1 00:00:51,567 --> 00:00:55,879 A fossil jaw, and little doubt about the animal to which it once belonged 2 00:00:55,887 --> 00:01:00,722 because similar animals with similar jaws are alive today. 3 00:01:06,607 --> 00:01:10,839 The delicate imprint of a dragonfly in limestone. 4 00:01:12,367 --> 00:01:14,676 It's so similar to a living dragonfly 5 00:01:14,767 --> 00:01:20,444 that it must have lived and flown in just the same fashion 150 million years ago. 6 00:01:23,607 --> 00:01:27,202 A 50 million-year-old shell of a nautilus. 7 00:01:27,447 --> 00:01:30,519 We can be pretty sure what kind of animal lived in it 8 00:01:30,807 --> 00:01:33,799 because nautilus still swim in the Pacific. 9 00:01:39,247 --> 00:01:42,523 But many fossils are much more mysterious. 10 00:01:42,607 --> 00:01:45,326 What could these bones have belonged to? 11 00:01:52,207 --> 00:01:54,516 Back at the beginning of the 18th century, 12 00:01:54,607 --> 00:01:59,681 a group of objects just like these were found near Nuremberg in Germany. 13 00:01:59,887 --> 00:02:04,915 The man who discovered them was a doctor and he thought he knew exactly what they were. 14 00:02:05,167 --> 00:02:08,159 They were, he said, part of a human backbone, 15 00:02:08,047 --> 00:02:13,724 the remains of a poor sinner who had died at the time of the biblical flood. 16 00:02:13,807 --> 00:02:16,719 But, in fact, they're not shaped like human vertebrae. 17 00:02:17,167 --> 00:02:23,481 However, a century later, this woman found some more on the south coast of England. 18 00:02:23,687 --> 00:02:27,521 Her name was Mary Anning and she earned her living at Lyme Regis 19 00:02:27,527 --> 00:02:30,121 by selling fossils to visitors. 20 00:02:30,407 --> 00:02:33,877 These new specimens of hers were particularly interesting 21 00:02:33,767 --> 00:02:39,399 because with the backbones were ribs and limbs and skulls. 22 00:02:39,527 --> 00:02:43,918 She sold one of them to a London surgeon who was also a fossil collector. 23 00:02:44,327 --> 00:02:48,843 He thought at first that they were some kind of fish. Then he changed his mind. 24 00:02:49,127 --> 00:02:54,247 He thought they were related, believe it or not, to the duck-billed platypus. 25 00:02:54,407 --> 00:02:57,922 And finally he decided that their nearest living relative 26 00:02:57,767 --> 00:03:03,444 was a strange creature that occasionally appeared in the streams of Yugoslavia. 27 00:03:07,487 --> 00:03:14,165 This odd animal and others like it were thought locally to be the tadpoles of dragons. 28 00:03:14,207 --> 00:03:18,246 In fact, it's an olm, an amphibian related to salamanders. 29 00:03:18,527 --> 00:03:21,917 But even its bones don't match the fossil ones. 30 00:03:22,007 --> 00:03:26,637 Eventually, experts at the British Museum got to the truth of the matter: 31 00:03:26,927 --> 00:03:32,684 There was nothing alive today that was like the fossils of Lyme Regis. 32 00:03:32,687 --> 00:03:34,757 But the skull seemed very reptilian 33 00:03:35,087 --> 00:03:38,204 and the paddle-like limbs showed that the animal swam. 34 00:03:37,967 --> 00:03:42,518 So they invented a special name for it, ichthyosaur, "fish-lizard". 35 00:03:43,967 --> 00:03:49,644 As more specimens were found, they tried to work out what the living animals looked like. 36 00:03:49,727 --> 00:03:52,036 The spine always had a kink at the end. 37 00:03:52,127 --> 00:03:55,278 That, they decided, was because the fleshy tail was so big 38 00:03:55,487 --> 00:03:59,400 that when the animal died, it drooped and broke. 39 00:03:59,687 --> 00:04:03,726 The huge eye and the teeth suggested that it was a hunter. 40 00:04:04,007 --> 00:04:08,285 Victorian illustrators began to picture ichthyosaurs in life, 41 00:04:08,327 --> 00:04:11,125 and this is how they saw them. 42 00:04:20,327 --> 00:04:24,206 Then a lot more evidence came from Germany. 43 00:04:32,807 --> 00:04:35,082 In the village of Holzmaden, near Stuttgart, 44 00:04:35,607 --> 00:04:41,523 there are thick deposits of black, slaty limestone of about the same age as the Lyme Regis rocks. 45 00:04:41,767 --> 00:04:44,600 Careful examination showed that they were once mud 46 00:04:44,367 --> 00:04:48,121 on the floor of a wide bay in a tropical sea. 47 00:04:53,087 --> 00:04:58,036 Most of the inhabitants in this sea swam in the sunlit upper waters, 48 00:04:58,367 --> 00:05:02,724 but the bay, it seems, was very tranquil and undisturbed by currents. 49 00:05:03,647 --> 00:05:09,199 At the bottom, the water was still, stagnant, and very poor in oxygen. 50 00:05:09,407 --> 00:05:11,398 Few scavengers could live down here 51 00:05:11,807 --> 00:05:16,562 and the processes of decay, which depend on oxygen, could only move very slowly. 