Saison 2019

35 épisodes

(5 h 50 min)

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When Humans Were Prey

S2019 E1 When Humans Were Prey

Not too long ago, our early human ancestors were under constant threat of attack from predators. And it turns out that this difficult chapter in our history may be responsible for the adaptations that allowed us to become so successful.

Première diffusion : 8 janvier 2019

How Blood Evolved (Many Times)

S2019 E2 How Blood Evolved (Many Times)

Blood is one of the most revolutionary features in our evolutionary history. Over hundreds of millions of years, the way in which blood does its job has changed over and over again. As a result, we animals have our familiar red blood. But also blue blood. And purple, and green, and even white.

Première diffusion : 15 janvier 2019

The Humans That Lived Before Us

S2019 E3 The Humans That Lived Before Us

As more and more fossil ancestors have been found, our genus has become more and more inclusive, incorporating more members that look less like us, Homo sapiens. By getting to know these other hominins--the ones who came before us--we can start to answer some big questions about what it essentially means to be human.

Première diffusion : 29 janvier 2019

The Island of Shrinking Mammoths

S2019 E4 The Island of Shrinking Mammoths

The mammoths fossils found on the Channel Islands off the coast of southern California are much smaller than their relatives found on the mainland. They were so small that they came to be seen as their own species. How did they get there? And why were they so small?

Première diffusion : 5 février 2019

The Evolution of the Heart (A Love Story)

S2019 E5 The Evolution of the Heart (A Love Story)

In order to understand where hearts came from, we have to go back to the earliest common ancestor of everything that has a heart. It took hundreds of millions of years, and countless different iterations of the same basic structure to lead to the heart that you have today.

Première diffusion : 13 février 2019

How 7,000 Years of Epic Floods Changed the World

S2019 E6 How 7,000 Years of Epic Floods Changed the World

Strange geologic landmarks in the Pacific Northwest are the lingering remains of a mystery that took nearly half a century to solve. These features turned out to be a result one of the most powerful and bizarre episodes in geologic history: this region experienced dozens of major, devastating floods over the course of more than 7,000 years.

Première diffusion : 27 février 2019

The Island of Huge Hamsters and Giant Owls

S2019 E7 The Island of Huge Hamsters and Giant Owls

Back in the late Miocene epoch, there was an island--or maybe a group of islands-- in the Mediterranean Sea that was populated with fantastic giant beasts. It’s a lesson in the very strange, but very real, powers of natural selection.

Première diffusion : 5 mars 2019

The Giant Bird That Got Lost in Time

S2019 E8 The Giant Bird That Got Lost in Time

The California condor is the biggest flying bird in North America, a title that it has held since the Late Pleistocene Epoch. It's just one example of an organism that we share the planet with today that seems lost in time, out of place in our world.

Première diffusion : 12 mars 2019

When We First Made Tools

S2019 E9 When We First Made Tools

The tools made by our human ancestors may not seem like much when you compare them to the screen you’re looking at right now but their creation represents a pivotal moment in the origin of technology and in the evolution of our lineage.

Première diffusion : 26 mars 2019

When Giant Scorpions Swarmed the Seas

S2019 E10 When Giant Scorpions Swarmed the Seas

Sea scorpions thrived for 200 million years, coming in a wide variety of shapes and sizes. Over time, they developed a number of adaptations--from crushing claws to flattened tails for swimming. And some of them adapted by getting so big that they still hold the record as the largest arthropods of all time.

Première diffusion : 2 avril 2019

When We Tamed Fire

S2019 E11 When We Tamed Fire

The ability to make and use fire has fundamentally changed the arc of our evolution. The bodies we have today were, in many ways, shaped by that time when we first tamed fire.

Première diffusion : 9 avril 2019

The Mystery Behind the Biggest Bears of All Time

S2019 E12 The Mystery Behind the Biggest Bears of All Time

The short-faced bears turned out to be remarkably adaptable, undergoing radical changes to meet the demands of two changing continents. And yet, for reasons we don’t quite understand, their adaptability wasn’t enough to keep them from going extinct.

Première diffusion : 23 avril 2019

The Croc That Ran on Hooves

S2019 E13 The Croc That Ran on Hooves

In the Eocene Epoch, there was a reptile that had teeth equipped for biting through flesh, its hind legs were a lot longer than its front legs and instead of claws, its toes were each capped with hooves. How did this living nightmare come to evolve?

