Nizar Ibrahim: How we unearthed the Spinosaurus
Nizar Ibrahim scours Northern Africa for clues to what things were like there in the Cretaceous period. A 2015 TED Fellow, he has spearheaded the recent search for the semi-aquatic dinosaur Spinosaurus. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
are incredible creatures.
we know about them.
through my head
my first dinosaur book.
to combine my love for animals
far-flung corners of the world.
I've led several expeditions
on this planet, the Sahara.
I've been on a quest
a bizarre, giant predatory dinosaur
have been found
by a German paleontologist.
were destroyed in World War II.
a few drawings and notes.
about 100 million years ago,
forming a magnificent sail,
a bit like a crocodile,
to catch slippery prey, like fish.
all we knew
between Morocco and Algeria,
and snakes and scorpions,
good fossils there.
in this part of the Sahara.
predatory dinosaurs,
of crocodile-like hunters.
in a river system.
to a giant, car-sized coelacanth,
were filled with pterosaurs,
to travel to if you had a time machine.
incredible fossils of animals
to be very elusive.
a partial skeleton at some point.
several bones of Spinosaurus.
we collected more bones.
had another partial skeleton
Spinosaurus had a head
predatory dinosaurs,
came from the rest of the skeleton.
dinosaur has feet like this --
used to walk on soft sediment,
microstructure of the bone,
very dense and compact.
that spend a lot of time in the water,
control in the water.
and built a digital Spinosaurus skeleton.
at the digital skeleton,
a dinosaur unlike any other.
written all over it,
"water-loving" written all over it --
and the hind limbs are reduced in size,
we see in animals
of time in the water.
and wrapping our dinosaur in skin --
with a river monster,
I showed you earlier on.
an incredible discovery.
this is a once-in-a-lifetime discovery.
to discover in the world."
further from the truth.
still full of treasures,
no places left to explore,
Roy Chapman Andrews,
an adventure just around the corner --
wrote these lines.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Nizar Ibrahim - PaleontologistNizar Ibrahim scours Northern Africa for clues to what things were like there in the Cretaceous period. A 2015 TED Fellow, he has spearheaded the recent search for the semi-aquatic dinosaur Spinosaurus.
Why you should listen
Paleontologist Nizar Ibrahim, a postdoc at the University of Chicago, wanted to uncover the mystery of the Spinosaurus, a gigantic predatory dinosaur whose only known remains were lost during World War II. After identifying a new skeleton at a dig in North Africa, Ibrahim made the landmark conclusion that the Spinosaurus may have been the largest carnivorous dinosaur to ever live. Its crocodile-like head, dense bones, short legs, and wide, paddle feet suggest it was a water dweller unlike any other. “The entire skeleton has water-loving river monster written all over it,” he says.
Ibrahim is a TED Fellow and a National Geographic Emerging Explorer.
Nizar Ibrahim | Speaker | TED.com