52 00:05:16,607 --> 00:05:20,725 So if the corpse of an animal that had been living in the waters above 53 00:05:20,927 --> 00:05:23,646 slowly drifted down here, 54 00:05:23,807 --> 00:05:30,246 it could settle on the bottom and remain entire, undecayed and undisturbed by scavengers, 55 00:05:30,047 --> 00:05:34,165 until mud settled down upon it and buried it. 56 00:05:34,367 --> 00:05:38,918 And here are the remains of just such a corpse. 57 00:05:49,447 --> 00:05:53,963 The tip of its snout lies beyond this natural joint in the rock. 58 00:05:53,767 --> 00:05:59,160 These are its jaws, its eye is somewhere there, its neck, its backbone, 59 00:05:59,527 --> 00:06:01,836 a few vertebrae are displaced here, 60 00:06:01,927 --> 00:06:07,524 then the backbone runs through this rock here, past this imprint of an ammonite. 61 00:06:07,687 --> 00:06:10,759 There it is in this crack again, a backbone, 62 00:06:11,047 --> 00:06:15,040 and past another ammonite, and there's its tail. 63 00:06:15,847 --> 00:06:19,556 When such near-perfect specimens are carefully prepared, 64 00:06:20,087 --> 00:06:22,885 they may even show the outline of the flesh, 65 00:06:22,967 --> 00:06:26,721 as a dark, almost oily silhouette around the bones. 66 00:06:26,807 --> 00:06:32,803 And from this it was discovered that the ichthyosaurs had a triangular fin on their back. 67 00:06:35,927 --> 00:06:39,761 And that kink at the end of the backbone was not a break, 68 00:06:39,767 --> 00:06:43,282 but a strengthening of the lower fluke of the tail. 69 00:06:47,527 --> 00:06:54,000 With the whole shape of the animal revealed, we can now work out just how it swam. 70 00:06:57,127 --> 00:07:00,278 The joints between the bones of its spine showed that it beat its tail from side to side, 71 00:07:02,407 --> 00:07:04,762 and it was clearly capable of great speeds 72 00:07:04,807 --> 00:07:09,039 as it surged through the sea in search of its food. 73 00:07:20,447 --> 00:07:25,237 No, not ichthyosaurs but their modern equivalent, dolphins. 74 00:07:25,247 --> 00:07:27,044 There are, of course, differences. 75 00:07:27,167 --> 00:07:30,921 Dolphins beat their tails not from side to side but up and down, 76 00:07:31,007 --> 00:07:33,316 and they are mammals, not reptiles. 77 00:07:33,407 --> 00:07:35,967 But their lifestyle is certainly very similar. 78 00:07:36,287 --> 00:07:38,755 Like ichthyosaurs, they breathe air... 79 00:07:41,087 --> 00:07:44,921 ... and break the surface every now and then to do so. 80 00:07:54,727 --> 00:07:59,960 After the ichthyosaurs died out, the seas, for a time, had no air-breathing hunters. 81 00:08:00,047 --> 00:08:03,084 But then a group of mammals began to colonise the sea, 82 00:08:03,407 --> 00:08:07,116 just as a group of reptiles had done 100 million years earlier, 83 00:08:06,887 --> 00:08:12,996 and similar ecological demands have produced similar evolutionary responses. 84 00:08:17,327 --> 00:08:20,603 Did ichthyosaurs, like dolphins, eat fish? 85 00:08:20,687 --> 00:08:24,805 Well, their teeth were sharp and easily capable of grabbing a wriggling fish, 86 00:08:25,647 --> 00:08:27,956 but they certainly ate other things as well. 87 00:08:28,047 --> 00:08:31,437 This one's belly contained a number of small, horny hooks, 88 00:08:31,407 --> 00:08:35,161 and those, we know, came from squid-like animals. 89 00:08:36,687 --> 00:08:38,518 But this is only one species. 90 00:08:38,567 --> 00:08:45,120 There are lots of different kinds of ichthyosaurs, and each may have had its own particular diet. 91 00:08:46,247 --> 00:08:52,243 This one was a giant, four or five times the length of the common ichthyosaur, 92 00:08:52,487 --> 00:08:54,557 and it was a cannibal, 93 00:08:54,887 --> 00:08:58,880 because here, between its ribs, where its stomach once lay, 94 00:08:59,087 --> 00:09:03,763 are the chewed-up remains of the backbones of smaller ichthyosaurs. 95 00:09:05,647 --> 00:09:12,280 And in addition to this monster, there was another kind which is still something of a mystery. 96 00:09:21,447 --> 00:09:23,756 Its jaws are extraordinary. 97 00:09:23,887 --> 00:09:27,766 This is the upper one. It's a long, thin spike. 98 00:09:27,927 --> 00:09:33,320 The lower one is only a quarter of the length, and it's fully armed with teeth. 99 00:09:33,207 --> 00:09:37,086 What could it have used them for? Well, there are two clues. 100 00:09:37,407 --> 00:09:42,401 The first are its paddles, which are huge and very broad. 101 00:09:42,687 --> 00:09:46,999 That suggests that they could only be moved very slowly. 102 00:09:47,167 --> 00:09:50,637 Secondly, its eyes are gigantic. 103 00:09:50,527 --> 00:09:54,805 They're the biggest of all known ichthyosaur eyes. 104 00:09:55,327 --> 00:10:00,117 Big eyes are characteristic of animals that live in low light levels. 