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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:00,319 --> 00:00:02,319 # (music) 2 00:00:12,440 --> 00:00:14,239 Dinosaurs. 3 00:00:14,279 --> 00:00:17,360 Perhaps some of the most dramatic animals 4 00:00:17,400 --> 00:00:20,160 ever to have walked the earth. 5 00:00:23,239 --> 00:00:27,680 They dominated the world for over 150 million years, 6 00:00:27,720 --> 00:00:32,040 until a huge asteroid struck the planet. 7 00:00:36,360 --> 00:00:39,360 But how exactly did they die? 8 00:00:40,800 --> 00:00:46,000 Palaeoltologists have been searching for the answer for decades. 9 00:00:46,760 --> 00:00:50,080 And now, new evidence is coming to light. 10 00:00:51,000 --> 00:00:53,800 We're out looking for clues. 11 00:00:55,480 --> 00:00:59,319 Each fossil is a clue and that tells us something about 12 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:02,080 what the world was like at that time. 13 00:01:03,199 --> 00:01:07,760 Since 2012, a team of palaeontologists has been 14 00:01:07,800 --> 00:01:13,599 investigating a remarkable site deep in the badlands of North Dakota. 15 00:01:16,800 --> 00:01:19,120 The team's leader, Robert De Palma, 16 00:01:19,160 --> 00:01:23,559 hopes it holds evidence of what happened the very last day 17 00:01:23,599 --> 00:01:25,959 of the dinosaurs... 18 00:01:26,000 --> 00:01:27,400 (thunder rolls) 19 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:30,839 Could it even contain the remains of an animal that bore witness 20 00:01:30,879 --> 00:01:33,440 to that terrible event? 21 00:01:33,480 --> 00:01:35,519 We've got all these bones in the ground right now. 22 00:01:35,559 --> 00:01:38,319 But the one thing that we would just dream 23 00:01:38,360 --> 00:01:40,279 of finding is that one dinosaur 24 00:01:40,319 --> 00:01:42,919 that died on the day of the impact. 25 00:01:44,959 --> 00:01:47,720 The idea that there is a dinosaur fossil potentially who was 26 00:01:47,760 --> 00:01:49,760 a direct victim of that, that's very exciting. 27 00:01:49,800 --> 00:01:52,279 Oh, that's skin right there. 28 00:01:52,319 --> 00:01:54,760 That's actually scaly skin. Oh, my God. 29 00:01:54,800 --> 00:01:58,680 Can they find a dinosaur that died on the day the asteroid hit? 30 00:02:15,080 --> 00:02:19,919 For 10 years, Robert De Palma and his team, 31 00:02:20,040 --> 00:02:23,839 have bene digging in a small corner of the Hell Creek formation. 32 00:02:23,879 --> 00:02:29,360 An area famous for more thna a Century, of major dinosaur discovery. 33 00:02:30,519 --> 00:02:33,480 They've already found a wealth of fossilised creatures in 34 00:02:33,519 --> 00:02:35,680 a patch of land they call Tanis. 35 00:02:37,720 --> 00:02:42,879 What appears to be a piece of fossilised skin from a Triceratops. 36 00:02:43,839 --> 00:02:48,239 The unhatched egg and what looks like pterosaur embryo. 37 00:02:48,760 --> 00:02:52,680 Jawbones of a mammal called a Pediomyid. 38 00:02:53,279 --> 00:02:56,800 And teeth and footprints of carnivorous dinosaurs 39 00:02:56,839 --> 00:02:58,839 like T-rex. 40 00:03:00,080 --> 00:03:03,639 There is no other dinosaur that has teeth like this. 41 00:03:03,680 --> 00:03:08,279 Many of these fossils were found in a thick layer of crumbly rock. 42 00:03:08,559 --> 00:03:11,400 The rock here is really not quite rocky. 43 00:03:11,680 --> 00:03:14,000 It just falls apart in your hands. 44 00:03:14,839 --> 00:03:18,760 Right above the rock, is the KPG boundary, 45 00:03:18,879 --> 00:03:22,680 a layer of iradium-rich debris from the asteroid impact 46 00:03:22,720 --> 00:03:26,279 that hit the earth 66 million years ago. 47 00:03:26,319 --> 00:03:29,160 It marks the end of the age of dinosaurs. 48 00:03:29,760 --> 00:03:33,919 If you look below this layer, you see fossils of dinosaurs. 49 00:03:33,959 --> 00:03:37,040 If you look above this layer, no dinosaurs. 50 00:03:37,360 --> 00:03:43,400 The methaplastic layer of rock at Tanis is full of ejector spherules. 51 00:03:43,559 --> 00:03:45,639 Beautiful. Look at that. 52 00:03:47,199 --> 00:03:52,440 Tiny glass droplets created in a major asteroid impact. 53 00:03:53,279 --> 00:03:56,239 Robert thinks that this is compelling evidence that 54 00:03:56,279 --> 00:04:00,519 everything in the layer was buried while the spherules fell. 55 00:04:07,319 --> 00:04:12,080 If he's right and the spherules can be matched to the asteroid impact, 56 00:04:12,120 --> 00:04:15,760 this dig site could provide a snapshot of what happened 57 00:04:15,800 --> 00:04:20,238 on the very last day of the dinosaurs. 58 00:04:20,519 --> 00:04:25,879 It opens up that whole debate about how do we link catastrophic events 59 00:04:25,919 --> 00:04:28,959 to fossil and geologic deposits? 60 00:04:29,360 --> 00:04:34,120 If we can both match spherules to the impact site geochemically and 61 00:04:34,720 --> 00:04:39,599 in terms of radiometric ages, that's pretty accurate. 62 00:04:42,680 --> 00:04:48,760 The asteroid hit in what is now the Yukutan Peninsula in Mexico. 63 00:04:51,919 --> 00:04:56,080 It's called the Chicxulub Asteroid after the town nearest to 64 00:04:56,120 --> 00:04:58,120 the centre of its crater. 65 00:05:04,680 --> 00:05:08,160 To find out if the spherules the found in North Dakota 66 00:05:08,199 --> 00:05:13,440 can be linked to Chicxulub, Robert has come to the Diamond Light 67 00:05:13,480 --> 00:05:15,480 Synchotron in the UK. 68 00:05:17,800 --> 00:05:22,160 Joining him is Professor Phil Manning of the University of Manchester. 69 00:05:22,480 --> 00:05:27,000 THey've already run initial tests on the spherules in America. 70 00:05:27,680 --> 00:05:32,400 Every piece of ejector from every impact that's ever occurred on earth 71 00:05:32,440 --> 00:05:34,760 has a unique chemical signature. 72 00:05:36,360 --> 00:05:39,440 The Chicxulub impact event is no exception. 73 00:05:39,519 --> 00:05:42,839 When you look at material from different sites, it has a very 74 00:05:42,879 --> 00:05:45,720 diagnostic chemical fingerprint. 75 00:05:45,760 --> 00:05:48,760 That's precisely what the team have been looking for. 76 00:05:48,800 --> 00:05:52,919 By comparing their spherule with spherules from other known 77 00:05:52,959 --> 00:05:57,160 Chicxulub dig sites, the team can see if it's a match. 78 00:05:57,199 --> 00:06:01,199 What the team has done is look at ejector from other sites 79 00:06:01,238 --> 00:06:03,360 and produced an elemental map. 80 00:06:03,400 --> 00:06:06,238 A chemical fingerprint from each site. 81 00:06:06,680 --> 00:06:11,639 Whether they be in Haiti, Mexico or other localities in North Dakota. 