Hunting for dinosaurs showed me our place in the universe Kenneth Lacovara

How do you find a dinosaur?

Sounds impossible, doesn’t it?

It’s not.

And the answer relies on a formula
that all paleontologists use.

And I’m going to tell you the secret.

First, find rocks of the right age.

Second, those rocks
must be sedimentary rocks.

And third, layers of those rocks
must be naturally exposed.

That’s it.

Find those three things
and get yourself on the ground,

chances are good
that you will find fossils.

Now let me break down this formula.

Organisms exist only during certain
geological intervals.

So you have to find
rocks of the right age,

depending on what your interests are.

If you want to find trilobites,

you have to find the really,
really old rocks of the Paleozoic –

rocks between a half a billion
and a quarter-billion years old.

Now, if you want to find dinosaurs,

don’t look in the Paleozoic,
you won’t find them.

They hadn’t evolved yet.

You have to find the younger
rocks of the Mesozoic,

and in the case of dinosaurs,

between 235 and 66 million years ago.

Now, it’s fairly easy to find rocks
of the right age at this point,

because the Earth is, to a coarse degree,

geologically mapped.

This is hard-won information.

The annals of Earth history
are written in rocks,

one chapter upon the next,

such that the oldest pages are on bottom

and the youngest on top.

Now, were it quite that easy,
geologists would rejoice.

It’s not.

The library of Earth is an old one.

It has no librarian to impose order.

Operating over vast swaths of time,

myriad geological processes
offer every possible insult

to the rocks of ages.

Most pages are destroyed
soon after being written.

Some pages are overwritten,

creating difficult-to-decipher palimpsests
of long-gone landscapes.

Pages that do find sanctuary
under the advancing sands of time

are never truly safe.

Unlike the Moon –
our dead, rocky companion –

the Earth is alive, pulsing
with creative and destructive forces

that power its geological metabolism.

Lunar rocks brought back
by the Apollo astronauts

all date back to about the age
of the Solar System.

Moon rocks are forever.

Earth rocks, on the other hand,
face the perils of a living lithosphere.

All will suffer ruination,

through some combination
of mutilation, compression,

folding, tearing, scorching and baking.

Thus, the volumes of Earth history
are incomplete and disheveled.

The library is vast and magnificent –

but decrepit.

And it was this tattered complexity
in the rock record

that obscured its meaning
until relatively recently.

Nature provided no card catalog
for geologists –

this would have to be invented.

Five thousand years after the Sumerians
learned to record their thoughts

on clay tablets,

the Earth’s volumes remained
inscrutable to humans.

We were geologically illiterate,

unaware of the antiquity
of our own planet

and ignorant of our connection

to deep time.

It wasn’t until the turn
of the 19th century

that our blinders were removed,

first, with the publication
of James Hutton’s “Theory of the Earth,”

in which he told us that the Earth
reveals no vestige of a beginning

and no prospect of an end;

and then, with the printing
of William Smith’s map of Britain,

the first country-scale geological map,

giving us for the first time

predictive insight into where
certain types of rocks might occur.

After that, you could say things like,

“If we go over there,
we should be in the Jurassic,”

or, “If we go up over that hill,
we should find the Cretaceous.”

So now, if you want to find trilobites,

get yourself a good geological map

and go to the rocks of the Paleozoic.

If you want to find dinosaurs like I do,

find the rocks of Mesozoic and go there.

Now of course, you can only make
a fossil in a sedimentary rock,

a rock made by sand and mud.

You can’t have a fossil

in an igneous rock formed
by magma, like a granite,

or in a metamorphic rock
that’s been heated and squeezed.

And you have to get yourself in a desert.

It’s not that dinosaurs
particularly lived in deserts;

they lived on every land mass

and in every imaginable environment.

It’s that you need to go to a place
that’s a desert today,

a place that doesn’t have
too many plants covering up the rocks,

and a place where erosion is always
exposing new bones at the surface.

So find those three things:

rocks of the right age,

that are sedimentary rocks, in a desert,

and get yourself on the ground,

and you literally walk

until you see a bone
sticking out of the rock.

Here’s a picture that I took
in Southern Patagonia.

Every pebble that you see
on the ground there

is a piece of dinosaur bone.