105 00:10:00,127 --> 00:10:06,646 So maybe this, the rarest of the ichthyosaurs, lived in the darkness near the bottom of the sea 106 00:10:06,847 --> 00:10:11,967 and moved across the sea floor, propelling itself slowly with its huge paddles, 107 00:10:12,127 --> 00:10:15,597 stirring up the mud with its long upper jaw 108 00:10:15,487 --> 00:10:19,321 and snapping up what food it found with its lower. 109 00:10:24,767 --> 00:10:27,440 The marvellously preserved specimens of Holzmaden 110 00:10:27,647 --> 00:10:32,084 reveal a further detail in the lives of these ancient reptiles. 111 00:10:32,447 --> 00:10:36,440 Just emerging from the body of this female is a baby. 112 00:10:36,287 --> 00:10:38,642 Most reptiles lay eggs on land, 113 00:10:39,167 --> 00:10:45,037 but the ichthyosaurs had broken this last link with the land and produced live young. 114 00:10:45,447 --> 00:10:47,915 Ichthyosaur or dolphin? 115 00:10:47,847 --> 00:10:54,286 150 million years ago, there must have been events just like this in Holzmaden lagoon. 116 00:10:58,247 --> 00:11:01,557 While ichthyosaurs were swimming so efficiently through the water, 117 00:11:01,607 --> 00:11:05,395 other animals were moving around over the sand and mud of the sea floor. 118 00:11:05,527 --> 00:11:10,601 Some were even managing to crawl out of the sea and up onto the land. 119 00:11:12,727 --> 00:11:16,481 And here they left other evidence of their presence. 120 00:11:22,007 --> 00:11:24,760 A track can tell you a lot about an animal; 121 00:11:25,207 --> 00:11:31,237 how many legs it has, in what order it moved them, how heavy it was and much else. 122 00:11:34,927 --> 00:11:39,523 And tracks, too, can be preserved in sandstones. 123 00:11:40,287 --> 00:11:43,723 0n the shores of the Isle of Arran in western Scotland, 124 00:11:44,127 --> 00:11:47,722 there are two parallel stripes in the rock. 125 00:11:53,207 --> 00:11:58,042 At first they might appear to be some kind of stress mark or faulting in the stone, 126 00:11:58,487 --> 00:12:03,436 but look at them closely and you can see that they are tracks of some kind. 127 00:12:03,287 --> 00:12:08,441 What is more, you can see that they were made by an animal with a very large number of legs. 128 00:12:09,527 --> 00:12:12,803 There's an obvious candidate for what made them; 129 00:12:15,767 --> 00:12:17,758 a millipede. 130 00:12:22,487 --> 00:12:27,083 Its multitude of legs, moving up and down in a wave passing along the body, 131 00:12:27,287 --> 00:12:32,315 leave just such parallel stripes in the mud behind it. 132 00:12:46,007 --> 00:12:50,125 They match these tracks in Arran almost exactly. 133 00:12:50,327 --> 00:12:57,165 The biggest millipede alive today is about ten inches long, and we call that a giant millipede. 134 00:12:57,047 --> 00:13:00,403 But the animal that made these tracks, judging from their dimension, 135 00:13:00,887 --> 00:13:03,526 must have been about six feet long. 136 00:13:03,287 --> 00:13:06,040 That was a real giant. 137 00:13:22,447 --> 00:13:27,999 Marks in sand and mud, of course, can be made not only out of water but in it. 138 00:13:28,207 --> 00:13:30,926 And one of the commonest of those underwater marks 139 00:13:31,087 --> 00:13:35,524 are the ones that are made when sand is moved across the bottom of the sea 140 00:13:35,407 --> 00:13:38,877 as the tide moves in and out - ripple marks. 141 00:13:48,847 --> 00:13:55,082 These, too, are ripples in sand, but they are 500 million years old. 142 00:13:55,087 --> 00:13:57,396 They were formed at the bottom of a sea 143 00:13:57,487 --> 00:14:01,196 which at that time covered most of western Europe. 144 00:14:01,327 --> 00:14:07,721 Since then, continents have collided, and those sediments have been rucked up 145 00:14:08,047 --> 00:14:13,883 so that now they form these mountains in North Wales. 146 00:14:31,567 --> 00:14:37,278 It's not only inanimate mechanical forces that create patterns in the sand of the sea floor, 147 00:14:37,327 --> 00:14:39,363 animals do so as well. 148 00:14:39,727 --> 00:14:43,003 They burrow through the sediment, extracting nutriment from it, 149 00:14:43,087 --> 00:14:46,204 and they usually do so in a regular, systematic way, 150 00:14:46,447 --> 00:14:51,043 so that they don't miss patches of mud and don't process any of it twice, 151 00:14:51,247 --> 00:14:56,002 and this produces regular patterns of casts and burrows. 152 00:15:03,247 --> 00:15:05,397 But many of these patterns are complicated, 153 00:15:05,647 --> 00:15:09,720 and it's not always easy to see exactly how the animal could have made them. 154 00:15:09,967 --> 00:15:13,755 However, computers can help to solve this problem. 155 00:15:14,127 --> 00:15:17,085 This is not a pattern that has been generated by the computer. 156 00:15:17,007 --> 00:15:21,205 This is the tracing of an actual fossil, but it's rather puzzling. 