82 00:06:11,680 --> 00:06:15,040 You can see they all follow similar concentrations, 83 00:06:15,080 --> 00:06:17,760 and sort of map on top of each other here. 84 00:06:17,800 --> 00:06:20,040 When you look at the material from the Tanis site, 85 00:06:20,080 --> 00:06:25,519 again they perfectly map on top of this chemical fingerprint. 86 00:06:26,080 --> 00:06:31,559 It was unequivocal that Tanis was tied in to the KPG extinction event or the impact event, 87 00:06:31,599 --> 00:06:35,238 that makes this an astoundingly important site. 88 00:06:35,279 --> 00:06:39,879 A site that really brings you down to the last day of the dinosaurs. 89 00:06:42,319 --> 00:06:46,680 This is very important because it immediately gives a time stamp 90 00:06:46,720 --> 00:06:48,720 for the locality itself. 91 00:06:49,559 --> 00:06:55,199 The Tanis site is like a window into a snapshot of time. 92 00:06:56,040 --> 00:06:59,959 With ejector spherules found throughout the deposit, 93 00:07:00,279 --> 00:07:06,559 Robert and his team seem to be able to link their site to a single day. 94 00:07:08,238 --> 00:07:14,239 And the synchotron here in the UK reveals something even more remarkable. 95 00:07:14,639 --> 00:07:18,360 This particular spherule is probably one of the most significant ones 96 00:07:18,400 --> 00:07:20,400 I've ever seen in my life. 97 00:07:20,919 --> 00:07:25,760 This irregular piece of debris which is inside this swirling glass, 98 00:07:25,879 --> 00:07:29,599 is actually a piece of unmelted rock. 99 00:07:29,639 --> 00:07:32,879 That was initially an absolute red flag to us. 100 00:07:34,120 --> 00:07:38,120 Why is there a piece of angular rock inside the spherule? 101 00:07:38,160 --> 00:07:42,919 Then when we look at that chemical map, that's when we really started jumping for joy. 102 00:07:42,959 --> 00:07:46,720 Because we start seeing iron and chromium and nickel 103 00:07:46,800 --> 00:07:52,279 in ratios that we would expect for something that could've been not from earth. 104 00:07:52,519 --> 00:07:58,639 The thought that crosses our mind is this could be a piece of the asteroid. 105 00:07:58,800 --> 00:08:00,760 I've never seen anything like this. 106 00:08:00,800 --> 00:08:04,480 That was immediately of incredible interest to us. 107 00:08:10,319 --> 00:08:14,400 Robert's team may have found a fragment of the asteroid itself, 108 00:08:14,440 --> 00:08:16,239 in North Dakota. 109 00:08:16,279 --> 00:08:21,599 Physical evidence linking this site to the Chicxulub impact. 110 00:08:22,800 --> 00:08:27,279 Tanis is around 3,000 kilometres away from where the asteroid hit. 111 00:08:27,319 --> 00:08:32,080 So exactly how did the asteroid cause the death of the animals here? 112 00:08:34,080 --> 00:08:37,120 To answer that question, Robert is searching in something 113 00:08:37,160 --> 00:08:40,800 he calls the mass death assemblage. 114 00:08:42,679 --> 00:08:46,160 Right here we got this intertangled mass of fish. 115 00:08:46,199 --> 00:08:48,599 There's one fish here. Another goes this way. 116 00:08:48,639 --> 00:08:54,400 Underneath the body of a paddlefish there's another sturgeon that goes this way. 117 00:08:56,400 --> 00:09:01,480 His head hit that log and has deflected downward at a 90 degree angle. 118 00:09:02,800 --> 00:09:06,279 Robert has a theory that the creatures he found surrounded by 119 00:09:06,319 --> 00:09:10,239 spherfules in a logjam, were swept to their death in some 120 00:09:10,279 --> 00:09:15,040 kind of turbulent surge or water and quickly entombed in sediment, 121 00:09:15,400 --> 00:09:18,160 which is why they're so well preserved. 122 00:09:19,160 --> 00:09:21,559 But what could've caused the wave? 123 00:09:24,080 --> 00:09:27,040 One hypothesis is a tsunami. 124 00:09:27,279 --> 00:09:29,279 The asteroid hit at sea. 125 00:09:30,400 --> 00:09:33,679 We talkt about a tsunami of a completely different scale. 126 00:09:33,720 --> 00:09:38,800 Much higher, much larger than we've ever seen before in mondern tsunami. 127 00:09:39,400 --> 00:09:43,319 So if you had 2km of water, at least half of that would've 128 00:09:45,199 --> 00:09:46,760 left as the rim wave. 129 00:09:46,800 --> 00:09:49,040 So at last a kilometre high at a mimimum. 130 00:09:49,080 --> 00:09:51,319 The tsunami raced towards land. 131 00:09:53,480 --> 00:09:58,160 When they reached the coastlines, they were still very high waves 132 00:09:58,239 --> 00:10:00,239 of up to hundreds of metres. 133 00:10:00,720 --> 00:10:02,879 That's a very impressive wave. 134 00:10:03,958 --> 00:10:08,958 Imagine a wave that's the size of a building approaching the coastline. 135 00:10:09,839 --> 00:10:14,279 In the LAte Crutaceous, North America was divided by a narrow sea 136 00:10:14,319 --> 00:10:17,599 that's been called the Western Interior Seaway. 137 00:10:17,958 --> 00:10:23,360 The tsunamin could have theoretically travelled up this towards Hell Creek. 138 00:10:24,400 --> 00:10:28,239 Tsunamis generally travel at the speed of a jet plane. 139 00:10:30,080 --> 00:10:32,599 It's not something you could say run away from. 140 00:10:32,639 --> 00:10:36,160 It had plenty of energy to get over the coastline. 141 00:10:36,879 --> 00:10:39,679 It could easily still have been tens of metres high 142 00:10:39,720 --> 00:10:42,800 by the time it reached well into the Seaway. 143 00:10:45,760 --> 00:10:50,800 Could the rapid deposition at Tanis have been caused by a tsunami? 144 00:10:53,000 --> 00:10:56,760 To test the idea, the team needs to look at the timing. 145 00:10:58,440 --> 00:11:01,040 Which fish is that? That's a new one. 146 00:11:02,120 --> 00:11:06,120 If a tsunami buried he fish, it would have to have hit while 147 00:11:06,160 --> 00:11:08,760 the ejector spherules were falling. 148 00:11:10,639 --> 00:11:13,199 Because spherules were found everywhere, 149 00:11:13,239 --> 00:11:15,639 including in the fish's gills. 150 00:11:17,120 --> 00:11:22,639 So much depends on determining when these spherfules were falling at the site. 151 00:11:22,839 --> 00:11:26,360 Modelling the ejecta always has error bars on it. 152 00:11:28,040 --> 00:11:33,440 In that we're not there to measure it, we've had no equivalent impact like this 153 00:11:33,559 --> 00:11:36,080 on earth since then. 154 00:11:38,080 --> 00:11:42,599 We can look at the computational models that we do and say alright, 155 00:11:42,639 --> 00:11:46,360 this material is coming from this point. 