3:38
Oligocene Epoch - Florida Fossils: Evolution of Life and Land
This video from the Museum's Florida Fossils exhibit describes the Oligocene, 34 milli...
published: 02 Feb 2010
author: FloridaMuseum
Oligocene Epoch - Florida Fossils: Evolution of Life and Land
This video from the Museum's Florida Fossils exhibit describes the Oligocene, 34 million to 24 million years ago. Global climates became cooler during the Oligocene, causing sea levels to drop. At least the northern portion of the Florida platform, once abundant with tropical, marine habitats, was now land. Early immigrants to the Florida peninsula included amphibians, reptiles, bats, shrews and rabbits. Also, predators tracked dwarf horses and the strange, hoofed mammals, oreodonts and chalicotheres, onto this new land. In the ocean, huge sharks plied the depths, while several kinds of sea cows were abundant near shore. Produced, directed and filmed for the Florida Museum of Natural History by Wes C. Skiles/Karst Productions, Inc.
2:22
Oligocene
curtain club 10-28-07...
published: 31 Oct 2007
author: peacepop1
Oligocene
curtain club 10-28-07
7:51
Oligocene Jhonny
nigguh high...
published: 29 Jan 2009
author: OctopusOnFir3
Oligocene Jhonny
nigguh high
1:58
Nannofossils of Eocene to Oligocene
Geologist: Tiia Carraway Study on Eocene / Oligocene nannofossils in Yazoo Clay...
published: 26 Oct 2010
author: carrawaytiia
Nannofossils of Eocene to Oligocene
Geologist: Tiia Carraway Study on Eocene / Oligocene nannofossils in Yazoo Clay
2:31
A Oligocene Cat Tribute
enjoy!!...
published: 13 Jan 2011
author: MrDarkcatify
A Oligocene Cat Tribute
enjoy!!
10:00
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 1
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 mill...
published: 31 Mar 2010
author: bram221
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 1
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 million years ago - Late Oligocene - Mongolia Thank you BBC!
0:32
6 months old in the Oligocene Epoch
What? When did Asha start cavorting with three-toed horses?...
published: 09 Nov 2011
author: abhathakkar
6 months old in the Oligocene Epoch
What? When did Asha start cavorting with three-toed horses?
3:09
conchiglie oligocene.avi
Il mistero delle vongole (oppure potrei dire per pranzo: asparagi con uova per molti- ling...
published: 25 Apr 2012
author: ndatore
conchiglie oligocene.avi
Il mistero delle vongole (oppure potrei dire per pranzo: asparagi con uova per molti- linguine con conchiglie di 35milioni di anni fa per me) Che posso dire. Sono differente. Mentre glia altri fanno razzia di asparagi selvatici preferisco andare negli stessi luoghi ma a vongole. Potrei "papparmi" un piatto di linguine con vongole di 35milioni di anni fa. Potreste subito pensare che io sia matto! Ma non del tutto! Seguo sempre la logica del dito e della luna, oppure quella da me coniata sul cacciatore nella taverna che si vanta di aver sparato un bel lepre. Tutti chiedono al cacciatore il peso dell'animale, io preferisco conoscere il colore (anche se preferivo che non fosse ammazzato). Ma torniamo al mistero delle vongole! Possiamo definirlo un mistero "parziale" per chi appassionato di geologia. Infatti, è tutto da collegare al periodo Oligocene (da 34 a 23 milioni di anni fa) quando la Terra era "perseguitata da innumerevoli maremoti e terremoti e quindi con il verificarsi di molteplici tsunami. Ma il mistero è rimasto tale fino ad uno studio di Tony Wilson dell'Università di Zurigo, che ipotizza la presenza della fauna oceanica come conseguenza di un inimmaginabile maremoto avvenuto nell'Africa orientale tra Eocene ed Oligocene. Wilson ei suoi colleghi svizzeri hanno sequenziato il Dna di un'aringa del Tanganica e la storia dei geni di quel pesce indica la sua comparsa nel lago fra i 50 ei 25 milioni di anni fa, contemporaneamente a un'immensa massa d'acqua che avrebbe <b>...</b>
9:30
Prehistoric Predators: Killer Pig Part 1
The Entelodont,a fierce scavanger, was the terror of the Oligocene, for nearly 10 million ...
published: 18 Apr 2010
author: Mrjohn5533
Prehistoric Predators: Killer Pig Part 1
The Entelodont,a fierce scavanger, was the terror of the Oligocene, for nearly 10 million years, until climatic changes make this scavanger evolve into fierce and giant predator.
7:04
Era Cenozoica - Paleoceno, Eoceno, Oligoceno (Cenozoic Era)
Biology Elective project. My friends and I got to talk about the Paleocene, Eocene and Oli...
published: 18 Jun 2010
author: PazGranger
Era Cenozoica - Paleoceno, Eoceno, Oligoceno (Cenozoic Era)
Biology Elective project. My friends and I got to talk about the Paleocene, Eocene and Oligocene *Judith and I got a 7 (A+, 10, whatever), while Ignacio got a 6.3 (B+, 9, whatever) because he didn't modulated well.
10:00
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 2
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 mill...
published: 31 Mar 2010
author: bram221
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 2
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 million years ago - Late Oligocene - Mongolia Thank you BBC!