157 00:15:21,327 --> 00:15:23,602 Look, for example, at down here. 158 00:15:24,007 --> 00:15:30,924 There's one ring there, but there is another ring on the inside. 159 00:15:31,287 --> 00:15:33,278 How could that have been formed? 160 00:15:33,207 --> 00:15:35,596 Well, by looking at the actual fossil itself, 161 00:15:36,087 --> 00:15:42,401 you can see which ring, which track has been placed on top of which other track. 162 00:15:42,327 --> 00:15:46,081 And by feeding that information carefully into the computer, 163 00:15:46,167 --> 00:15:50,797 you can then ask the computer to look at the pattern from a different point of view, 164 00:15:50,967 --> 00:15:53,765 and then what you see is this. 165 00:15:58,567 --> 00:16:04,119 The animal was working in three dimensions, it was burrowing down in the mud, 166 00:16:03,927 --> 00:16:08,717 and it was when the rock was compacted that it produced this ring 167 00:16:09,207 --> 00:16:13,120 superimposed upon one another and that particular shape. 168 00:16:14,487 --> 00:16:18,241 But although we know so much about this elegant burrow, 169 00:16:18,207 --> 00:16:23,406 we don't know what animal made it and may, in fact, never find out. 170 00:16:25,167 --> 00:16:27,476 These rocks in North Wales, 171 00:16:28,047 --> 00:16:32,518 close by those ancient, 500 million-year-old ripple marks, 172 00:16:32,367 --> 00:16:36,201 are also covered with trails of many kinds. 173 00:16:36,687 --> 00:16:39,326 One sort is like this. 174 00:16:39,087 --> 00:16:43,922 They are long tracks which often criss-cross one another. 175 00:16:44,367 --> 00:16:49,760 And this is another kind, a sort of large dimple. 176 00:16:49,647 --> 00:16:51,638 What could have made them? 177 00:16:52,047 --> 00:16:57,075 Well, we have direct evidence as to what made this kind. 178 00:16:57,327 --> 00:17:01,764 A fossil has been found that sits in it perfectly. 179 00:17:02,127 --> 00:17:07,679 A trilobite, the most abundant of all the animals in the seas of this period. 180 00:17:13,647 --> 00:17:16,559 The dimple is where it rested, 181 00:17:16,527 --> 00:17:21,043 the broad stripe the track it made as it trundled over the sea floor. 182 00:17:29,527 --> 00:17:35,045 Trilobites have left no direct descendants, but we nevertheless know a lot about them. 183 00:17:34,807 --> 00:17:36,843 Underneath their hard, jointed shells 184 00:17:37,207 --> 00:17:40,995 they had two rows of long, thin legs, as shrimps have. 185 00:17:41,367 --> 00:17:47,920 Most trilobites were only an inch or so long, but a few were giants, over a foot in length. 186 00:17:52,407 --> 00:17:55,524 Although their remains all accumulated on the bottom of the sea, 187 00:17:55,887 --> 00:17:58,196 they didn't necessarily all live there. 188 00:17:58,287 --> 00:18:00,278 Some may have grubbed about on the bottom, 189 00:18:00,687 --> 00:18:03,759 but others could have swum quite a long way above the sea floor. 190 00:18:04,527 --> 00:18:08,998 To find out which did what, casts are put in a tank of flowing water 191 00:18:09,287 --> 00:18:11,482 by Richard Fortey of the British Museum. 192 00:18:11,687 --> 00:18:14,247 What kind of animal is this one? 193 00:18:14,367 --> 00:18:20,840 This is a typical bottom-living trilobite, which we think was rather poorly streamlined. 194 00:18:21,087 --> 00:18:26,081 And we can show this quite graphically by turning on some dye. 195 00:18:28,767 --> 00:18:30,086 There it goes. 196 00:18:30,207 --> 00:18:34,200 And you can see that large wakes are created on the back of the animal, 197 00:18:34,527 --> 00:18:37,758 behind the eyes and behind the tail. 198 00:18:42,127 --> 00:18:48,077 And if we turn the dye off, you can see how these wakes linger on for a long time, 199 00:18:47,887 --> 00:18:50,560 behind the eyes and on the back of the animal. 200 00:18:50,767 --> 00:18:53,679 This is generally a bad design for active swimming, 201 00:18:54,127 --> 00:18:59,759 as we might expect of an animal that spent most of its time crawling along the sea floor. 202 00:19:04,687 --> 00:19:10,557 If we look at this one, by contrast, you can see how well streamlined the animal is. 203 00:19:11,887 --> 00:19:16,165 The dye proceeds over the back of the animal without the eddies we saw last time 204 00:19:16,207 --> 00:19:20,917 and the head of the animal, this end here, is prolonged into a kind of nose, 205 00:19:21,007 --> 00:19:24,556 and the eyes are recessed, it's almost like a dogfish head. 206 00:19:24,847 --> 00:19:29,398 So that is proof, do you think, that this animal was free-swimming? 207 00:19:29,647 --> 00:19:32,115 I don't think we can ever talk about proof, 208 00:19:32,527 --> 00:19:37,237 but as far as we can test by experiment and looking at the shape of the animal, 209 00:19:37,327 --> 00:19:42,321 this was a free-swimming trilobite in the seas of 500 million years ago. 210 00:19:47,407 --> 00:19:52,925 It's clear from such investigations that some trilobites, at any rate, were very active. 