Episode 1: Finding fossils in Madagascar
Episode 2: Birds are Dinosaurs!
Episode 3: What is a Reptile?
Episode 4: Giant Dinosaur Mysteries
Quick Bite: Ocepechelon the Whale Turtle
Episode 5: Throwing in Human Evolution
Episode 6: Tiny Horses, Galloping Crocs, and Fossilized Jungles!
Quick Bite: New Mammals from the Age of Dinosaurs!
Episode 7: Walking through Whale Evolution
Episode 8: Crocodiles are the Chomping Champions
Episode 9: New Relatives of Tyrannosaurus rex!
Quick Bite: The Giant Before the Tyrant!
Episode 10: The Hobbit – An Unexpected Discovery
Quick Bite: The Alien Turtle and Ancient Color
Quick Bite: From Terror Bird to Gentle Giant
Episode 11: Trilobites and the Cincinnati Sea
Quick Bite: Weird Whales and Swimming Sloths
Episode 12: Growing up Dinosaur
Episode 13: Following in the Footsteps of Dinosaurs
Episode 14: The Art of Dinosaurs
Conjuring up extinct environments, museums, books, and documentaries rely on art to show extinct animals revitalized in their ancient surroundings. This type of educational reconstruction is called Paleoart (or Palaeoart for the UK inclined). They are usually striking portraits of the weird place this planet used to be. But, you look at an image of a roamingTyrannosaurus rex without wondering, “How much of that is real?” How do we know its bulk, its color, its environment, or its behavior? Where does the science start and the art (and hypothesizing) begin? Julius Csotonyi, a Candian paleoartist, sat down with us to discuss how he assembles his images which are on display in natural history museums across North America and fill his recently published book, The Paleoart of Julius Csotonyi. A single landscape by Julius is a blend of the latest knowledge from paleontologists, zoologists, paleobotanists, geologists, and geochemists, and as new information is learned, he is ready to update his paintings and present the world with a more accurate glimpse into the ancient past.