So when you’re in that right situation,

it’s not a question of whether
you’ll find fossils or not;

you’re going to find fossils.

The question is: Will you find something
that is scientifically significant?

And to help with that, I’m going to add
a fourth part to our formula,

which is this:

get as far away from other
paleontologists as possible.

(Laughter)

It’s not that I don’t like
other paleontologists.

When you go to a place
that’s relatively unexplored,

you have a much better chance
of not only finding fossils

but of finding something
that’s new to science.

So that’s my formula
for finding dinosaurs,

and I’ve applied it all around the world.

In the austral summer of 2004,

I went to the bottom of South America,

to the bottom of Patagonia, Argentina,

to prospect for dinosaurs:

a place that had terrestrial
sedimentary rocks of the right age,

in a desert,

a place that had been barely visited
by paleontologists.

And we found this.

This is a femur, a thigh bone,

of a giant, plant-eating dinosaur.

That bone is 2.2 meters across.

That’s over seven feet long.

Now, unfortunately,
that bone was isolated.

We dug and dug and dug,
and there wasn’t another bone around.

But it made us hungry to go back
the next year for more.

And on the first day
of that next field season,

I found this: another two-meter femur,

only this time not isolated,

this time associated with 145 other bones

of a giant plant eater.

And after three more hard,
really brutal field seasons,

the quarry came to look like this.

And there you see the tail
of that great beast wrapping around me.

The giant that lay in this grave,
the new species of dinosaur,

we would eventually call
“Dreadnoughtus schrani.”

Dreadnoughtus was 85 feet
from snout to tail.

It stood two-and-a-half stories
at the shoulder,

and all fleshed out in life,
it weighed 65 tons.

People ask me sometimes,
“Was Dreadnoughtus bigger than a T. rex?”

That’s the mass of eight or nine T. rex.

Now, one of the really cool things
about being a paleontologist

is when you find a new species,
you get to name it.

And I’ve always thought it a shame
that these giant, plant-eating dinosaurs

are too often portrayed as passive,
lumbering platters of meat

on the landscape.

(Laughter)

They’re not.

Big herbivores can be surly,
and they can be territorial –

you do not want to mess with a hippo
or a rhino or a water buffalo.

The bison in Yellowstone injure
far more people than do the grizzly bears.

So can you imagine a big bull,
65-ton Dreadnoughtus

in the breeding season,

defending a territory?

That animal would have been
incredibly dangerous,

a menace to all around, and itself
would have had nothing to fear.

And thus the name, “Dreadnoughtus,”

or, “fears nothing.”

Now, to grow so large,

an animal like Dreadnoughtus
would’ve had to have been

a model of efficiency.

That long neck and long tail help it
radiate heat into the environment,

passively controlling its temperature.

And that long neck also serves
as a super-efficient feeding mechanism.

Dreadnoughtus could stand
in one place and with that neck

clear out a huge envelope of vegetation,

taking in tens of thousands of calories
while expending very few.

And these animals evolved
a bulldog-like wide-gait stance,

giving them immense stability,

because when you’re 65 tons,
when you’re literally as big as a house,

the penalty for falling over

is death.

Yeah, these animals are big and tough,

but they won’t take a blow like that.

Dreadnoughtus falls over,
ribs break and pierce lungs.

Organs burst.

If you’re a big 65-ton Dreadnoughtus,

you don’t get to fall down
in life – even once.

Now, after this particular
Dreadnoughtus carcass was buried

and de-fleshed by a multitude
of bacteria, worms and insects,

its bones underwent a brief metamorphosis,

exchanging molecules with the groundwater

and becoming more and more
like the entombing rock.

As layer upon layer
of sediment accumulated,

pressure from all sides
weighed in like a stony glove

whose firm and enduring grip held
each bone in a stabilizing embrace.

And then came the long …

nothing.

Epoch after epoch of sameness,

nonevents without number.

All the while, the skeleton lay
everlasting and unchanging

in perfect equilibrium

within its rocky grave.

Meanwhile, Earth history unfolded above.

The dinosaurs would reign
for another 12 million years

before their hegemony was snuffed out
in a fiery apocalypse.

The continents drifted. The mammals rose.

The Ice Age came.

