(tribal drum music)
- [Narrator] Dinosaurs are awesome.
(dinosaur roaring)
We all know it.
When we figured out
these guys were a thing,
we wanted more, more fossils,
more art, more, well,
whatever this is.
So we went out and found them.
Fast forward to today,
we're still discovering like never before.
(soft marimba music)
- Paleontology as a science
started in the 1800s.
Back then, we understood
for the first time
they were a unique and
different group of animals.
- [Narrator] Fossil
discoveries were happening
long before this distinction, though.
Dinosaur bones were mistaken
for mythological creatures
thousands of years before science
could tell us what they really were.
And for generations,
people connected these
fossils to living creatures
they already knew.
Until Richard Owen,
frenemy of Charles Darwin,
concluded these fossils were different
from any living creature on earth.
- He coined the term dinosaur,
the terrible lizard.
- [Narrator] New type of
animal, big step forward.
(dinosaur roaring)
- For the first 100 years,
we knew very, very little about dinosaurs.
We only knew 50 or 100 species or so.
- [Narrator] Discovery started slow,
but the public's curiosity was high.
So a view into this prehistoric world
came from a different perspective, art.
(upbeat jazz music)
Creativity brought dinosaurs
to the cultural forefront.
While these drawings,
paintings, and sculptures
were initially based on
scientific discoveries,
(toilet flushes)
let's just say that didn't last.
Our imaginations might've
gotten a headstart,
but technology, it's catching up.
- Paleontology has been undergoing
this massive revolution.
- [Narrator] One of those technologies?
CT scanning, giving paleontologists
a new look at dinosaurs.
- You can look at the brain size,
you can look at the
different parts of the brain,
because basically the bones
that demarcate the brain cavity
are very good proxy for what
the brain actually looked like.
So there's a ton of new
morphological information
that we can get through
these high resolution
imaging techniques that are fairly new.
- [Narrator] This in depth
view has been a game changer
in the field,
but one classical aspect of paleontology
has also experienced a renaissance.
(shovels scraping)
Finding fossils.
- In the U.S. or Europe,
that's where paleontology
first grew as a science,
but other continents,
they have not been explored as much.
There are so many expeditions
being conducted right now,
but many, many new dinosaur species
are coming from these places.
- [Narrator] Example,
Diego's team in Patagonia
discovering the Patagotitan mayorum,
one of the largest dinosaurs ever found.
Fossil discoveries in
China are also answering
an age old question,
dinosaurs' relationship to birds.
- Birds are extremely
rare in the fossil record,
and this is for a number of reasons.
One is that birds are all pretty small.
Aerodynamics limits body size,
so you can't get that big.
The other thing is that
birds have hollow bones.
They get crushed easily,
they get destroyed, and
they just don't survive.
So all these fossil birds all come
from ancient lake deposits,
(bell dings)
the perfect environment to preserve
these very delicate fossils.
- [Narrator] Birds evolving from dinosaurs
is not a new idea, but it's the access
to these ancient lake deposits
(bell dings)
that's finally providing
the necessary evidence.
- The notion that birds
are living dinosaurs
actually dates back to
like the second half
of the 19th century.
A guy named Thomas Huxley,
based on his observations,
he came up with a hypothesis
that birds descended from
small bipedal dinosaurs.
But other scientists opposed this idea
because they said, well, you know,
all birds have a wishbone, right?
This is not known in any dinosaurs.
So birds can't be living dinosaurs.
- [Narrator] Next up, John Ostrom,
who analyzed theropod dinosaurs,
and also hypothesized that
birds were living dinosaurs.
- But again, people kind of
rejected this hypothesis.
At the time, their new reason was
velociraptors that were
supposed to be closely related
to birds were much younger
in the fossil record
than Archaeopteryx, the oldest bird.
So they were like,
how could Archaeopteryx
have descended from taxa
that don't appear in the fossil record
until like 70 million years later, right?
(engine racing)
- [Narrator] Inconclusive
evidence persisted,
until, well, that's what brings us back
to these ancient lake deposits.
- So in 1996, you find
the first feathered dinosaur in China.
So then an enormous amount of
field work started to happen,
and this produced these
thousands of specimens.
(upbeat music)
- [Narrator] Paleontologists
then discovered an area
where fossils predate Archaeopteryx.
And within this area,
they found small feathered
dinosaurs with bird-like traits,
including wings here and here,
making his theory much stronger, also.
- There was a little troodontid
dinosaur named Mei long
that was discovered, and it's really tiny.
It's like this big,
and it's preserved with its
head underneath its wing,
sleeping the same way modern ducks do.
So that's behavioral evidence
that birds are in fact living dinosaurs.
- [Narrator] Today,
substantial evidence points
to birds evolving from dinosaurs,
specifically theropods,
and showcases the
progression of paleontology.
But the discoveries don't stop here.
- There are still new things out there
that once they are discovered
are gonna shake up
everything we think we know.
New data will cause us to
adjust our existing hypotheses,
so you just kind of have to go
with the flow of discoveries.