156 00:11:46,400 --> 00:11:50,400 It's now moving away this fast with about this much mass. 157 00:11:51,839 --> 00:11:54,440 Then we can tell with the sorts of equations that we might 158 00:11:54,480 --> 00:11:59,040 use to calculate the trajectory of a canon ball, where it would go. 159 00:11:59,080 --> 00:12:02,400 We can observe from these simulations how long it takes 160 00:12:02,440 --> 00:12:05,839 these ejecta to reach their final destination. 161 00:12:06,239 --> 00:12:08,639 Down to the order of a few minutes. 162 00:12:10,480 --> 00:12:13,559 What the calculation shows is surprising. 163 00:12:14,480 --> 00:12:19,800 Robert and his team have found that these spherules landed at Tanis 164 00:12:19,839 --> 00:12:25,199 between 13 minutes and 2 hours after the impact. 165 00:12:27,319 --> 00:12:32,720 So if a wave buried the fish, it must also have reached the site within 2 hours. 166 00:12:36,000 --> 00:12:39,519 Data from recent tsunamis show even a powerful one would take 167 00:12:39,559 --> 00:12:43,160 much longer than that to travel around the 3,000 km 168 00:12:43,480 --> 00:12:45,559 from the impact site to Tanis. 169 00:12:49,120 --> 00:12:56,120 So if wasn't the tsunami, what could've cause the surge of water at Tanis? 170 00:13:08,639 --> 00:13:12,440 Professor Bondevich is an expert in tsunamis. 171 00:13:17,599 --> 00:13:21,319 The fjords here in Norway are very special. 172 00:13:21,800 --> 00:13:25,639 We have tall mountains surrounding bodies of weater. 173 00:13:26,440 --> 00:13:28,760 So the water is usually very calm. 174 00:13:29,160 --> 00:13:32,239 In 2011, something very strange happened. 175 00:13:33,639 --> 00:13:36,958 The water in the fjord began to move violently. 176 00:13:38,279 --> 00:13:42,199 The height of the water increased by 1.4 metres. 177 00:13:42,599 --> 00:13:47,040 Like a maelstrom with turbulent water. 178 00:13:47,080 --> 00:13:49,919 Someone said that the fjord was boiling. 179 00:13:51,080 --> 00:13:54,519 News started to roll in, there had been an earthquake 180 00:13:54,559 --> 00:13:58,000 8,000 kilometres away in Japan. 181 00:14:00,120 --> 00:14:02,199 A journalist from the local newspaper called me and 182 00:14:02,239 --> 00:14:07,839 said that people were observing waves here in the fjords. 183 00:14:09,400 --> 00:14:11,760 I got a video clip of the waves. 184 00:14:11,800 --> 00:14:15,720 I saw immediately that they looked like a tsunami wave. 185 00:14:15,800 --> 00:14:19,199 Here you can see that he fjord is perfectly calm. 186 00:14:20,839 --> 00:14:25,519 But at the beach here, you can see the water sloshing back and forth. 187 00:14:25,599 --> 00:14:28,680 And no-one had every seen anything like it. 188 00:14:29,760 --> 00:14:32,519 Some people got very upset and afraid. 189 00:14:37,160 --> 00:14:42,559 A magnitude 9 earthquake had devastated the northeast of Japan. 190 00:14:44,000 --> 00:14:47,559 But how that affect a fjord so far away? 191 00:14:50,279 --> 00:14:53,599 So no-one in Norway could feel the earthquake. 192 00:14:54,519 --> 00:14:58,040 But I could see that the times matched the arrival of the waves 193 00:14:58,080 --> 00:15:00,360 here in the fjord. 194 00:15:05,400 --> 00:15:09,639 Eventaully Stein and his team realised that this might have 195 00:15:09,680 --> 00:15:14,519 something to do with seizmic waves, shock waves that pass quickly 196 00:15:14,559 --> 00:15:17,480 through teh earth during an earthquake. 197 00:15:17,760 --> 00:15:20,040 So it took only 12 minutes before the first signal 198 00:15:20,080 --> 00:15:25,040 of the earthquake in Japan reached all the way here to Western Norway. 199 00:15:27,559 --> 00:15:31,239 So it was the seismic waves that caused the normally calm water 200 00:15:31,279 --> 00:15:35,440 in the fjord, to slosh turbulently back and forth. 201 00:15:37,000 --> 00:15:39,000 Just thinking of that... 202 00:15:39,199 --> 00:15:41,720 Scientifically, it's fantastic. 203 00:15:48,239 --> 00:15:51,760 Could something similar have happened in Tanis? 204 00:15:57,919 --> 00:16:02,160 Trying to find out is geophysicist, Professor Mark Richards, 205 00:16:02,199 --> 00:16:06,199 who's been studying the site at Tanis for several years. 206 00:16:06,879 --> 00:16:12,559 He's working with Robert to discover what could've caused a surge of water here. 207 00:16:18,680 --> 00:16:21,919 A tsunami can't get here in less than 12 hours. 208 00:16:23,559 --> 00:16:27,599 But seismic waves travelling from teh Yukatan impact site to 209 00:16:27,639 --> 00:16:30,959 North Dakota, can arrive here fairly quickly. 210 00:16:33,199 --> 00:16:38,680 In the late Crutaceous, the Western Interior Seaway that bisected North America, 211 00:16:38,720 --> 00:16:42,879 could have been connected to Tanis through the extensive river system 212 00:16:42,919 --> 00:16:45,800 that once flowed here. 213 00:16:47,959 --> 00:16:50,760 If you have a very large body of water, 214 00:16:50,800 --> 00:16:53,199 like the Western Interior Seaway, 215 00:16:53,440 --> 00:16:59,120 and you can shake it back and forth, you can generate a large water wave 216 00:16:59,160 --> 00:17:02,120 coming up this river at Tanis. 217 00:17:02,919 --> 00:17:06,559 So this is bigger than any techtonic generated earthquake. 218 00:17:06,599 --> 00:17:10,760 You would have shaking literally everywhere on the planet. 219 00:17:14,080 --> 00:17:18,519 So seismic waves from the impact could have caused surges of water 220 00:17:18,559 --> 00:17:20,720 in the Hell Creek river system. 221 00:17:21,000 --> 00:17:25,519 Seismic waves get here quickly enough to cause this wall of water 222 00:17:26,440 --> 00:17:30,199 coming up the Tanis river, inundating this area, 223 00:17:30,239 --> 00:17:35,400 arriving at the same time these spherules are still falling. 224 00:17:36,040 --> 00:17:41,199 If they're right, those surges could have carried mud and marine creatures 225 00:17:41,239 --> 00:17:44,919 from the Western Interior Seaway. 226 00:17:46,359 --> 00:17:48,519 And dumped on the Tanis sand bank, 227 00:17:50,160 --> 00:17:55,279 burying everything all at the same time, as spherules fell. 228 00:17:57,000 --> 00:18:00,440 Debris and fine iridium dust from the asteroid, 229 00:18:00,480 --> 00:18:06,199 would have gradually covered the deposit, forming the KPG boundary. 230 00:18:06,239 --> 00:18:11,400 Over millions of years the surge of mud would become the deep layer of rock. 231 00:18:14,359 --> 00:18:16,359 That's the beauty of Tanis. 