211 00:19:58,447 --> 00:20:02,599 Active animals need good sense organs in order to find their way about, 212 00:20:02,767 --> 00:20:05,122 and trilobites had amazing eyes, 213 00:20:05,247 --> 00:20:09,206 the first complex eyes ever to gaze out on this world. 214 00:20:09,087 --> 00:20:12,841 Each consisted of a mosaic of tiny, tightly-packed units, 215 00:20:12,927 --> 00:20:18,877 which produced separate spots of light or shade, and together formed a single picture. 216 00:20:19,167 --> 00:20:22,716 Crabs have very much the same sort of eye today. 217 00:20:25,647 --> 00:20:27,922 But some trilobites did even better. 218 00:20:28,047 --> 00:20:33,724 Each element in their eye had a little lens over it which focused the light into a separate image. 219 00:20:33,807 --> 00:20:37,004 This intricate structure was mounted on a kind of turret. 220 00:20:37,247 --> 00:20:40,398 A pair of these on the head gave this trilobite a view 221 00:20:40,607 --> 00:20:44,316 that extended from its tail right round to its nose. 222 00:20:44,447 --> 00:20:48,326 But why should it have needed such a detailed view of its surroundings? 223 00:20:48,287 --> 00:20:51,563 Well, there were hunters in those ancient seas. 224 00:20:51,647 --> 00:20:55,083 Ancestors of cuttlefish were around, stalking trilobites, 225 00:20:55,327 --> 00:20:59,525 just as cuttlefish today hunt crabs. 226 00:21:15,807 --> 00:21:19,846 Once the trilobites were alarmed, they had very good defences. 227 00:21:26,287 --> 00:21:29,518 You find them preserved in many different postures. 228 00:21:29,647 --> 00:21:31,877 From specimens like these, it's evident 229 00:21:32,047 --> 00:21:36,006 that those joints between the segments along the back were very flexible. 230 00:21:36,367 --> 00:21:42,602 When danger threatened, they were able to protect their vulnerable undersides by rolling up. 231 00:21:45,967 --> 00:21:49,642 They even had little knobs on their heads and sockets on their tails 232 00:21:49,807 --> 00:21:53,402 that enabled them to lock themselves into a ball. 233 00:21:59,487 --> 00:22:02,684 They evolved into many thousand different species 234 00:22:02,847 --> 00:22:08,683 and then, 250 million years ago, they died out and left no descendants. 235 00:22:08,607 --> 00:22:14,204 Yet from their remains we can still discover how they moved and protected themselves, 236 00:22:14,367 --> 00:22:20,283 what they ate, where they swam, even what they saw of that long-lost world. 237 00:22:24,167 --> 00:22:27,682 The skies above the ancient seas were not empty either. 238 00:22:28,007 --> 00:22:30,362 Today it's birds that fly over the ocean, 239 00:22:30,407 --> 00:22:33,843 scouring the surface for food of one kind or another. 240 00:22:34,247 --> 00:22:37,239 But birds are relatively recent arrivals. 241 00:22:37,127 --> 00:22:43,316 Millions of years before they appeared, the air had been invaded by flying reptiles. 242 00:22:45,687 --> 00:22:49,566 The first to be discovered was named "wing-finger", pterodactyl, 243 00:22:49,527 --> 00:22:53,600 for its wing was supported by its greatly elongated fourth finger. 244 00:22:53,847 --> 00:22:56,077 Now so many different kinds have been found 245 00:22:56,247 --> 00:23:00,445 that the group as a whole is called "winged reptiles" - pterosaurs. 246 00:23:00,567 --> 00:23:02,558 Their slim jaws are lined with teeth 247 00:23:02,967 --> 00:23:08,246 and they had a skinny membrane that stretched from that long finger to the side of their body. 248 00:23:08,327 --> 00:23:12,718 This wing was powered by muscles attached to the breastbone. 249 00:23:12,647 --> 00:23:17,004 The fact that this is of a reasonable size and had a small keel down the middle 250 00:23:17,447 --> 00:23:22,282 shows that the pterosaurs were able to flap and not just glide. 251 00:23:23,447 --> 00:23:26,837 But we have more than just bones of pterosaurs. 252 00:23:26,807 --> 00:23:31,164 This is a very remarkable skull of one that was found in the north of England. 253 00:23:31,487 --> 00:23:35,116 The front part of the snout is missing, and so is the lower jaw, 254 00:23:35,327 --> 00:23:39,525 but here is the huge orbit where the eye once was. 255 00:23:39,647 --> 00:23:45,597 And at the back, the top of the skull is missing and you can see inside. 256 00:23:45,527 --> 00:23:49,202 At some stage during fossilisation, sediment seeped in, 257 00:23:49,607 --> 00:23:53,680 and it's left a cast of the pterosaur's brain. 258 00:23:57,727 --> 00:24:01,402 Brains can tell us a great deal about an animal's behaviour. 259 00:24:01,567 --> 00:24:04,684 And this is not the only pterosaur brain we have. 260 00:24:04,447 --> 00:24:10,079 One, separated from the skull and marvellously preserved, was found in Israel. 