What if The Dinosaurs Didn't Go Extinct
66 million years ago, a giant asteroid hit the Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs. What if it had missed? Would a highly intelligent species like Homo sapiens still have evolved— or would evolution have gone off in a completely different direction? Another 66 million years of dinosaurs may have failed to produce intelligent tool users because dinosaurs and mammals had different evolutionary constraints and pathways open to them. But it's also possible that the asteroid impact pushed evolution in a fundamentally new direction, altering the selective pressure operating on species, and favoring the evolution of intelligence. Even so, it may be a fluke that we're here.

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How Many Dinosaur Species Were there? More Than You Think

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Evolutionary Biologist Reacts to Creationist Arguments

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Where Did the Asteroid That Killed The Dinosaurs Come From

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The Other Sapiens— what happened to the primitive humans who lived alongside us?

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Hatchling T. rex and the Evolution of Vertebrate Parental Care

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How HIV Started a Century Before Anyone Noticed

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How Many Mass Extinctions Were There? Beyond the Big Five

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Why Mass Extinctions Make Intelligence Vanishingly Rare in the Universe: The Charmed Life Hypothesis

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Why The Deadliest Predator in the Ocean Refuses to Kill Us

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The Biggest Raptor That Ever Existed

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Every Species of Canid (Wolves, Jackals, Dogs, and Other Foxes)

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Evolutionary Biologist Reacts to Creationist Arguments

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The Amazing Plan for a (nearly) Car-Free Amsterdam

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Solving One of the Oldest Problems in Paleontology

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The Higher They Went The WORSE It Got!! | The Strange Story Of Lufthansa Flight 1829

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We've Been Wrong About The Dinosaur Extinction

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How Close Were Dinosaurs To A Stone Age?

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The Prehistoric World Was Weirder Than You Think

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China quietly saved the world last month

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