And then, in East Africa,

an unpromising species of ape
evolved the odd trick of sentient thought.

These brainy primates were not
particularly fast or strong.

But they excelled at covering ground,

and in a remarkable diaspora

surpassing even the dinosaurs' record
of territorial conquest,

they dispersed across the planet,

ravishing every ecosystem
they encountered,

along the way, inventing culture
and metalworking and painting

and dance and music

and science

and rocket ships that would eventually
take 12 particularly excellent apes

to the surface of the Moon.

With seven billion peripatetic
Homo sapiens on the planet,

it was perhaps inevitable

that one of them would eventually
trod on the grave of the magnificent titan

buried beneath the badlands
of Southern Patagonia.

I was that ape.

And standing there, alone in the desert,

it was not lost on me

that the chance of any one individual
entering the fossil record

is vanishingly small.

But the Earth is very, very old.

And over vast tracts of time,
the improbable becomes the probable.

That’s the magic of the geological record.

Thus, multitudinous creatures
living and dying on an old planet

leave behind immense numbers of fossils,

each one a small miracle,

but collectively, inevitable.

Sixty-six million years ago,
an asteroid hits the Earth

and wipes out the dinosaurs.

This easily might not have been.

But we only get one history,
and it’s the one that we have.

But this particular reality
was not inevitable.

The tiniest perturbation
of that asteroid far from Earth

would have caused it to miss
our planet by a wide margin.

The pivotal, calamitous day during which
the dinosaurs were wiped out,

setting the stage
for the modern world as we know it

didn’t have to be.

It could’ve just been another day –

a Thursday, perhaps –

among the 63 billion days
already enjoyed by the dinosaurs.

But over geological time,

improbable, nearly impossible events

do occur.

Along the path from our wormy,
Cambrian ancestors

to primates dressed in suits,

innumerable forks in the road
led us to this very particular reality.

The bones of Dreadnoughtus
lay underground for 77 million years.

Who could have imagined

that a single species of shrew-like mammal

living in the cracks of the dinosaur world

would evolve into sentient beings

capable of characterizing
and understanding

the very dinosaurs they must have dreaded?

I once stood at the head
of the Missouri River

and bestraddled it.

There, it’s nothing more
than a gurgle of water

that issues forth from beneath a rock
in a boulder in a pasture,

high in the Bitterroot Mountains.

The stream next to it
runs a few hundred yards

and ends in a small pond.

Those two streams – they look identical.

But one is an anonymous trickle of water,

and the other is the Missouri River.

Now go down to the mouth
of the Missouri, near St. Louis,

and it’s pretty obvious
that that river is a big deal.

But go up into the Bitterroots
and look at the Missouri,

and human prospection does not
allow us to see it as anything special.

Now go back to the Cretaceous Period

and look at our tiny, fuzzball ancestors.

You would never guess

that they would amount
to anything special,

and they probably wouldn’t have,

were it not for that pesky asteroid.

Now, make a thousand more worlds
and a thousand more solar systems

and let them run.

You will never get the same result.

No doubt, those worlds would be
both amazing and amazingly improbable,

but they would not be our world
and they would not have our history.

There are an infinite number of histories
that we could’ve had.

We only get one, and wow,
did we ever get a good one.

Dinosaurs like Dreadnoughtus were real.

Sea monsters like the mosasaur were real.

Dragonflies with the wingspan of an eagle
and pill bugs the length of a car

really existed.

Why study the ancient past?

Because it gives us perspective

and humility.

The dinosaurs died in the world’s
fifth mass extinction,

snuffed out in a cosmic accident
through no fault of their own.

They didn’t see it coming,
and they didn’t have a choice.

We, on the other hand, do have a choice.

And the nature of the fossil record
tells us that our place on this planet

is both precarious
and potentially fleeting.

Right now, our species is propagating
an environmental disaster

of geological proportions
that is so broad and so severe,

it can rightly be called
the sixth extinction.

Only unlike the dinosaurs,

we can see it coming.

And unlike the dinosaurs,

we can do something about it.

That choice is ours.

Thank you.

(Applause)

你怎么找到恐龙?

听起来不可能,不是吗?