232 00:18:16,680 --> 00:18:21,080 What you're seeing is the deposit that is literally recording 233 00:18:21,119 --> 00:18:28,080 the last say, 45 minutes to 90 minutes of the Crutaceous. 234 00:18:34,359 --> 00:18:37,280 If the extinction of the dinosaurs was a crime, 235 00:18:37,320 --> 00:18:42,000 the detectives solving it would have plenty of evidence. 236 00:18:42,040 --> 00:18:46,119 They would see that the asteroid was in the right place at the right time. 237 00:18:46,400 --> 00:18:50,400 They would see that no dinosaurs survived after the hit. 238 00:18:51,640 --> 00:18:53,640 They would have a piece of the murder weapon, 239 00:18:53,680 --> 00:18:55,680 a fragment of the asteroid, 240 00:18:55,839 --> 00:18:59,919 but they would be missing one very important thing. 241 00:19:00,119 --> 00:19:02,119 A body. 242 00:19:04,600 --> 00:19:07,400 A lot of the bones that exist from those last Crutaceous days 243 00:19:07,439 --> 00:19:09,439 were basically destroyed. 244 00:19:10,359 --> 00:19:14,000 As far as we know, we've never actually found a fossil 245 00:19:14,040 --> 00:19:15,879 of a dinosaur individual. 246 00:19:15,919 --> 00:19:17,359 A signel skeleton, let's say, 247 00:19:17,400 --> 00:19:22,879 that we can unequivocally say was there the day the asteroid hit. 248 00:19:25,799 --> 00:19:30,239 But before the site was time stamped to the Chicxulub impact, 249 00:19:30,280 --> 00:19:35,839 Robert's team did find part of a triceratops in the crumbly layer at Tanis. 250 00:19:35,879 --> 00:19:41,080 So could that be the body? A dinosaur that died on that day? 251 00:19:41,839 --> 00:19:46,040 Something that would help them would be establishig the cause of death. 252 00:19:46,080 --> 00:19:51,640 Which can be difficult when you only have a piece of skin and horn to go on. 253 00:19:54,119 --> 00:19:57,799 This is the horn after they've cleanead it up. 254 00:19:59,479 --> 00:20:04,320 This triceratops horn is probably the most beat up one I've ever seen. 255 00:20:05,400 --> 00:20:08,720 I'm noticing a very big crack right here. 256 00:20:08,760 --> 00:20:11,559 There's another very large one right here. 257 00:20:11,600 --> 00:20:14,359 We have fractures, breakage of the bone that occurred 258 00:20:14,400 --> 00:20:16,879 during the lifetime of the dinosaur. 259 00:20:16,919 --> 00:20:21,000 Triceratops is such a massive animal and a really strong animal. 260 00:20:21,040 --> 00:20:24,559 So it must've taken a tremendous force to cause these cracks 261 00:20:24,600 --> 00:20:26,640 that go all the way through the horn. 262 00:20:26,680 --> 00:20:30,199 Possibly fighting between two triceratopses or 263 00:20:30,239 --> 00:20:33,400 fighting with a predatory dinosaur could've caused this. 264 00:20:38,199 --> 00:20:44,280 A big question that comes into my mind when I see a crack like that is when did it happen? 265 00:20:44,479 --> 00:20:46,400 When I look closely inside that crack, 266 00:20:46,439 --> 00:20:48,439 I see healing bone. 267 00:20:48,600 --> 00:20:52,119 This animal must've survived for some time after the injuries. 268 00:20:52,159 --> 00:20:56,519 So is survived whatever caused it and it started to reheal. 269 00:21:02,119 --> 00:21:04,280 Part of putting the story together of this triceratops 270 00:21:04,320 --> 00:21:06,479 is how it died and when it died. 271 00:21:06,519 --> 00:21:09,280 Was it involved in the impact in some way? 272 00:21:09,320 --> 00:21:11,720 Or was it already dead at that time? 273 00:21:12,119 --> 00:21:15,119 Luckily enough, the animal can tell me its own story. 274 00:21:15,159 --> 00:21:18,640 So I'm looking at the skin here and I see a lot of areas 275 00:21:18,680 --> 00:21:21,199 that have kind of sagged in places. 276 00:21:21,439 --> 00:21:23,400 Where it had already started to rot from the inside. 277 00:21:23,439 --> 00:21:28,199 So before the thing was buried, a lot of decay had already occurred. 278 00:21:28,479 --> 00:21:34,400 So this animal was probably dead and partially devayed shortly before impact. 279 00:21:37,119 --> 00:21:40,479 Given the size of partial decay, 280 00:21:41,000 --> 00:21:47,239 it's likely this triceratops wouldn't have lived to see the last day of the dinosaurs. 281 00:21:52,119 --> 00:21:57,439 However, the triceratops fossil does show that dinosaurs were alive 282 00:21:57,479 --> 00:21:59,519 shortly before the asteroid hit. 283 00:21:59,559 --> 00:22:02,400 Perhaps even within weeks of the impact. 284 00:22:04,680 --> 00:22:07,519 This is an extraordinary discovery and one that 285 00:22:07,559 --> 00:22:10,359 has never been found before. 286 00:22:12,680 --> 00:22:17,159 But if it's true that dinosaurs were here until the final weeks before 287 00:22:17,199 --> 00:22:22,919 the impact, there could be even more still to find in this deposit. 288 00:22:24,839 --> 00:22:26,879 We've got all these bones in the ground right now. 289 00:22:26,919 --> 00:22:31,040 But the thong that we could just dream of finding is that one 290 00:22:31,080 --> 00:22:34,159 dinosaur that died on the day of the impact. 291 00:22:39,559 --> 00:22:43,000 And the weather isn't helping his search. 292 00:22:57,879 --> 00:22:59,879 That print is toasted. 293 00:23:00,439 --> 00:23:02,439 It was in a low corner. 294 00:23:02,760 --> 00:23:04,760 It's full of mud and water. 295 00:23:05,439 --> 00:23:07,439 The problem is it's wet. 296 00:23:08,080 --> 00:23:11,239 If we're not careful, we're gonna lose the print. 297 00:23:11,280 --> 00:23:13,799 That's the biggest print we've got. 298 00:23:14,879 --> 00:23:17,879 I see some areas that could use glue right now too. 299 00:23:19,960 --> 00:23:24,839 The team is racing to excavate the footprints, along with dozens of fish fossils 300 00:23:24,879 --> 00:23:30,400 tangled together in a logjam, before storms wash them away. 301 00:23:31,559 --> 00:23:33,119 We're up against the clock here. 302 00:23:33,159 --> 00:23:38,320 This stuff that could be exposed right now is gonna get ruined by the rain. 303 00:23:39,400 --> 00:23:44,000 But then Robert comes across something that looks very unusual. 304 00:23:46,839 --> 00:23:48,839 What is going on right there? 305 00:23:49,280 --> 00:23:50,919 Are we sure this isn't crocidilian? 306 00:23:50,960 --> 00:23:52,960 That's not crocodilian. 307 00:23:55,239 --> 00:23:59,640 I'll go in from the top and then twist. It separates on that line. 308 00:24:00,720 --> 00:24:04,680 That's skin right there. That's actually scaly skin. 309 00:24:04,720 --> 00:24:06,760 Look, look, look. 310 00:24:07,839 --> 00:24:08,680 Look at that pattern right ther. 311 00:24:08,720 --> 00:24:12,960 Have you ever seen elongated scales like that before, Dave? 312 00:24:13,839 --> 00:24:15,839 Just careful. 