1 00:00:01,800 --> 00:00:06,880 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff, a production of iHeart Radio, Hey 2 00:00:06,920 --> 00:00:12,240 Speaker 1: brain Stuff Lauren Vogelbaum. Here. There's ongoing debates about which 3 00:00:12,320 --> 00:00:15,240 Speaker 1: dinosaur might be the largest animal to have ever RealMed 4 00:00:15,280 --> 00:00:18,880 Speaker 1: the Earth. One candidate is a ninety eight million year 5 00:00:18,880 --> 00:00:22,640 Speaker 1: old skeleton of a long necked titanosaur discovered in northwest 6 00:00:22,640 --> 00:00:28,560 Speaker 1: Patagonia in in research published one in the journal Cretaceous Research. 7 00:00:29,040 --> 00:00:31,200 Speaker 1: The authors said that they believe it could be one 8 00:00:31,280 --> 00:00:34,559 Speaker 1: of the largest sauropods ever found, even larger than the 9 00:00:34,560 --> 00:00:36,880 Speaker 1: one on display at the American Museum of Natural History. 10 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:39,560 Speaker 1: That's a hundred and twenty two ft long. That's thirty 11 00:00:39,600 --> 00:00:44,520 Speaker 1: seven ms. But why did priest work animals like these 12 00:00:44,640 --> 00:00:47,400 Speaker 1: get so big in the first place? After all, we 13 00:00:47,479 --> 00:00:52,080 Speaker 1: do still have megafauna that reached towering sizes, like elephants, rhinoceros, 14 00:00:52,080 --> 00:00:55,440 Speaker 1: and hippopotamus, But most of the largest land animals living 15 00:00:55,480 --> 00:00:58,120 Speaker 1: today would still look like little buddies next to the 16 00:00:58,240 --> 00:01:03,120 Speaker 1: literal mammoths of prehistory. And there are several hypotheses about 17 00:01:03,120 --> 00:01:08,200 Speaker 1: why these creatures grew so massive. Several studies have linked 18 00:01:08,280 --> 00:01:11,520 Speaker 1: environmental factors such as higher oxygen content in the air 19 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:15,480 Speaker 1: to the expansion of huge sauropod dinosaurs in North America. 20 00:01:16,200 --> 00:01:19,160 Speaker 1: For example, a study published in twenty nineteen reported the 21 00:01:19,160 --> 00:01:22,240 Speaker 1: researchers using a new technique to analyze tiny amounts of 22 00:01:22,280 --> 00:01:25,800 Speaker 1: gas trapped inside two hundred and fifteen million year old 23 00:01:25,880 --> 00:01:29,760 Speaker 1: rocks from the Colorado Plateau and the Newark Basin. Jumps 24 00:01:29,760 --> 00:01:32,640 Speaker 1: in oxygen levels in layers of the rock correlate with 25 00:01:32,680 --> 00:01:36,920 Speaker 1: the first dinosaurs appearing in the area and then massive sauropods. 26 00:01:38,480 --> 00:01:41,760 Speaker 1: The existence of sauropods leads us to a second hypothesis 27 00:01:41,800 --> 00:01:45,840 Speaker 1: about why these animals grew so gigantic efficient food uptake. 28 00:01:46,720 --> 00:01:49,920 Speaker 1: The thought behind this idea is that because sarropods had 29 00:01:49,920 --> 00:01:53,040 Speaker 1: such long necks, they must have been more efficient eaters 30 00:01:53,120 --> 00:01:56,720 Speaker 1: than other large herbivores, meaning they could cover much larger 31 00:01:56,760 --> 00:01:59,600 Speaker 1: feeding grounds and reach food that was inaccessible to other 32 00:01:59,640 --> 00:02:03,800 Speaker 1: dinosaur wars. So, in theory, the massive sauropods must have 33 00:02:03,840 --> 00:02:06,560 Speaker 1: been able to grow larger than other dinosaurs because they 34 00:02:06,600 --> 00:02:11,799 Speaker 1: fed more efficiently. Then there's Cope's rule, which is the 35 00:02:11,880 --> 00:02:15,880 Speaker 1: hypothesis formulated by paleontologist Edward Cope that says that animals 36 00:02:15,919 --> 00:02:20,080 Speaker 1: in evolving lineages tend to get larger over time, and 37 00:02:20,320 --> 00:02:23,160 Speaker 1: a twelve study by the Department of paleo Biology at 38 00:02:23,160 --> 00:02:26,200 Speaker 1: the National Museum of Natural History found that Cope was 39 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:31,200 Speaker 1: right well some of the time. Using advanced statistical methods, 40 00:02:31,280 --> 00:02:34,640 Speaker 1: the team used dinosaur femur bones to estimate animal size. 41 00:02:35,240 --> 00:02:37,760 Speaker 1: They then used that data in their statistical model to 42 00:02:37,800 --> 00:02:41,000 Speaker 1: look for too things, directional trends in