不是。

答案取决于
所有古生物学家都使用的公式。

我要告诉你这个秘密。

首先,找到合适年龄的岩石。

其次,这些岩石
必须是沉积岩。

第三,这些岩石的层层
必须自然暴露。

而已。

找到这三样东西
,然后脚踏实地,你

很有
可能会找到化石。

现在让我分解这个公式。

有机体只存在于某些
地质时期。

因此,您必须根据自己的兴趣找到
合适年龄的

岩石。

如果你想找到三叶虫,

你必须找到
古生代非常非常古老的岩石——

年龄在 50 亿
到 25 亿年之间的岩石。

现在,如果你想找到恐龙,

不要看古生代,
你不会找到它们的。

他们还没有进化。

你必须找到中生代较年轻的
岩石

,就恐龙而言,是

在 235 到 6600 万年前。

现在,
在这一点上找到合适年龄的岩石相当容易,

因为在粗略的程度上,地球是经过

地质测绘的。

这是来之不易的信息。

地球历史的编年史
是写在岩石上的,

一章接一章

,所以最古老的页面在底部

,最年轻的页面在顶部。

现在,如果真的那么容易,
地质学家会很高兴的。

不是。

地球图书馆是一个古老的图书馆。

它没有图书馆员来强加秩序。

在漫长的时间里运行,

无数的地质过程对年龄的岩石
提供了一切可能的

侮辱。

大多数页面
在写入后很快就被销毁。

一些页面被覆盖,

创造了难以破译
的久远风景的重写本。

在前进的时间之沙下找到避难所的页面

永远不会真正安全。

与月球——
我们死去的岩石伙伴——不同

的是,地球是活着的,它
以创造性和破坏性的

力量在脉动,为其地质新陈代谢提供动力。

阿波罗宇航员带回的月球岩石

都可以追溯到
太阳系时代。

月球岩石是永恒的。

另一方面,地球岩石
面临着活的岩石圈的危险。

所有人都将遭受破坏,

通过某种方式
的破坏,压缩,

折叠,撕裂,烧焦和烘烤。

因此,地球历史的卷册
是不完整和凌乱的。

图书馆又大又壮丽——

但破旧不堪。

直到最近,摇滚唱片中这种破烂的复杂性

才模糊了它的含义

大自然没有为地质学家提供卡片目录
——

这必须被发明出来。

在苏美尔人
学会在泥板上记录他们的思想五千年后

,地球的体积
对人类来说仍然是难以理解的。

我们在地质上是文盲,

不知道
我们自己星球的古老

,也不知道我们

与深层时间的联系。

直到
19 世纪之交

,我们的眼罩才被移除,

首先,随着
詹姆斯·赫顿 (James Hutton) 的《地球理论》(Theory of the Earth) 的

出版,他告诉我们
地球没有任何开端的痕迹,

也没有未来的前景。 结束;

然后,
随着威廉·史密斯的英国地图的印刷

,第一张国家尺度的地质图,

让我们第一次


某些类型的岩石可能出现的位置进行预测性洞察。

在那之后,你可以说,

“如果我们去那里,
我们应该在侏罗纪,”

或者,“如果我们越过那座山,
我们应该找到白垩纪。”

所以现在,如果你想找到三叶虫,

就给自己找一张好的地质图,

然后去古生代的岩石上。

如果你想像我一样寻找恐龙,

找到中生代的岩石然后去那里。

当然,现在你只能
在沉积岩中制造化石,

一种由沙子和泥土组成的岩石。

你不可能

在由岩浆形成的火成岩中找到化石
,比如花岗岩,

或者在
被加热和挤压的变质岩中。

你必须让自己置身沙漠。

并不是说恐龙
特别生活在沙漠中。

他们生活在每一个土地上

和每一个可以想象的环境中。

就是你今天需要去
一个沙漠

的地方,一个没有
太多植物覆盖岩石

的地方,一个侵蚀总是
在地表露出新骨头的地方。

所以找到这三样东西:

合适年龄的岩石,

也就是沉积岩,在沙漠中,

然后把自己放在地上,

然后你真的走路,

直到你看到一块骨头
从岩石中伸出来。

这是我在南巴塔哥尼亚拍的一张照片

你在地上看到的每

一块鹅卵石都有一块恐龙骨头。

因此,当您处于正确的情况时,

这不是
您是否会找到化石的问题。

你会找到化石。

问题是:你会找到
具有科学意义的东西吗?