261 00:24:10,687 --> 00:24:13,679 The lobes at the back of all brains coordinate the muscles, 262 00:24:13,567 --> 00:24:16,604 and those at the front link the muscles with the senses. 263 00:24:16,927 --> 00:24:22,001 All these lobes are much bigger than in a similar-sized land-living reptile, 264 00:24:22,207 --> 00:24:25,517 which confirms that this animal had the speedy reactions necessary 265 00:24:25,567 --> 00:24:28,001 for manoeuvrability in the air. 266 00:24:30,367 --> 00:24:34,360 The lobes at the side of the brain control vision and are also large, 267 00:24:34,207 --> 00:24:38,564 so the pterosaurs had excellent sight and probably flew during the day. 268 00:24:43,007 --> 00:24:45,202 With their skinny wings and short feet, 269 00:24:45,207 --> 00:24:48,199 the pterosaurs may have looked more like bats than birds. 270 00:24:48,647 --> 00:24:51,844 There's another way in which they may have resembled them. 271 00:24:52,087 --> 00:24:54,840 Flying like this demands a lot of energy. 272 00:24:55,007 --> 00:24:58,795 Bats can produce it because they have warm bodies insulated with fur. 273 00:24:58,727 --> 00:25:02,879 What about pterosaurs? Could reptiles have warm blood? 274 00:25:03,047 --> 00:25:06,881 And if they did, how did they keep it warm? 275 00:25:09,007 --> 00:25:13,558 These remarkable pterosaur fossils from Kazakhstan in the Soviet Union 276 00:25:13,807 --> 00:25:16,002 provide an answer to that question. 277 00:25:16,207 --> 00:25:20,519 Around the body of this one is the unmistakable imprint of fur, 278 00:25:20,527 --> 00:25:24,884 and what is fur for if it's not to keep a body warm? 279 00:25:33,727 --> 00:25:37,686 The pterosaurs first appeared 245 million years ago, 280 00:25:37,607 --> 00:25:41,998 and they populated the skies for the next 170 million years. 281 00:25:42,207 --> 00:25:45,802 The earliest ones were about the size of sparrows and had bony tails, 282 00:25:46,447 --> 00:25:49,962 but, as time passed, they got bigger and bigger. 283 00:25:56,407 --> 00:26:00,400 Judging from their teeth, they had a wide variety of diets. 284 00:26:00,727 --> 00:26:06,120 Some of the smaller ones, with well-spaced, simple teeth like this, may have fed on insects, 285 00:26:07,367 --> 00:26:11,565 but this one, from the rocks of Bavaria, is very different. 286 00:26:11,687 --> 00:26:15,885 Its teeth are so long and thin that they're little more than bristles. 287 00:26:16,367 --> 00:26:20,997 Did it use them to filter food from the water, as a flamingo does? 288 00:26:23,927 --> 00:26:27,556 Nearly a hundred different kinds have been found already, 289 00:26:27,767 --> 00:26:31,999 and there are undoubtedly a great number still to be discovered. 290 00:26:32,167 --> 00:26:36,160 One of the most productive areas in recent years has been Brazil. 291 00:26:36,487 --> 00:26:40,366 Some extremely bizarre forms have come from there, 292 00:26:40,327 --> 00:26:42,318 like this one. 293 00:26:43,687 --> 00:26:47,760 It's very big, the skull alone is over two feet long, 294 00:26:48,007 --> 00:26:53,365 and at the end of its upper jaw there is this extraordinary flange. 295 00:26:55,727 --> 00:27:00,562 Peter Wellnhofer, a pterosaur expert working in Munich University, 296 00:27:01,007 --> 00:27:03,680 has been investigating these new finds, 297 00:27:03,647 --> 00:27:08,641 trying to work out what possible purpose such extraordinary features could have. 298 00:27:09,007 --> 00:27:14,639 It cannot be an aerodynamic stabiliser. 299 00:27:14,767 --> 00:27:20,364 It probably would not make much sense on the very end of the snout. 300 00:27:20,527 --> 00:27:24,918 So no use in flying. They can't use it to steer with or anything. 301 00:27:24,847 --> 00:27:31,082 But probably it had a function when it was diving and skimming in the water, 302 00:27:31,567 --> 00:27:38,484 and during that time it was necessary to stabilise this long and narrow skull in the water. 303 00:27:38,607 --> 00:27:42,964 As you can see here in this restoration, 304 00:27:42,927 --> 00:27:47,398 the skull must bend back when it dives down, 305 00:27:47,727 --> 00:27:54,326 but it still flies and it's moving through the water and it has to come up again. 306 00:27:57,527 --> 00:28:02,123 Frigate birds pick up food from the water with just this sort of action. 307 00:28:02,327 --> 00:28:06,684 The pterosaur's membranous wings probably gave it less control than feathered wings, 308 00:28:06,927 --> 00:28:10,840 so maybe a flange on the beak was essential for the pterosaur 309 00:28:11,007 --> 00:28:13,601 if it was going to do this trick. 310 00:28:16,367 --> 00:28:21,202 I asked Peter Wellnhofer how he reconstructed the appearance of these pterosaurs. 311 00:28:21,367 --> 00:28:25,679 This requires some degree of imagination, of course. 312 00:28:25,807 --> 00:28:32,121 0n the other hand, we know that pterosaurs, for example, had hairs. 