Première diffusion : 1 mai 2019

When We Took Over the World

S2019 E14 When We Took Over the World

From our deepest origins in Africa all the way to the Americas, by looking at the fossils and archaeological materials we have been able to trace the path our ancestors took during thee short window of time when we took over the world.

Première diffusion : 7 mai 2019

The Ghostly Origins of the Big Cats

S2019 E15 The Ghostly Origins of the Big Cats

All of today’s big cat species evolved less than 11 million years ago and yet their evolutionary history remains an almost total mystery. But scientists have recently discovered a major clue about the origins of the big cats, one that could provide a whole new starting place for solving this puzzle.

Première diffusion : 16 mai 2019

The History of Climate Cycles (and the Woolly Rhino) Explained

S2019 E16 The History of Climate Cycles (and the Woolly Rhino) Explained

Throughout the Pleistocene Epoch, the range of the woolly rhino grew and shrank in sync with global climate. So what caused the climate -- and the range of the woolly rhino -- to cycle back and forth between such extremes?

Première diffusion : 30 mai 2019

The Hellacious Lives of the "Hell Pigs"

S2019 E17 The Hellacious Lives of the "Hell Pigs"

Despite the name, we don’t know where the so-called “hell pigs” belong in the mammalian family tree. They walked on hooves, like pigs do, but had longer legs, almost like deer. They had hunched backs, a bit like rhinos or bison. But as is often, if not always, the case, there is some evolutionary method to this anatomical madness.

Première diffusion : 5 juin 2019

How Evolution Works (And How We Figured It Out)

S2019 E18 How Evolution Works (And How We Figured It Out)

As a scientific concept, evolution was revolutionary when it was first introduced. With the help of all three of our hosts and the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History’s new Deep Time Hall, we’ll try to explain how evolution actually works and how we came to understand it.

Première diffusion : 11 juin 2019

How Black Holes Kill Galaxies

S2019 E19 How Black Holes Kill Galaxies

Black holes are really only dangerous if you get too close. Ha, who am I kidding. It turns out they may be responsible for ending star formation across the entire universe. When we first realized that black holes could have masses of millions or even billions of times that of the sun, it came as a bit of a shock. They were discovered as the driving force behind quasars, where matter is heated to extreme incandescence before its plunge into vast black holes. But if that weren’t enough, we soon realized that every single decent-sized galaxy contains such a supermassive black hole. By the beginning of the 21st century it became clear that black holes and the galaxies that contain them are very closely connected. The bigger the galaxy, the bigger its supermassive black hole. That might not sound surprising. What was weird was how closely they were connected. There’s a tight correlation between the mass the central black hole and the mass of the stars in the galactic bulge – that’s the central ball-like part of a spiral galaxy, or the entirety of an elliptical galaxy, and every bulge contains a supermassive black hole around one-one-thousandth its mass. And there’s an even tighter relationship between the black hole mass and the speed that stars are moving in their random orbits within the galactic bulge – the so-called stellar velocity dispersion – which itself depends of the total mass of the galaxy, including dark matter.

When the Synapsids Struck Back

S2019 E19 When the Synapsids Struck Back

Synapsids were the world’s first-ever terrestrial megafauna but the vast majority of these giants were doomed to extinction. However some lived on, keeping a low profile among the dinosaurs. And now our world is the way it is because of the time when the synapsids struck back.

Première diffusion : 19 juin 2019

When Ichthyosaurs Led a Revolution in the Seas

S2019 E20 When Ichthyosaurs Led a Revolution in the Seas

The marine reptiles Ichthyosaurs arose after The Great Dying, which wiped out at least 90 percent of life in the oceans, changing the seas forever and triggering a new evolutionary arms race between predator and prey.

Première diffusion : 25 juin 2019

When We Met Other Human Species

S2019 E21 When We Met Other Human Species

We all belong to the only group of hominins on the planet today. But we weren’t always alone. 100,000 years ago, Eurasia was home to other hominin species, some of which we know our ancestors met, and spent some quality time with.

Première diffusion : 9 juillet 2019

How Volcanoes Froze the Earth (Twice)

S2019 E22 How Volcanoes Froze the Earth (Twice)

Over 600 million years ago, sheets of ice coated our planet on both land and sea. How did this happen? And most importantly for us, why did the planet eventually thaw again? The evidence for Snowball Earth is written on every continent today.