313 00:24:16,680 --> 00:24:18,680 It's changing again. 314 00:24:20,680 --> 00:24:24,280 We're seeing it for the first time in 66 million years. 315 00:24:24,320 --> 00:24:26,919 I think we got ourselves a dinosaur. 316 00:24:28,199 --> 00:24:30,040 A dinosaur fossil. 317 00:24:30,080 --> 00:24:34,400 And unlike the triceratops, this is located in the logjam, 318 00:24:34,439 --> 00:24:36,960 the mass death layer, 319 00:24:37,080 --> 00:24:40,919 surrounded by the fish with spherules in their gills. 320 00:24:44,439 --> 00:24:47,119 This is the most incredible thing we could possibly imagine. 321 00:24:47,159 --> 00:24:48,720 The best case scenario. 322 00:24:48,760 --> 00:24:52,960 We're excavating this mass death layer of fish from the surge sent up 323 00:24:53,000 --> 00:24:56,320 by the impact, and we've got dinosaur remains. 324 00:24:56,720 --> 00:25:00,479 The one thinkg that we would always want to find. 325 00:25:00,519 --> 00:25:02,519 And here we've got it. 326 00:25:02,600 --> 00:25:05,879 This is unreal. I cannot process this in my brain. 327 00:25:05,919 --> 00:25:08,439 I am absolutely blown away by this. 328 00:25:09,159 --> 00:25:10,879 My heart is literally pumping out of my chest wondering 329 00:25:10,919 --> 00:25:14,359 what is behind there. Just a couple centimetres back in the outcrop. 330 00:25:14,400 --> 00:25:16,720 What is waiting for us back there? 331 00:25:21,879 --> 00:25:23,879 The team keeps digging. 332 00:25:25,320 --> 00:25:28,479 This could be laying against ribs that are curved. 333 00:25:28,519 --> 00:25:30,519 There's something here. 334 00:25:30,640 --> 00:25:33,960 That's hard. That's bone right next to the skin. 335 00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:37,960 This is either a hip or a shoulder element. 336 00:25:41,159 --> 00:25:44,280 After hours of painstaking work... 337 00:25:47,519 --> 00:25:49,879 And we can go from the thigh of the animal. 338 00:25:49,919 --> 00:25:51,519 There's the knee. 339 00:25:51,559 --> 00:25:54,239 And then you've got the little calf muscles 340 00:25:54,280 --> 00:25:56,119 of the dinosaur, they're bulging out, 341 00:25:56,159 --> 00:25:59,080 and you go down to the anklebones, 342 00:25:59,119 --> 00:26:01,879 and these are the toes of the feet. 343 00:26:01,919 --> 00:26:03,919 We have got nails at the tips of the toes. 344 00:26:03,960 --> 00:26:05,760 It's a beautifully preserved leg, 345 00:26:05,799 --> 00:26:07,600 all articulated, covered with skin. 346 00:26:08,760 --> 00:26:12,559 The complete leg of a dinosaur. 347 00:26:12,600 --> 00:26:14,600 In my wildest dreams, 348 00:26:14,640 --> 00:26:17,439 I never expected to find a dinosaur leg in this deposit. 349 00:26:17,600 --> 00:26:20,919 Yeah. I mean, and then it's got skin and tissue. 350 00:26:20,960 --> 00:26:23,400 It does look just like a drumstick. 351 00:26:23,439 --> 00:26:25,280 It looks like a Thanksgiving turkey, 352 00:26:25,320 --> 00:26:26,879 just laid out in the ground. 353 00:26:26,919 --> 00:26:30,640 Robert thinks he has found the body in question - 354 00:26:30,680 --> 00:26:34,879 a dinosaur that might itself have witnessed 355 00:26:34,919 --> 00:26:36,720 the cataclysmic impact. 356 00:26:39,960 --> 00:26:42,199 Dinosaur fossils are not known 357 00:26:42,239 --> 00:26:45,080 from the last years of the Cretaceous. 358 00:26:45,119 --> 00:26:47,680 And it was unclear whether they were already extinct 359 00:26:47,720 --> 00:26:49,559 or in decline or what was going on. 360 00:26:49,600 --> 00:26:51,400 So they were just sort of absent. 361 00:26:55,000 --> 00:26:56,400 And this answers that question. 362 00:26:56,439 --> 00:26:59,000 Were dinosaurs still there then? 363 00:26:59,040 --> 00:27:03,119 Well, yes - this one likely died in that surge. 364 00:27:07,000 --> 00:27:11,559 For such big claims, Robert needs verification. 365 00:27:16,119 --> 00:27:18,359 He's brought the dinosaur leg to London 366 00:27:18,400 --> 00:27:21,040 to get a second opinion... 367 00:27:21,199 --> 00:27:23,479 ...from Professor Paul Barrett, 368 00:27:23,519 --> 00:27:26,720 an expert in ornithischian dinosaurs 369 00:27:26,760 --> 00:27:29,600 from the Natural History Museum. 370 00:27:29,839 --> 00:27:35,680 We thought this was a herbivore similar to a theselosuarus but 371 00:27:35,720 --> 00:27:39,119 not quite certain so hoping to get your opinion. 372 00:27:41,400 --> 00:27:44,000 There are some obvious things we can rule out. 373 00:27:44,040 --> 00:27:47,199 It's clearly not a meat-eating dinosaur. 374 00:27:47,239 --> 00:27:51,559 These are the claws of a small running animal, that's not using 375 00:27:52,400 --> 00:27:54,960 the claws to pin things down. 376 00:27:55,000 --> 00:28:01,040 It's not a heavy, stocky animal. Not a duckbill or a horn dinosaur. 377 00:28:01,359 --> 00:28:06,000 This looks like a more agile runner than one of those. 378 00:28:06,960 --> 00:28:11,720 It limits those possibilities down ot a small bipedal plant-eater. 379 00:28:11,960 --> 00:28:14,799 A thescelosaur sounds like a great way to go with this. 380 00:28:18,439 --> 00:28:21,119 Thescelosaurs lived next to rivers 381 00:28:21,159 --> 00:28:24,159 where there was plenty of rich vegetation to feed on. 382 00:28:26,680 --> 00:28:28,919 They had leaf-shaped teeth, 383 00:28:28,960 --> 00:28:30,960 common amongst herbivores, 384 00:28:31,000 --> 00:28:33,040 and claws on their short front limbs - 385 00:28:33,080 --> 00:28:35,199 excellent for digging. 386 00:28:49,400 --> 00:28:51,960 They probably dug for food. 387 00:28:57,159 --> 00:29:00,320 But how did Robert's thescelosaur die? 388 00:29:03,040 --> 00:29:07,000 I'm trying to think of how this animal might've died. 389 00:29:09,479 --> 00:29:12,360 Could it have been killed by another dinosaur? 390 00:29:12,400 --> 00:29:14,080 It's possibile. 391 00:29:14,119 --> 00:29:16,960 This is one of the more agile dinosaurs. 392 00:29:18,360 --> 00:29:22,320 Its primary defence against the predators is gonna be to run away. 393 00:29:22,360 --> 00:29:27,239 Hopefully giving the advantage over a slower predator. 394 00:29:30,600 --> 00:29:35,239 Whenever we're excavating a dinosaur, we're always keen to know 395 00:29:35,280 --> 00:29:37,239 is how did the animal die. 396 00:29:37,280 --> 00:29:39,439 It's not always easy to do that. 397 00:29:39,479 --> 00:29:42,280 Maybe we can find evidence for things like broken bones 398 00:29:42,320 --> 00:29:44,199 that didn't heal back up. 399 00:29:44,239 --> 00:29:48,040 We can even see things like bone tumours and gout. 400 00:29:48,559 --> 00:29:52,159 There are some wonderful fossils where you can find bite marks. 