313 00:28:32,047 --> 00:28:38,919 And so we put hair on the skull in the restorations, as you can see here. 314 00:28:39,447 --> 00:28:46,080 And so you get a fairly good picture of what the animal looked like in life. 315 00:28:47,607 --> 00:28:52,237 And what an extraordinary portrait gallery he has produced. 316 00:28:59,127 --> 00:29:04,201 This is one of the filter feeders, with bristles on its lower jaw only. 317 00:29:06,207 --> 00:29:10,758 This one, pteranodon, like many of the later kinds, had no tail, 318 00:29:11,007 --> 00:29:13,601 but its wings were 18 feet across. 319 00:29:13,887 --> 00:29:18,358 Its wing muscles, judging from its breastbone, were not particularly powerful, 320 00:29:18,687 --> 00:29:21,963 so that it's likely that it was primarily a glider. 321 00:29:21,727 --> 00:29:25,879 But you can get a long way gliding over the sea. 322 00:29:32,767 --> 00:29:34,439 Pelicans show what can be done 323 00:29:34,687 --> 00:29:39,807 if you are able to exploit the updraughts created by the rolling waves. 324 00:29:58,367 --> 00:30:03,157 And pteranodon was probably just as expert. 325 00:30:15,127 --> 00:30:19,439 But perhaps the most extraordinary, indeed almost unbelievable pterosaur 326 00:30:19,447 --> 00:30:22,678 was found here in the badlands of southern Texas. 327 00:30:22,807 --> 00:30:27,164 In 1971, a group of students working with Professor Wann Langston 328 00:30:27,607 --> 00:30:30,041 were down here looking for dinosaur bones 329 00:30:30,007 --> 00:30:34,080 when one of them, Douglas Lawson, found something very strange. 330 00:30:35,287 --> 00:30:41,123 Late one hot July afternoon, after he had spent an almost fruitless day, 331 00:30:41,447 --> 00:30:44,484 he was walking up this dry arroyo 332 00:30:44,327 --> 00:30:51,324 and began to see postage stamp-sized fragments of petrified bone down in the sand. 333 00:30:52,007 --> 00:30:55,317 And as he followed on up the valley, 334 00:30:55,367 --> 00:30:59,201 the fragments became more numerous and larger, 335 00:30:59,487 --> 00:31:06,484 and eventually he arrived over here at this bank 336 00:31:06,687 --> 00:31:12,364 and there he found a few pieces of bone projecting from the rock, still in place, 337 00:31:12,447 --> 00:31:18,556 and other, larger pieces that had weathered out were lying around on the surface. 338 00:31:19,847 --> 00:31:25,956 This is a replica of the upper arm-bone in the wing. 339 00:31:26,087 --> 00:31:31,764 As it turned out, this was the only piece that was nearly complete and still embedded in the rock, 340 00:31:31,847 --> 00:31:34,725 but it gives an idea of the size of the wing 341 00:31:35,207 --> 00:31:38,119 and taken together with all the fragments that were picked up, 342 00:31:38,087 --> 00:31:41,397 we've been able to piece together a reconstruction of the entire wing. 343 00:31:41,447 --> 00:31:43,836 I just happen to have a diagram here 344 00:31:44,327 --> 00:31:48,400 that will give us some idea 345 00:31:48,567 --> 00:31:52,685 about the size of this object. 346 00:32:05,367 --> 00:32:09,679 So this is the reconstruction of the entire wing. 347 00:32:09,687 --> 00:32:14,841 The dark areas represent the pieces that we actually have found as fossils. 348 00:32:14,967 --> 00:32:20,087 And from the shoulder joint out to this tip is a length of about 18 feet. 349 00:32:20,247 --> 00:32:22,238 And remember this is only one wing, 350 00:32:22,647 --> 00:32:27,437 so you double the 18 feet and add a couple of feet for the body in between 351 00:32:27,447 --> 00:32:32,077 and you come up with an animal that had a wingspan of maybe 35 to 40 feet, 352 00:32:32,447 --> 00:32:36,884 which is larger than some small private aircraft. 353 00:32:42,007 --> 00:32:44,726 How could such a huge creature have flown? 354 00:32:45,127 --> 00:32:48,324 Wann Langston studied the bones of a smaller individual of the same species in his laboratory 355 00:32:49,927 --> 00:32:51,724 to try and find out, 356 00:32:51,847 --> 00:32:56,045 suspending them in position to see just how they could move and how they couldn't. 357 00:32:56,647 --> 00:32:59,320 We can take the humerus 358 00:32:59,047 --> 00:33:05,441 and because of the configuration of the head, fitting into the shoulder socket, 359 00:33:05,767 --> 00:33:10,158 we can move the humerus up to its maximum possible elevation. 360 00:33:10,567 --> 00:33:15,357 We can also depress it to the limit 361 00:33:15,367 --> 00:33:21,237 and we can move it backward and forward in this plane, which also was possible for the animal. 