Hi guys! I read a super interesting book over the last few days, a book that I can't recommend enough called "The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of Their Lost World" by Steve Brusatte. This book is incredibly well written, each page bringing dinosaurs to life again. At times I (no joke literally!) felt as if they were about to fly off the page into real life. He recounts dozens of stories of the many expeditions and prospecting trips he has taken over the years of his career exploring and studying dinosaurs. He recounts everything from how they initially began their evolutionary humble beginnings, how they rose so rapidly by evolutionary standards to wearing the crown at the top of hte food chain, too evolving into such a wide range of species and sub-species, to developing feathers and lungs that utilize oxygen in the same way that modern day birds do, to developing the ability to fly, to being nearly completely obliterated from the fallout of only a few hours' worth of devastation. I highly recommend this book for anyone with a passing layman curiosity about dinosaurs. It's written in a manner easy to understand even if you have no science background to build on, and has enough pictures of fossils and evidence to keep the book interesting without being your typical glossy coffee-table book of who's who in the dinosaur age. Can you tell I loved the book? I hope you enjoy this video! 🦕🦖
Para escuchar mientras usas otras apps, cambia el reproductor a Picture-in-Picture (PiP) durante la reproducción: sigue sonando en una pequeña ventana flotante (la pantalla permanece encendida).
Para escuchar con la pantalla totalmente apagada, la reproducción en el navegador se detiene por el funcionamiento de YouTube. Abre el vídeo en la app de YouTube para seguir escuchando donde la reproducción en segundo plano es compatible (por ejemplo, con YouTube Premium).
Abrir en la app de YouTube