004 We had long spines, 00:03:39.004 --> 00:03:41.632 the spines forming the big sail. 00:03:41.632 --> 00:03:43.877 We had leg bones, we had skull bones, 00:03:43.877 --> 00:03:47.385 we had paddle-shaped feet, wide feet, 00:03:47.385 --> 00:03:50.140 again, very unusual, no other dinosaur has feet like this, 00:03:50.140 --> 00:03:53.251 and we think they may have been used to walk on soft sediment, 00:03:53.251 --> 00:03:55.943 or maybe for paddling in the water. 00:03:55.943 --> 00:03:59.381 We also looked at the fine, microstructure of the bone. 00:03:59.381 --> 00:04:01.377 The inside structure of Spinosaurus bones, 00:04:01.377 --> 00:04:04.136 and it turns out that they're very dense and compact. 00:04:04.136 --> 00:04:07.994 Again, this is something we see in animals that spend a lot of time in the water, 00:04:07.994 --> 00:04:11.186 it's useful for buoyancy control in the water. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:11.186 --> 00:04:16.559 We CT-scanned all of our bones and built a digital Spinosaurus skeleton. 00:04:16.559 --> 00:04:18.770 And when we looked at the digital skeleton, 00:04:18.770 --> 00:04:23.206 we realized, that yes, this was a dinosaur unlike any other. 00:04:23.206 --> 00:04:25.095 It's bigger than a T-rex, and yes, 00:04:25.095 --> 00:04:27.530 the head has "fish-eating" written all over it, 00:04:27.530 --> 00:04:31.629 but really the entire skeleton has "water-loving" written all over it: 00:04:31.629 --> 00:04:36.464 dense bone, paddle-like feet, and the hind limbs are reduced in size, 00:04:36.464 --> 00:04:38.672 and again, this is something we see in animals 00:04:38.672 --> 00:04:41.551 that spend a substantial amount of time in the water. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:42.711 --> 00:04:46.104 So, as we fleshed out our Spinosaurus 00:04:46.104 --> 00:04:50.268 -- I'm looking at muscle attachments and wrapping our dinosaur in skin -- 00:04:50.268 --> 00:04:54.148 we realize that we're dealing with a river monster, 00:04:54.148 --> 00:04:56.477 a predatory dinosaur, bigger than a T-Rex, 00:04:56.477 --> 00:04:59.253 the ruler of this ancient river of giants, 00:04:59.253 --> 00:05:02.503 feeding on the many aquatic animals I showed you early on. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:02.503 --> 00:05:05.369 So that's really what makes this an incredible discovery. 00:05:05.369 --> 00:05:06.874 It's a dinosaur like no other. 00:05:06.874 --> 00:05:10.441 And some people told me, "Wow, this is a once-in-a-lifetime discovery. 00:05:10.441 --> 00:05:13.703 There're not many things left to discover in the world." 00:05:14.803 --> 00:05:17.975 Well, I think nothing could be further from the truth. 00:05:17.975 --> 00:05:20.246 I think the Sahara's still full of treasures, 00:05:20.246 --> 00:05:23.431 and when people tell me there are no places left to explore, 00:05:23.431 --> 00:05:27.468 I like to quote a famous dinosaur hunter, Roy Chapman Andrews, 00:05:27.468 --> 00:05:33.084 and he said, "Always, there has been an adventure just around the corner. 00:05:33.084 --> 00:05:35.896 And the world is still full of corners." 00:05:35.896 --> 00:05:37.815 That was true many decades ago 00:05:37.815 --> 00:05:39.857 when Roy Chapman Andrew wrote these lines. 00:05:39.857 --> 00:05:41.839 And it is still true today. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:41.839 --> 00:05:42.727 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:42.727 --> 00:05:45.421 (Applause).