size over time, 43 00:02:41,360 --> 00:02:44,760 Speaker 1: and whether there were any detectable upper limits for body size. 44 00:02:46,120 --> 00:02:49,160 Speaker 1: What they found was some groups or clades of dinosaurs, 45 00:02:49,200 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 1: including the long necked sauropods, do grow larger over time, 46 00:02:53,200 --> 00:02:57,680 Speaker 1: as Cope's rule suggests. However, others like therapods, which include 47 00:02:57,720 --> 00:03:03,200 Speaker 1: the popular Tyrannosaurus rex, did not. Other evidence points to 48 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:07,200 Speaker 1: why prehistoric animals that flew grew so massive, and specifically, 49 00:03:07,240 --> 00:03:11,440 Speaker 1: it points to their bones and lungs. Parasaurs, for instance, 50 00:03:11,560 --> 00:03:16,400 Speaker 1: started out small, but some species ballooned to unbelievable proportions. 51 00:03:16,720 --> 00:03:18,760 Speaker 1: This could have been due in part to a highly 52 00:03:18,800 --> 00:03:22,440 Speaker 1: effective float through respiratory system, which allowed them the ability 53 00:03:22,480 --> 00:03:27,400 Speaker 1: to sustain flight. Take one of the largest flying pterosaurs 54 00:03:27,480 --> 00:03:29,799 Speaker 1: in the world as Dark Kids and I do hope 55 00:03:29,840 --> 00:03:33,000 Speaker 1: on saying that right. They had wingspans of thirty three 56 00:03:33,040 --> 00:03:35,640 Speaker 1: feet that's ten meters and weighed as much as four 57 00:03:35,720 --> 00:03:39,600 Speaker 1: hundred and forty pounds that's two hundred kilos. Studies have 58 00:03:39,640 --> 00:03:42,480 Speaker 1: shown that their bones were made up of intricate structures 59 00:03:42,520 --> 00:03:45,560 Speaker 1: that made them both super strong and stable, but also 60 00:03:45,600 --> 00:03:48,720 Speaker 1: super light. They may have been able to fly as 61 00:03:48,760 --> 00:03:52,200 Speaker 1: far as ten thousand miles that's sixteen thousand kilometers without 62 00:03:52,240 --> 00:03:57,760 Speaker 1: resting or eating, and the supersaurus is also thought to 63 00:03:57,760 --> 00:04:00,840 Speaker 1: have had extraordinarily light bones and a complex system of 64 00:04:00,880 --> 00:04:03,480 Speaker 1: air sacks, which could have allowed it to grow huge 65 00:04:03,560 --> 00:04:07,800 Speaker 1: without collapsing in on itself. They also had very efficient lungs, 66 00:04:07,840 --> 00:04:11,000 Speaker 1: so their respiration and heat exchange could better support their 67 00:04:11,080 --> 00:04:15,320 Speaker 1: larger size. Of course, all of the animals we've mentioned 68 00:04:15,320 --> 00:04:17,960 Speaker 1: were the top predators of their time, which made them 69 00:04:18,040 --> 00:04:22,800 Speaker 1: a lot less susceptible to becoming other animals dinner. One 70 00:04:22,920 --> 00:04:27,279 Speaker 1: exception to the animals being smaller these days rule are whales. 71 00:04:28,160 --> 00:04:31,559 Speaker 1: For example, the blue whale makes the supersourus seem small. 72 00:04:32,400 --> 00:04:35,240 Speaker 1: Blue whales grow on average to between seventy five and 73 00:04:35,320 --> 00:04:37,600 Speaker 1: nine ft in length that's about twenty three to twenty 74 00:04:37,640 --> 00:04:41,359 Speaker 1: seven and way about two hundred tons. Though it is 75 00:04:41,400 --> 00:04:45,640 Speaker 1: difficult to measure such a huge creature underwater. Being ocean bound, 76 00:04:45,760 --> 00:04:48,719 Speaker 1: they have buoyancy on their side, which makes it possible 77 00:04:48,760 --> 00:04:51,240 Speaker 1: for them to weigh three times with the supersourus wave 78 00:04:51,600 --> 00:04:59,479 Speaker 1: without their bodies collapsing. Today's episode is based on the 79 00:04:59,520 --> 00:05:02,359 Speaker 1: article why were so many prehistoric animals So big? On 80 00:05:02,400 --> 00:05:05,000 Speaker 1: how stuff works dot Com, written by Karen Kirkpatrick and 81 00:05:05,080 --> 00:05:08,000 Speaker 1: Sarah glime A. Brain Stuff is production by Heart Radio 82 00:05:08,080 --> 00:05:10,320 Speaker 1: in partnership with how stuff Works dot Com is produced 83 00:05:10,320 --> 00:05:13,600 Speaker 1: by Tyler Clang. Four more podcasts my Heart Radio viausit, 84 00:05:13,640 --> 00:05:16,400 Speaker 1: the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen 85 00:05:16,440 --> 00:05:17,400 Speaker 1: to your favorite shows,