362 00:33:21,607 --> 00:33:28,001 And every move that we make with the humerus has an effect, of course, on the rest of the wing. 363 00:33:29,007 --> 00:33:32,966 With all this detailed information about the mechanics of the wing available, 364 00:33:33,327 --> 00:33:37,764 the Smithsonian Institution in the United States decided to commission a model of one 365 00:33:37,927 --> 00:33:41,124 that would actually flap its wings and fly. 366 00:33:41,367 --> 00:33:45,440 The cost of making one with a 40-foot wingspan would have been astronomic, 367 00:33:45,687 --> 00:33:50,807 so they decided to make a half-grown one, but even that is immense. 368 00:33:50,847 --> 00:33:55,716 It was built from carbon-fibre materials which are very light and extremely strong. 369 00:33:55,687 --> 00:33:58,440 It was coated with foam and then covered with latex, 370 00:33:58,567 --> 00:34:03,118 which is very flexible and allows the wing to make all the necessary movements. 371 00:34:05,647 --> 00:34:10,846 The man who took on this job is aeronautical engineer and inventor Paul Macready. 372 00:34:10,927 --> 00:34:15,398 What was your reaction when you first saw the fossils 373 00:34:15,247 --> 00:34:19,081 and the reconstructions made by palaeontologists of a thing like this? 374 00:34:19,567 --> 00:34:23,640 Did it seem that it could possibly fly, to you as an aeronautical engineer? 375 00:34:23,887 --> 00:34:28,039 Well, we knew it did fly, but it didn't seem possible 376 00:34:28,207 --> 00:34:32,200 because it was reputed to have a wingspan of 35 to 50 feet 377 00:34:32,047 --> 00:34:34,607 and that's so beyond anything that exists now 378 00:34:34,927 --> 00:34:38,681 that it almost seemed impossible, but you knew nature had done it. 379 00:34:38,767 --> 00:34:44,763 So you, when you had to try and make something of the same shape that flew, 380 00:34:45,007 --> 00:34:47,316 what were your immediate problems? 381 00:34:47,407 --> 00:34:49,875 First you had to figure out what the shape was. 382 00:34:50,287 --> 00:34:53,359 You pleaded with the palaeontologists, "Tell us what it looked like." 383 00:34:53,447 --> 00:34:58,521 The main thing was a big head stuck way out in front of a long neck 384 00:34:58,727 --> 00:35:00,797 and no tail to provide stability. 385 00:35:00,647 --> 00:35:02,239 Trying to have this fly 386 00:35:02,567 --> 00:35:06,958 is like trying to shoot an arrow with the feathered end in front. It's very unstable. 387 00:35:07,007 --> 00:35:12,320 The earliest pterosaurs, little ones, had tails in the rear and they were stable, 388 00:35:12,767 --> 00:35:16,077 but it's kinda like riding a bicycle with training wheels. 389 00:35:16,127 --> 00:35:19,403 When it's small and you're early in your training, you need that. 390 00:35:19,487 --> 00:35:22,797 When nature got to these, it didn't need training wheels any more. 391 00:35:23,127 --> 00:35:24,845 Everybody ready? 392 00:35:27,887 --> 00:35:33,405 The first experiments were with small models, fitted with tails to give them some stability 393 00:35:33,887 --> 00:35:38,199 while the designers wrestled with the basic aerodynamic problems. 394 00:35:38,447 --> 00:35:41,484 Radio controls enabled them to move the head and wings. 395 00:35:54,047 --> 00:35:58,677 With each flight, and each crash, a new lesson was learnt. 396 00:36:04,007 --> 00:36:07,363 The damage caused by these crash-landings was often severe, 397 00:36:07,447 --> 00:36:11,156 but slowly the engineers were able to improve their design. 398 00:36:11,367 --> 00:36:15,076 Even with the aid of computers and advanced aeronautical skills, 399 00:36:15,167 --> 00:36:20,480 this particular problem was so tricky that much of the progress was by trial and error. 400 00:36:22,167 --> 00:36:24,761 After months of work, a half-sized, 401 00:36:25,087 --> 00:36:28,762 tailless, wing-flapping pterosaur was ready to take to the air. 402 00:36:28,927 --> 00:36:32,442 Power on. Motion check. 403 00:36:33,007 --> 00:36:34,838 Left, right. 404 00:36:38,287 --> 00:36:40,596 Forward, aft. 405 00:36:40,727 --> 00:36:44,083 Take up the slack. 406 00:36:44,087 --> 00:36:46,123 Clear. Go. 407 00:37:01,247 --> 00:37:07,595 Once airborne, the tail and the undercarriage needed for take-off are shed. 408 00:37:08,687 --> 00:37:10,996 Although major movements are controlled by radio, 409 00:37:11,167 --> 00:37:14,637 the model controls itself to a considerable degree. 410 00:37:14,527 --> 00:37:17,678 Sensors in the wings react to the varying wind currents 411 00:37:17,887 --> 00:37:21,596 and automatically feed signals to a small computer, a brain, 412 00:37:21,767 --> 00:37:26,238 which then activates tiny motors to adjust the posture of the head and wings, 413 00:37:26,607 --> 00:37:30,600 so preventing stalls and sideslips. 414 00:37:36,127 --> 00:37:40,757 The last time such a shape flapped its way across the skies of North America, 415 00:37:41,287 --> 00:37:44,438 the animals watching it were dinosaurs. 416 00:37:44,647 --> 00:37:51,120 You could hardly go farther than this in bringing long-dead bones back to life.