401 00:29:52,199 --> 00:29:58,479 You can even find a predator tooth buried within the bones. 402 00:29:58,519 --> 00:30:05,519 CT scans allow a closer look at what the animal might've gone through. 403 00:30:07,799 --> 00:30:12,280 I can't see any evidence of predation on this animal. 404 00:30:12,919 --> 00:30:16,000 There are no puncture marks causedby teeth. 405 00:30:16,760 --> 00:30:20,320 There's no obvious scraping or gnawing of the bones. 406 00:30:24,680 --> 00:30:26,879 Then what else could've brought this down? 407 00:30:26,919 --> 00:30:29,879 One thing that does leave marks on bones are some forms of disease. 408 00:30:35,040 --> 00:30:39,600 I can't see any obvious evidence of those kinds of features here. 409 00:30:42,720 --> 00:30:47,760 Could this leg be from a dinosaur that died in the surge? 410 00:30:49,239 --> 00:30:51,919 I think it's certainly compatible with that idea. 411 00:30:52,040 --> 00:30:57,799 Something could've been moved around in a very physical way. 412 00:31:00,400 --> 00:31:02,559 This is actually a shoulder blade, 413 00:31:02,600 --> 00:31:04,519 and this bone in a living animal 414 00:31:04,559 --> 00:31:08,239 would actually be way over my shoulder. 415 00:31:10,080 --> 00:31:13,040 When you have got those big lumps of wood in a rapid flow like 416 00:31:13,080 --> 00:31:17,839 an overflowing river, that would do a lot of damage to anything caught between them. 417 00:31:18,239 --> 00:31:23,519 That's phenomenal. We could be looking at a casualty of the impact. 418 00:31:23,559 --> 00:31:28,960 This could be one of those dinosaurs that saw the fireball coming down. 419 00:31:29,000 --> 00:31:34,239 And was just there on the last day of the Cretaceous, when all the lights went out. 420 00:31:34,280 --> 00:31:39,280 It's unbelievable to think this animal might've witnessed that event. 421 00:31:39,320 --> 00:31:42,080 Paleaontologists do depend a lot on tragedy. 422 00:31:42,280 --> 00:31:48,680 Every little disaster is the material we need to develop our subject. 423 00:31:48,919 --> 00:31:55,040 Tragic for the individual concerned, but we're just really happy that it happened. 424 00:31:54,719 --> 00:31:56,960 After years of investigation, 425 00:31:56,999 --> 00:31:59,240 Robert has found out a great deal 426 00:31:59,280 --> 00:32:01,359 about the creatures which lived at Tanis, 427 00:32:01,399 --> 00:32:05,960 and he knows that many of them were alive on that fateful day 428 00:32:05,999 --> 00:32:09,039 when the asteroid devastated our planet. 429 00:32:10,200 --> 00:32:12,359 But how exactly did they die? 430 00:32:13,399 --> 00:32:17,200 Robert's finds now allow us to tell the story of that day 431 00:32:17,240 --> 00:32:19,679 and finally answer that question. 432 00:32:24,039 --> 00:32:26,960 One of the most important days in Earth's history 433 00:32:26,999 --> 00:32:30,880 probably started much like any other late spring morning. 434 00:32:31,840 --> 00:32:36,679 We know the season because Robert found fossils of young fish that 435 00:32:36,719 --> 00:32:39,359 died at the size they reach at that time of year. 436 00:32:39,399 --> 00:32:41,999 This agrees with evidence already found 437 00:32:42,039 --> 00:32:44,039 by other scientists. 438 00:32:47,520 --> 00:32:51,119 Perhaps this day, that would end with so much death, 439 00:32:51,160 --> 00:32:53,719 began with something different. 440 00:32:55,560 --> 00:32:57,119 A new life. 441 00:32:59,240 --> 00:33:01,560 SQUEAKING 442 00:33:08,399 --> 00:33:10,240 SQUAWKS 443 00:33:21,640 --> 00:33:24,920 No-one can be certain of the exact timings of the day 444 00:33:24,960 --> 00:33:28,039 when the asteroid collided with our planet. 445 00:33:28,079 --> 00:33:32,399 But it's estimated that within just 40 minutes of the impact, 446 00:33:32,439 --> 00:33:34,960 the consequences for the creatures of Tanis 447 00:33:34,999 --> 00:33:36,520 would have been profound. 448 00:33:40,679 --> 00:33:43,039 Based on Robert's finds 449 00:33:43,079 --> 00:33:45,840 and the latest evidence from other scientists, 450 00:33:45,880 --> 00:33:50,640 this is how the catastrophe might have unfolded. 451 00:33:52,719 --> 00:33:56,200 The asteroid is around seven miles across, 452 00:33:56,240 --> 00:33:58,079 bigger than Mount Everest... 453 00:33:59,679 --> 00:34:04,119 ...and travelling at close over 70,000km an hour. 454 00:34:10,719 --> 00:34:12,880 The impact causes an explosion 455 00:34:12,920 --> 00:34:18,119 over a billion times the power of the first atomic bomb. 456 00:34:18,920 --> 00:34:22,840 It comes in so fast that it wouldn't even have been visible 457 00:34:22,960 --> 00:34:24,880 passing through the atmosphere. 458 00:34:24,920 --> 00:34:27,560 It would have come and hit in a moment. 459 00:34:27,600 --> 00:34:31,320 At Tanis, almost 2,000 miles away... 460 00:34:33,079 --> 00:34:36,560 ...it's completely silent. 461 00:34:38,200 --> 00:34:40,079 But at the impact site... 462 00:34:42,439 --> 00:34:44,320 ...the asteroid vaporises. 463 00:34:46,239 --> 00:34:48,719 More than three trillion tonnes of rock 464 00:34:48,759 --> 00:34:50,640 are ejected into space 465 00:34:50,679 --> 00:34:53,280 in a blast of super-heated violence. 466 00:34:55,200 --> 00:34:58,079 Winds of almost 1,000kph. 467 00:35:02,560 --> 00:35:08,640 A colossal earthquake, followed by a ring of massive tsunamis. 468 00:35:12,998 --> 00:35:15,320 RUMBLING 469 00:35:15,359 --> 00:35:17,679 ANIMAL CALLS 470 00:35:17,719 --> 00:35:19,679 All the while, the creatures at Tanis 471 00:35:19,719 --> 00:35:21,560 go about their business... 472 00:35:21,600 --> 00:35:23,679 CACOPHONY OF ANIMAL NOISES 473 00:35:25,600 --> 00:35:27,998 ...just like any other day. 474 00:35:28,039 --> 00:35:31,039 COOING 475 00:35:31,079 --> 00:35:32,960 CLICKING 476 00:35:32,998 --> 00:35:34,320 WARBLES 477 00:35:39,520 --> 00:35:41,960 SNEEZES 478 00:35:41,998 --> 00:35:43,399 THUNDER RUMBLES 479 00:35:45,039 --> 00:35:46,039 SQUAWKS 480 00:35:46,079 --> 00:35:48,759 The evidence suggests that baby pterosaurs 481 00:35:48,799 --> 00:35:52,239 emerge from the egg ready to fend for themselves. 482 00:35:54,920 --> 00:35:56,759 And that includes... 483 00:35:59,399 --> 00:36:00,759 ...flying? 484 00:36:02,280 --> 00:36:04,840 Well, almost. 