为了帮助解决这个问题,我将在
我们的公式中添加第四部分,

:尽可能远离其他
古生物学家。

(笑声

) 并不是我不喜欢
其他古生物学家。

当你去一个
相对未开发的地方时,

你不仅有更好的
机会找到化石,

而且还有更多的机会找到
对科学来说是新的东西。

这就是我
寻找恐龙的公式

,我已经在世界各地应用了它。

2004年的夏天,

我去了南美洲

的底部,阿根廷的巴塔哥尼亚底部

,寻找恐龙:

一个有
合适年龄的陆地沉积岩的地方,

在沙漠中,

一个曾经被 古生物学家几乎没有参观
过。

我们发现了这一点。

是一只巨大的食草恐龙的股骨,大腿骨。

那块骨头有2.2米宽。

那是超过七英尺长。

现在,不幸的
是,那块骨头被孤立了。

我们挖啊挖啊挖,
周围没有一根骨头。

但这让我们
渴望明年再来一次。

在下一个野外季节的第一天,

我发现了这个:另一个两米长的股骨,

只是这一次不是孤立的,

这一次与

一个巨型食草动物的其他 145 块骨头有关。

在又经历了三个艰苦、
非常残酷的野外季节之后

,采石场变成了这个样子。

在那里,你看到
那只巨兽的尾巴缠绕着我。

躺在这个坟墓里的巨人,
新的恐龙物种,

我们最终称之为
“Dreadnoughtus schrani”。

Dreadnoughtus
从鼻子到尾巴有 85 英尺。

它站在两层半
的肩膀上

,生活充实
,重达 65 吨。

有时人们会问我,
“无畏龙比霸王龙大吗?”

那是八九只霸王龙的质量。

现在,成为古生物学家最酷的事情之一

就是当你发现一个新物种时,
你可以给它命名。

我一直
认为这些巨大的食草恐龙

经常被描绘成被动的、
笨拙的肉盘,这很

可惜。

(笑声)

他们不是。

大型食草动物可能很乖巧
,也可能有领土意识——

你不想惹河马
、犀牛或水牛。

黄石公园的野牛
比灰熊造成的伤害要多得多。

那么你能想象一头
重达 65 吨的大公牛

在繁殖季节

保卫领土吗?