8:51
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 3
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 mill...
published: 31 Mar 2010
author: bram221
Walking with Beasts - Land of Giants part 3
The BBC documentary walking with Beasts. Episode Three: "Land of Giants" 25 million years ago - Late Oligocene - Mongolia Thanks you BBC!
2:05
Hunting Shark Teeth in a Creek in Summerville
Its been a really long time since I had a good opportunity to hunt shark teeth in my favor...
published: 21 Dec 2009
author: blackriverfossils
Hunting Shark Teeth in a Creek in Summerville
Its been a really long time since I had a good opportunity to hunt shark teeth in my favorite creek in Summerville. Steady rain on Friday washed all the leaves away and revealed a nice assortment of fossil shark teeth, including a handful of Carcharodon carcharias (modern great white), a really nice Retroflexus (mako), a large, beautifully Angustidens (oligocene giant great white)
3:04
Tribute to Indricotherium aka Baluchitherium aka Paraceratherium
Tribute to real king of prehistoric mammal. Song is Crawling by 1 Up 2 Down. Paraceratheri...
published: 23 Jul 2009
author: dinox3raptor
Tribute to Indricotherium aka Baluchitherium aka Paraceratherium
Tribute to real king of prehistoric mammal. Song is Crawling by 1 Up 2 Down. Paraceratherium, also commonly known as Indricotherium or Baluchitherium (see taxonomic discussion below), was a genus of gigantic hornless rhinoceros-like mammals, belonging to the family of the Hyracodontidae. Their fossils have been found in many parts of Asia, including Kazakhstan, Pakistan, India, Mongolia, and China. It lived from the middle Oligocene to the early Miocene, roughly from 30 to 20 million years ago, when this region of Asia was covered in lush subtropical forests and woodlands. From Wikimedia.
3:50
john day fossil beds
Student teams digging in John Day...
published: 19 Mar 2008
author: dunnijones
john day fossil beds
Student teams digging in John Day
4:51
Sporistoric park season 2 episode 1_0001.wmv
this is the first of two bonus episode of Sporistoric park...
published: 03 Jul 2011
author: Meerkatmatt2
Sporistoric park season 2 episode 1_0001.wmv
this is the first of two bonus episode of Sporistoric park
8:10
Oreodont
A short history of this extinct species "aka" merycoidodon....
published: 29 Jul 2008
author: Darwinsgift
Oreodont
A short history of this extinct species "aka" merycoidodon.
0:43
MEGALADON SHARK one of the largest and most powerful shurk ever! Pic.¸11.15.2011
meaning "big tooth", from Greek μέγας (mega, "bi...
published: 15 Oct 2011
author: ppetrov5
MEGALADON SHARK one of the largest and most powerful shurk ever! Pic.¸11.15.2011
meaning "big tooth", from Greek μέγας (mega, "big") and ὀδούς (odon, "tooth")) is an extinct species of shark that lived roughly from 28 to 1.5 million years ago, during the Cenozoic Era (late Oligocene to early Pleistocene).
3:10
Vasquez Rocks County Park | Los Angeles County | California | 28 March 2010
A short late-afternoon hike in Vasquez Rocks County Park, Los Angeles County, California, ...
published: 10 Apr 2010
author: bapyou
Vasquez Rocks County Park | Los Angeles County | California | 28 March 2010
A short late-afternoon hike in Vasquez Rocks County Park, Los Angeles County, California, 28 March 2010. Hiking through steeply-dipping sandstone, I ponder the significance of chunks of granite and mudstone found in the sandstone. The rocks over which I am walking in this video, belong to the Vasquez formation. The Vasquez formation is composed of a variety of rock types (lithologies) including sedimentary and volcanic rocks. Vasquez formation rocks mostly date from the Oligocene Epoch (about 37 to 25 million years ago), which is contrary to the information I discuss in the video. (In the video I identify the age of the rocks as Miocene Epoch, which is true only for the upper layers of the Vasquez formation.) Vasquez Rocks County Park and its surrounding area are depicted on the USGS topographic quadrangle titled AGUA DULCE, CA. Of course, Vasquez Rocks County Park can also be found on Google Maps, Google Earth and other online sources of geographic data. Geologic information about this area can be found in the Thomas Dibblee Foundation map titled 'AGUA DULCE, CA' and references therein. If you visit Vazquez Rocks in the spring time, watch out for rattlesnakes. They live here and spring is when the become active.
2:25
United States's Badland National Park
Badland National Park consist a colorful spires and pinnacles, massive buttes and deep gor...
published: 24 Oct 2011
author: mirandalkf0830
United States's Badland National Park
Badland National Park consist a colorful spires and pinnacles, massive buttes and deep gorges. It also preserves the world's greatest fossil beds of animals from the Oligocene Epoch of the Age of Mammals.
0:27
New Zealand Elephant Rocks
The Elephant Rocks locality features strangely sculptured remnants of Otekaike Limestone. ...
published: 21 Apr 2010
author: markstravels
New Zealand Elephant Rocks
The Elephant Rocks locality features strangely sculptured remnants of Otekaike Limestone. The limestone started out as limey sand on the sea floor perhaps 24 million years ago, during the Oligocene Epoch. Later, the limey sand was buried and gradually turned into rock. In recent geological times, probably within the last million years, the limestone was uplifted. Water and wind weathered the limestone into the shapes before you. In 2005 they were the backdrop to the Walt Disney film The chronicles of Narnia