485 00:36:10,320 --> 00:36:14,520 Elsewhere, as the devastation spreads out across North America 486 00:36:14,560 --> 00:36:15,840 towards Tanis... 487 00:36:17,520 --> 00:36:20,600 ...dinosaurs and creatures of all shapes and sizes 488 00:36:20,640 --> 00:36:23,039 are obliterated by the blast. 489 00:36:33,399 --> 00:36:37,119 If I were a dinosaur standing on the coast of North America, 490 00:36:37,160 --> 00:36:40,200 I would just see a flash and a fireball coming at me 491 00:36:40,239 --> 00:36:41,719 and I would be fried. 492 00:36:41,759 --> 00:36:45,719 All you'd feel is an awfully sharp stabbing pain in your ears, 493 00:36:45,759 --> 00:36:47,920 then you explode. 494 00:36:53,679 --> 00:36:57,160 At Tanis, for a few more precious minutes, 495 00:36:57,200 --> 00:36:58,880 life carries on as usual. 496 00:37:00,998 --> 00:37:03,160 But the clock is ticking. 497 00:37:10,359 --> 00:37:11,520 GRUNTING 498 00:37:12,600 --> 00:37:15,399 DEEP BELLOWING 499 00:37:16,719 --> 00:37:20,439 The blast from the impact never reaches Tanis, 500 00:37:20,479 --> 00:37:22,960 but seismic shock waves do. 501 00:37:27,719 --> 00:37:29,520 RUMBLING 502 00:37:30,280 --> 00:37:32,239 They are far more powerful 503 00:37:32,280 --> 00:37:34,679 than any earthquake ever recorded. 504 00:37:38,759 --> 00:37:44,520 That magnitude 12 earthquake would've been strong enough to actually 505 00:37:44,560 --> 00:37:47,679 jam your femurs up into your body cavity. 506 00:37:48,160 --> 00:37:53,079 While the earthquake that reached Tanis was likely less destructive, 507 00:37:53,160 --> 00:37:56,479 the effects would've been felt by all that lived there. 508 00:37:59,079 --> 00:38:02,479 Seismic waves are now shaking the whole region, 509 00:38:02,520 --> 00:38:06,079 causing water to slosh and churn. 510 00:38:10,719 --> 00:38:13,759 At Tanis, strange currents in the river 511 00:38:13,799 --> 00:38:16,399 give a hint of what is still to come. 512 00:38:22,320 --> 00:38:23,920 THUNDER CRACKS 513 00:38:25,439 --> 00:38:28,280 Next, it begins to rain. 514 00:38:28,320 --> 00:38:30,399 PATTERING 515 00:38:30,439 --> 00:38:33,640 Ejecta spherules are falling back to Earth. 516 00:38:41,560 --> 00:38:44,439 As the spherules begin their fall... 517 00:38:45,600 --> 00:38:48,880 ...friction heats them until they're red hot. 518 00:38:55,359 --> 00:38:58,719 Then the heat transfers to the air. 519 00:39:00,239 --> 00:39:02,479 Temperatures rise with every second. 520 00:39:10,960 --> 00:39:14,239 As the heat builds, the creatures of Tanis 521 00:39:14,280 --> 00:39:15,880 are fighting for their lives. 522 00:39:17,679 --> 00:39:19,439 ROARS 523 00:39:21,039 --> 00:39:23,479 And then, as seismic waves 524 00:39:23,520 --> 00:39:26,280 continue to slowly rock the whole region... 525 00:39:27,399 --> 00:39:30,679 ...a violent surge wave ten metres high 526 00:39:30,719 --> 00:39:32,998 rushes up the Tanis river. 527 00:39:46,160 --> 00:39:48,600 Surviving the turbulence of the surge 528 00:39:48,640 --> 00:39:51,759 is a challenge even for the best swimmers. 529 00:40:03,719 --> 00:40:07,520 Then, the powerful rocking of the river system 530 00:40:07,560 --> 00:40:11,160 slowly begins to draw the water back the way it came. 531 00:40:30,160 --> 00:40:32,719 A large, robust animal like a T-rex 532 00:40:32,759 --> 00:40:34,799 might have survived the surge. 533 00:40:40,320 --> 00:40:42,640 As might a hard-shelled reptile. 534 00:40:44,359 --> 00:40:47,160 But there is much more to come. 535 00:40:47,200 --> 00:40:52,280 As billions of tonnes of superheated spherules continue to fall, 536 00:40:52,320 --> 00:40:54,600 the atmosphere gets even hotter... 537 00:40:57,079 --> 00:41:01,160 ...igniting dead leaves and sparking wildfires. 538 00:41:07,520 --> 00:41:09,079 Earthquakes, 539 00:41:09,119 --> 00:41:11,039 fire... 540 00:41:13,200 --> 00:41:14,640 ...devastation. 541 00:41:17,200 --> 00:41:19,200 Little would survive for long, 542 00:41:19,239 --> 00:41:21,039 on land... 543 00:41:21,079 --> 00:41:23,280 ROARS 544 00:41:25,719 --> 00:41:27,479 ...or in the air. 545 00:41:30,520 --> 00:41:32,799 SHRIEKS 546 00:41:37,759 --> 00:41:41,399 The air around the planet was effectively set to boil. 547 00:41:41,439 --> 00:41:45,920 This was something that you couldn't escape on the surface. 548 00:41:55,560 --> 00:41:57,600 Those that live deep underground 549 00:41:57,640 --> 00:41:59,160 may have a better chance. 550 00:42:07,160 --> 00:42:10,640 As the slow sloshing of the river system continues... 551 00:42:13,600 --> 00:42:15,880 ...another powerful surge hits. 552 00:42:36,799 --> 00:42:39,359 There is no escaping the destruction. 553 00:42:42,560 --> 00:42:45,560 For many of the creatures of Tanis, 554 00:42:45,600 --> 00:42:47,960 their stories end underwater. 555 00:43:00,799 --> 00:43:04,998 In less than two hours, the world has changed forever. 556 00:43:07,079 --> 00:43:09,799 The mud the surge waves leave behind 557 00:43:09,840 --> 00:43:13,799 will gradually turn into the thick layer of crumbly rock 558 00:43:13,840 --> 00:43:16,719 entombing the creatures which died here... 559 00:43:19,640 --> 00:43:22,719 ...until 66 million years later, 560 00:43:22,759 --> 00:43:25,039 when they're finally unearthed. 561 00:43:28,799 --> 00:43:34,520 We have a general idea of what horrors were unleashed on the landscape by the asteroid. 562 00:43:34,560 --> 00:43:37,479 I think these sites may give us the ability to put them in sequence 563 00:43:37,520 --> 00:43:40,960 and understand what these organisms went through. 564 00:43:40,998 --> 00:43:44,200 Even though there's a lot of debate, 565 00:43:44,320 --> 00:43:49,679 every new thing that we find, every new hypothesis, 566 00:43:49,719 --> 00:43:53,960 gets us a little bit closer to doing that mental time travel 567 00:43:54,079 --> 00:43:57,039 and imagining ourselves back in the Cretacious world. 568 00:44:02,119 --> 00:44:06,399 Robert's finds have helped us understand in remarkable detail 569 00:44:06,439 --> 00:44:08,079 what happened at Tanis 570 00:44:08,119 --> 00:44:11,600 in the minutes after the asteroid impact. 571 00:44:11,640 --> 00:44:13,759 But what about the rest of the world? 572 00:44:17,998 --> 00:44:22,359 Fires raged, destroying many of the world's forests. 573 00:44:24,799 --> 00:44:28,039 As that horrific day drew to a close, 574 00:44:28,079 --> 00:44:31,840 many of the world's dinosaurs were already dead. 575 00:44:36,160 --> 00:44:40,600 Research shows that the angle at which the asteroid hit 576 00:44:40,640 --> 00:44:43,600 and the sulphur-rich rocks at the impact site 577 00:44:43,640 --> 00:44:45,880 amplified the devastation. 