Première diffusion : 17 juillet 2019

How Earth's First, Unkillable Animals Saved the World

S2019 E23 How Earth's First, Unkillable Animals Saved the World

They have survived every catastrophe and every mass extinction event that nature has thrown at them. And by being the little, filter-feeding, water-cleaning creatures that they are, sponges may have saved the world.

Première diffusion : 30 juillet 2019

When Giant Deer Roamed Eurasia

S2019 E24 When Giant Deer Roamed Eurasia

Megaloceros was one of the largest members of the deer family ever to walk the Earth. The archaeological record is full of evidence that our ancestors lived alongside and interacted with these giant mammals for millennia. But what happened when they did interact, when humans met this megafauna?

Première diffusion : 7 août 2019

Was This Dinosaur a Cannibal?

S2019 E25 Was This Dinosaur a Cannibal?

Paleontologists have spent the better part of two decades debating whether Coelophysis ate its own kind. It turns out, the evidence that scientists have had to study in order to answer that question includes some of the strangest and grossest fossils that any expert would ever get to see.

Première diffusion : 14 août 2019

The Missing Link That Wasn’t

S2019 E26 The Missing Link That Wasn’t

The myth of the Missing Link--the idea that there must be a specimen that partly resembles an ape but also partly resembles a modern human--is persistent. But the reality is that there is no missing link in our lineage, because that’s not how evolution works.

Première diffusion : 21 août 2019

The Raptor That Made Us Rethink Dinosaurs

S2019 E27 The Raptor That Made Us Rethink Dinosaurs

In 1964, a paleontologist named John Ostrom unearthed some fascinating fossils from the mudstone of Montana. Its discovery set the stage for what’s known today as the Dinosaur Renaissance, a total re-thinking of what we thought we knew about dinosaurs.

Première diffusion : 28 août 2019

When Bats Took Flight

S2019 E28 When Bats Took Flight

Bats pretty much appear in the fossil record as recognizable, full-on, flying bats. And they show up on all of the continents, except Antarctica, around the same time. So where did bats come from? And which of the many weird features that bats have, showed up first?

Première diffusion : 11 septembre 2019

How Pterosaurs Got Their Wings

S2019 E29 How Pterosaurs Got Their Wings

When pterosaurs first took flight, you could say that it marked the beginning of the end for the winged reptiles. Because, strangely enough, the power of flight -- and the changes that it led to -- may have ultimately led to their downfall.

Première diffusion : 18 septembre 2019

When Giant Lemurs Ruled Madagascar

S2019 E30 When Giant Lemurs Ruled Madagascar

Just a few thousand years ago, the island of Madagascar was inhabited by giant lemurs. How did such a diverse group of primates evolve in the first place, and how did they help shape the unique environments of Madagascar? And how did they get winnowed down, leaving only their smaller relatives behind?

Première diffusion : 25 septembre 2019

When Antarctica Was Green

S2019 E31 When Antarctica Was Green

Before the start of the Eocene Epoch about 56 million years ago--Antarctica was still joined to both Australia and South America. And it turns out that a lot of what we recognize about the southern hemisphere can be traced back to that time when Antarctica was green.

Première diffusion : 3 octobre 2019

The Case of the Dinosaur Egg Thief

S2019 E32 The Case of the Dinosaur Egg Thief

Paleontologists found a small theropod dinosaur skull right on top of a nest of eggs that were believed to belong to a plant-eating dinosaur. Instead of being the nest robbers that they were originally thought to be, raptors like this one would reveal themselves to actually be caring parents.

Première diffusion : 16 octobre 2019

When Hobbits Were Real

S2019 E33 When Hobbits Were Real

Its discoverers named it Homo floresiensis, but it’s often called “the hobbit” for its short stature and oddly proportioned feet. And it’s been at the center of a major controversy in the field ever since. Was it its own species? Or was it really just one of us? Or, could it even have descended from a whole lineage of hominins that we don’t even know about?

Première diffusion : 22 octobre 2019

Were These Monsters Inspired by Fossils?

S2019 E34 Were These Monsters Inspired by Fossils?

People have been discovering the traces and remains of prehistoric creatures for thousands of years. And they’ve also probably been telling stories about fantastic beasts since language became a thing. So, is it possible that the monsters that populate our myths and legends were influenced by the fossil record?

Première diffusion : 29 octobre 2019