1 00:00:00,640 --> 00:00:02,800 Speaker 1: Hey, I'm Chuck and I'm Josh and we're the host 2 00:00:02,840 --> 00:00:05,000 Speaker 1: of Stuff. You should know the podcast that's right, And 3 00:00:05,040 --> 00:00:08,840 Speaker 1: if you're into understanding cool and unusual and seemingly ordinary 4 00:00:08,840 --> 00:00:11,440 Speaker 1: and even boring things that are made interesting, you should 5 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:14,800 Speaker 1: check us out. Please and thank you. We're on iTunes, Spotify, 6 00:00:14,920 --> 00:00:22,840 Speaker 1: Google Play Music, anywhere you get podcasts. Welcome to brain 7 00:00:22,880 --> 00:00:30,440 Speaker 1: Stuff from how Stuff Works. Hey, I'm Christian Saga and 8 00:00:30,520 --> 00:00:34,199 Speaker 1: this is brain Stuff. Dinosaurs are super old and they 9 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:37,640 Speaker 1: are also super popular. We see them in movies, museums, 10 00:00:37,720 --> 00:00:40,720 Speaker 1: children's toys, cartoons, and more. But how do we know 11 00:00:40,800 --> 00:00:44,440 Speaker 1: what they actually looked like? It all comes down to fossils. 12 00:00:44,840 --> 00:00:48,640 Speaker 1: Think of reconstructing a dinosaur's appearance like putting together a 13 00:00:48,760 --> 00:00:52,040 Speaker 1: jigsaw puzzle. The fossils are the pieces on the edge 14 00:00:52,080 --> 00:00:54,960 Speaker 1: of the puzzle, but most of the other pieces are missing. 15 00:00:55,240 --> 00:00:57,840 Speaker 1: So while they don't tell us everything, fossils are the 16 00:00:57,880 --> 00:01:01,720 Speaker 1: best starting point for figuring out a dinosaurs appearance. The 17 00:01:01,760 --> 00:01:04,000 Speaker 1: way the bones fit together can give us a basic 18 00:01:04,080 --> 00:01:07,319 Speaker 1: understanding of a dinosaur's shape and posture. We can learn 19 00:01:07,360 --> 00:01:10,880 Speaker 1: a lot from the teeth to flat leaf shaped teeth 20 00:01:10,920 --> 00:01:16,240 Speaker 1: indicate herbivores, while sharp pointed teeth suggests a carnivore. Cavities 21 00:01:16,280 --> 00:01:18,039 Speaker 1: in the skull can help us figure out how well 22 00:01:18,080 --> 00:01:21,279 Speaker 1: a dinosaur could see or hear. We also use CT 23 00:01:21,480 --> 00:01:24,880 Speaker 1: scans to build three D images of the skeletons. From there, 24 00:01:24,959 --> 00:01:28,120 Speaker 1: we can add virtual layers of tissue, muscle and skin. 25 00:01:28,640 --> 00:01:33,279 Speaker 1: Under very rare conditions, a dinosaurs soft tissue can fossilize too. 26 00:01:34,000 --> 00:01:39,400 Speaker 1: In paleontologist Tyler License found in Edmonton Soaurus in North Dakota, 27 00:01:39,840 --> 00:01:43,400 Speaker 1: the skin and muscle tissue of its fossil remained intact. 28 00:01:43,760 --> 00:01:46,560 Speaker 1: CT scans of the body have revealed a treasure trove 29 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:50,120 Speaker 1: of new information about dinosaurs. And here's the weirdest thing. 30 00:01:50,480 --> 00:01:55,120 Speaker 1: Dinosaurs weren't all scaly creatures like crocodiles or Godzilla. Some 31 00:01:55,240 --> 00:01:58,560 Speaker 1: had weird filaments all over their bodies, which dinosaur expert 32 00:01:58,640 --> 00:02:04,200 Speaker 1: Brian Switte calls dino fuzz. And some dinosaurs even had feathers. 33 00:02:04,560 --> 00:02:07,240 Speaker 1: We can tell by quill barbed marks little bumps where 34 00:02:07,280 --> 00:02:10,120 Speaker 1: feathers connect to bone. These marks aren't just one or 35 00:02:10,160 --> 00:02:15,080 Speaker 1: two obscure species either. We're talking about famous dinos like velociraptors. 36 00:02:15,160 --> 00:02:18,040 Speaker 1: It turns out quite a few dinosaurs had these feathers, 37 00:02:18,120 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: or technically something like feathers. Not every paleontologist is comfortable 38 00:02:22,760 --> 00:02:25,760 Speaker 1: with the name, preferring to describe these markings as into 39 00:02:25,880 --> 00:02:31,200 Speaker 1: gumentary structures or proto feathers instead, but these feathers and 40 00:02:31,240 --> 00:02:34,519 Speaker 1: feather like structures may have been pretty colorful too. In 41 00:02:35,440 --> 00:02:39,320 Speaker 1: scientists analyzed a micro raptor fossil with a scanning electron 42 00:02:39,400 --> 00:02:43,840 Speaker 1: microscope and found evidence of melanosomes. These are the organelles 43 00:02:43,880 --> 00:02:48,200 Speaker 1: inside a cell that store melanin or pigment. Different types 44 00:02:48,240 --> 00:02:51,520 Speaker 1: of melanosomes store different colors. This is the same stuff 45 00:02:51,560 --> 00:02:54,840 Speaker 1: that determines your hair color. The researchers found that this 46 00:02:54,960 --> 00:02:59,600 Speaker 1: microraptor had an irridescent glossy coat. As scientists look for 47 00:02:59,680 --> 00:03:04,680 Speaker 1: more fossilized melanosomes, they're reconstructing the appearance of Earth's ancient 48 00:03:04,720 --> 00:03:09,920 Speaker 1: dinosaurs with increasing and impressive accuracy. Not a bad job 49 00:03:10,040 --> 00:03:18,919 Speaker 1: considering they're literally working with a pile of bones. Check 50 00:03:18,960 --> 00:03:21,120 Speaker 1: out the Brainstuff channel on YouTube, and for more on 51 00:03:21,200 --> 00:03:23,919 Speaker 1: this and thousands of other topics, visit how stuff works 52 00:03:24,000 --> 00:03:38,040 Speaker 1: dot com.