578 00:44:47,200 --> 00:44:51,998 Without light, most plants died, and food became scarce. 579 00:44:53,840 --> 00:44:56,479 As the weeks and months passed, 580 00:44:56,520 --> 00:44:59,880 any dinosaur left alive would've died of hunger. 581 00:45:02,759 --> 00:45:05,439 In the oceans, it was the same. 582 00:45:07,160 --> 00:45:10,439 Nearly all of the world's plankton disappeared, 583 00:45:10,479 --> 00:45:14,479 leading to the starvation of most marine creatures. 584 00:45:16,119 --> 00:45:19,600 It's thought that the nuclear winter that followed 585 00:45:19,640 --> 00:45:22,239 caused a global temperature drop 586 00:45:22,280 --> 00:45:25,200 of at least 25 degrees centigrade. 587 00:45:25,239 --> 00:45:29,200 The fossil record tells us that this huge change in climate 588 00:45:29,239 --> 00:45:33,079 marked the disappearance of three quarters of all species, 589 00:45:33,119 --> 00:45:34,920 including the dinosaurs. 590 00:45:34,960 --> 00:45:36,960 The location of the Chicxulub impact really was a worst case scenario. 591 00:45:36,998 --> 00:45:43,239 If the asteroid had come in 30 seconds earlier, 592 00:45:43,799 --> 00:45:48,119 30 seconds later, it would've hit the Atlanic Ocean or Pacific 593 00:45:48,280 --> 00:45:52,759 and not the sediment-rich, sulphur-rich Yukutan Peninsula. 594 00:45:53,320 --> 00:45:56,520 Forests collapse. The planteaters didn't ahve any food to eat. 595 00:45:56,560 --> 00:46:01,880 They died. The meat-eaters didn't have any plant-eaters to eat. They died. 596 00:46:02,799 --> 00:46:07,520 This unintentional accident was set in motion 597 00:46:07,560 --> 00:46:10,239 long before dinosaurs even existed. 598 00:46:10,640 --> 00:46:15,039 And it just happened to be the one case of bad luck. 599 00:46:15,239 --> 00:46:18,239 The one worst day in the history of the planet. 600 00:46:21,239 --> 00:46:25,759 The planet was in semi-darkness for around a decade, 601 00:46:25,799 --> 00:46:28,960 as dust and soot slowly fell to Earth. 602 00:46:30,799 --> 00:46:33,119 But then came something wonderful. 603 00:46:33,640 --> 00:46:35,320 A new beginning. 604 00:46:36,960 --> 00:46:39,640 Once the dust cleared from the atmosphere 605 00:46:39,679 --> 00:46:41,320 and the sunlight returned... 606 00:46:42,880 --> 00:46:46,479 ...plant life was gradually restored, 607 00:46:46,520 --> 00:46:48,439 led by ferns, 608 00:46:48,479 --> 00:46:52,640 the spores of which had lain dormant deep underground, 609 00:46:52,679 --> 00:46:55,880 and the world began to turn green once more. 610 00:46:55,920 --> 00:46:57,998 But what about the animals? 611 00:47:01,719 --> 00:47:07,039 One of the reasons some mammals survived the great extinction, were burrows. 612 00:47:07,160 --> 00:47:08,998 During the nuclear winter, 613 00:47:09,039 --> 00:47:11,200 a burrow would've provided warmth, 614 00:47:11,239 --> 00:47:14,399 protection, and a place to store food. 615 00:47:21,679 --> 00:47:27,039 Mammals that survived were resourceful omnivores, 616 00:47:27,079 --> 00:47:31,799 and insects would've been a plentiful source of food. 617 00:47:35,560 --> 00:47:39,280 Their size woud have been another advantage. 618 00:47:43,560 --> 00:47:47,359 When catastrophe strikes and food is scarce, 619 00:47:47,399 --> 00:47:49,719 the largest tend to die out, 620 00:47:49,759 --> 00:47:52,679 whilst the smallest often survive. 621 00:47:54,200 --> 00:47:57,160 And they weren't alone. 622 00:47:58,840 --> 00:48:01,998 Robert's fossil turtle may have been unlucky, 623 00:48:02,039 --> 00:48:03,719 but many others survived. 624 00:48:05,399 --> 00:48:07,960 As did crocodiles, 625 00:48:07,998 --> 00:48:09,759 snakes, 626 00:48:09,799 --> 00:48:12,679 and many fish species. 627 00:48:14,160 --> 00:48:17,560 Life has found a way and life is now thriving again. 628 00:48:17,600 --> 00:48:24,600 It it those ecosystems that are the foundations of our ecosystems today. 629 00:48:26,320 --> 00:48:30,039 it's kind of amazing that we can put our finger on this line in the rock 630 00:48:30,079 --> 00:48:34,160 and as much as we miss the dinosaurs if this hasn't happened, 631 00:48:34,200 --> 00:48:36,200 we wouldn't be here. 632 00:48:36,600 --> 00:48:39,320 And as for the dinosaurs, 633 00:48:39,359 --> 00:48:41,799 did the impact really kill them all? 634 00:48:41,840 --> 00:48:45,479 Well, this beautiful fossilised feather 635 00:48:45,520 --> 00:48:47,520 isn't from a bird, 636 00:48:47,560 --> 00:48:49,679 but from a predatory dinosaur. 637 00:48:49,719 --> 00:48:51,399 So we have to be careful 638 00:48:51,439 --> 00:48:54,640 when we say that dinosaurs are extinct, 639 00:48:54,679 --> 00:48:58,719 because what we call birds originally evolved 640 00:48:58,759 --> 00:49:01,759 from the smallest feathered dinosaurs. 641 00:49:01,799 --> 00:49:03,998 So to be correct, we should say 642 00:49:04,039 --> 00:49:08,079 all non-avian dinosaurs are extinct. 643 00:49:10,799 --> 00:49:12,920 Robert's finds have given us 644 00:49:12,960 --> 00:49:15,239 a better idea than ever before... 645 00:49:16,880 --> 00:49:21,479 ...about what happened on the day that led to the extinction... 646 00:49:22,719 --> 00:49:27,039 ...of the largest beasts ever to walk the Earth. 647 00:49:29,640 --> 00:49:31,840 Dinosaurs were perhaps 648 00:49:31,880 --> 00:49:35,280 some of nature's most extraordinary creatures, 649 00:49:35,320 --> 00:49:39,359 dominating the planet for over 150 million years 650 00:49:39,399 --> 00:49:42,239 before they became extinct. 651 00:49:43,679 --> 00:49:46,880 But extinction comes in different forms, 652 00:49:46,920 --> 00:49:49,160 and many of the amazing creatures 653 00:49:49,200 --> 00:49:52,600 and plants alive today are also threatened. 654 00:49:52,640 --> 00:49:55,600 It's possible that humanity is having 655 00:49:55,640 --> 00:49:57,960 as big an impact on the world 656 00:49:57,998 --> 00:50:02,719 as the asteroid that ended the age of the dinosaurs. 657 00:50:02,759 --> 00:50:06,280 As human beings, we are unique in our ability 658 00:50:06,320 --> 00:50:09,359 to learn from the distant past. 659 00:50:09,399 --> 00:50:14,479 The question is will we use that ability wisely and do our very best 660 00:50:14,520 --> 00:50:18,079 to protect the millions of species 661 00:50:18,119 --> 00:50:22,840 for whom, alongside us, this planet is home? 662 00:50:24,880 --> 00:50:26,880 # (music)56610

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