那只动物会
非常危险,

对周围的人都是一种威胁,而且它本身
也没什么好怕的。

因此,“无畏”这个名字,

或者,“无所畏惧”。

现在,要长得这么大,

像无畏兽这样的
动物必须

成为效率的典范。

那长长的脖子和长长的尾巴帮助它
向环境辐射热量,

被动地控制它的温度。

而那长长的脖子
也是一种超高效的喂食机制。

Dreadnoughtus 可以
站在一个地方,用它的脖子

清理出一大片植被,

摄入数万卡路里的热量,
而消耗的热量却很少。

这些动物进化
出了类似斗牛犬的宽步态,

赋予它们极大的稳定性,

因为当你重达 65 吨时,
当你真的像房子一样大时

,跌倒的惩罚

就是死亡。

是的,这些动物又大又硬,

但它们不会受到那样的打击。

Dreadnoughtus 倒下,
肋骨断裂并刺穿肺部。

器官爆裂。

如果你是一只 65 吨重的无畏巨龙,

你一生都不会
摔倒——哪怕一次。

现在,在这具特殊的
Dreadnoughtus 尸体被

大量细菌、蠕虫和昆虫掩埋和去肉之后,

它的骨头经历了短暂的变态,

与地下水交换分子

,变得越来越
像埋葬的岩石。

随着一
层层沉积物的堆积,

来自四面八方的压力
像一只石头手套一样沉重,

它牢固而持久的抓握力将
每一块骨头牢牢地抱在怀里。

然后是漫长的……

什么都没有。

一代又一代千篇一律,

非事无数。

一直以来,这具骷髅

以完美的平衡永远不变

地躺在它的岩石坟墓中。

与此同时,地球历史在上面展开。

恐龙
将再统治 1200 万年,

然后它们的霸权
在一场炽热的世界末日中被扼杀。

大陆漂移。 哺乳动物站了起来。

冰河世纪来了。

然后,在东非,

一种没有前途的猿类
进化出了有知觉的奇怪把戏。

这些聪明的灵长类动物不是
特别快或特别强壮。

但他们擅长覆盖地面

,在

超过恐龙
领土征服记录的非凡散居中,

他们分散在地球上,在

途中发现了他们遇到的每一个生态系统

,发明了文化
、金属加工、绘画

、舞蹈、音乐

和科学

和火箭飞船,最终
将把 12 只特别优秀的猿

带到月球表面。 地球上

有 70 亿个四处
游荡的智人,

其中一个可能不可避免地

最终会
踏上埋在巴塔哥尼亚南部荒地之下的宏伟泰坦的坟墓

我就是那只猿。

独自站在沙漠中,

我并没有忘记

任何一个人
进入化石记录的机会

是微乎其微的。

但是地球非常非常古老。

在很长一段时间内
,不可能变成可能。

这就是地质记录的魔力。

因此,
在一个古老的星球上生活和死亡的众多生物

留下了大量的化石,

每一个都是一个小奇迹,

但总的来说是不可避免的。

六千六百万年前,
一颗小行星撞击地球

并消灭了恐龙。

这很可能不是。

但我们只得到一个历史
,它就是我们所拥有的。

但这种特殊的
现实并非不可避免。

这颗远离地球的小行星的最微小的扰动

都会导致它大大错过
我们的星球。 恐龙被消灭

的关键而灾难性的一天,

为我们所知道的现代世界奠定了基础

。 在恐龙

已经享受的 630 亿天中,这可能只是另一天

——也许是星期四

但随着地质时间的推移,确实会发生

不可能的、几乎不可能的事件

沿着从我们的蠕虫
寒武纪祖先

到穿着西装的灵长类动物

的道路上,道路上的无数岔路口
将我们带到了这个非常特殊的现实。

Dreadnoughtus 的骨头
在地下埋藏了 7700 万年。

谁能想到

,生活在恐龙世界的裂缝中的一种类似鼩鼱的哺乳动物

会进化成

能够描述
和理解

他们一定害怕的恐龙的有情众生?

我曾经站在
密苏里河的头

,跨过它。

在那里,它
只不过是

从比特鲁特山脉高处牧场的一块巨石中的岩石下流出的汩汩的水声

旁边的小
溪流过几百码

,尽头是一个小池塘。

这两个流——它们看起来是一样的。

但一个是无名的涓涓细流

,另一个是密苏里河。

现在下到
圣路易斯附近的密苏里河口

,很明显
那条河很重要。

但是到苦根山
去看看密苏里河

,人类的前景并没有
让我们看到它有什么特别之处。

现在回到白垩纪

,看看我们小小的、毛茸茸的祖先。

你永远猜不到

它们
会有什么特别之处

,如果不是因为那颗讨厌的小行星,它们可能不会有什么特别之处。

现在,再制造一千个世界
和一千个太阳系

,让它们运行。

你永远不会得到同样的结果。

毫无疑问,那些世界
既令人惊奇又不可思议,

但它们不会是我们的世界
,也不会有我们的历史。

我们可以拥有无数的
历史。

我们只得到一个,哇,
我们有没有得到一个好的。

像 Dreadnoughtus 这样的恐龙是真实存在的。

像沧龙这样的海怪是真实存在的。

翼展如鹰的蜻蜓
和车长的药丸虫

确实存在。

为什么要研究古代?

因为它给了我们远见

和谦逊。

恐龙在世界
第五次大灭绝

中丧生,在一次宇宙事故中灭绝,这
并不是它们自己的过错。

他们没有看到它的到来
,他们别无选择。

另一方面,我们确实有选择。

化石记录的性质
告诉我们,我们在这个星球上的

位置既不稳定
又可能转瞬即逝。

现在,我们这个物种正在传播
一场

地质规模
如此之大、如此严重的环境灾难

,可以
称之为第六次灭绝。

与恐龙不同的是,

我们可以看到它的到来。

与恐龙不同的是,

我们可以做点什么。

这个选择是我们的。

谢谢你。

(掌声)