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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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00:00God's story, O Makmatin
00:01I was looking for recommendations from whales when you had some work to do.
00:04Welcome, welcome, welcome
00:05Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
00:06Oh, how we long to go west!
00:07Congratulations, my son, you've been appointed!
00:09Is that so?
00:09There isn't even an IQ test.
00:10Their mark is on their faces, my dear brother.
00:13How generous You are, Lord!
00:14Now, feel like you might get to know my friend.
00:16They all came before.
00:17Where did they all go before me?
00:19On the sea?
00:19Oh, of course, by the sea.
00:20or
00:21No, no, hospital
00:22Do you have family or someone who loves you?
00:24No, honestly, no one has ever loved me.
00:27power
00:28Look at her
00:28Hospital for safety
00:30Hazem knows that his job
00:31Repelling whales is a dangerous job.
00:33The death rate could reach very, very, very high
00:36100% or tricks
00:37And strong, not water
00:39In this percentage
00:39Good, mmm, let's move on.
00:42Hospital
00:43No wonder the doctor who gave birth
00:44I'm blind, that's all.
00:45He told her that he was the first person born in their village without a brain
00:47And you are in it, your leg, your hand, and your eye
00:50Do you have one too?
00:51Ta'fa, ya Mustafa, Ta'fa
00:52Take this as a waiver of all your rights
00:55So we can go and get a tan right away
01:01One second
01:03There's something unsettling about this concession.
01:07Calm down, calm down, I'll explain everything to you.
01:10It is written that a whale is a fish
01:14What we know about the stadiums
01:15We can change it to your hearing.
01:18Ta'fa, ya Mustafa, Ta'fa
01:20She herself prayed for you and said, "May God keep you safe for your mother."
01:23But it's not worth it anymore.
01:24No, no, there's no need anymore.
01:25I go and come back in millions and return
01:29May God grant him safety
01:37Dear viewers, welcome to a new episode.
01:40From the Al-Daheeh program
01:41Hatch, the beautiful scenes, come and take a pot like it used to be
01:43And we'll set our destination to the thirteenth century.
01:46We'll adjust our location to Scandinavia
01:48There we will find a community of great shellfish
01:50Their knowledge was very extensive regarding the sea, its patterns, wave patterns, and different types of fish.
01:55Nothing stood in their way except the ocean monsters that invaded their imagination.
01:58One of the two monsters was a monster named Alhav Jofa
02:01Sea Fury
02:02A mysterious monster in the depths of the ocean
02:04He never gets enough of predation.
02:05Bitgs on fish, ships, and men
02:07This is what it is, Muhammad?
02:08I didn't recommend fish or ships, just carp and men.
02:11This bothered us a little
02:12Sometimes, my dear sailors, they would reach a lake
02:14They decide to meet on the island
02:16And they light a fire for him.
02:17That's a surprise, my dear.
02:19They discover that they are not on land, nor on any island.
02:22Oh my God
02:23But in reality, they are on the back of the legendary monster Da
02:26And as soon as this monster comes out from under the water
02:28He says, "Which animal was drinking nectar from my neck?"
02:30Here the wave moves violently, the movement of matter and its parts changes, and the sailors drown.
02:35That's not all, my dear.
02:36Other times the sailors would cross between two rocky mountains
02:39And halfway through, he discovers that they are not in a narrow sea
02:41But they are between the open jaws of the beast, that's its size.
02:44The Frais, my dear, thought it was a cave.
02:46They enter it and hide.
02:47They kept walking happily, pleased with the strong, visible Nafi' al-Adhar.
02:50Let's take a shortcut from here and review the image for the radar.
02:53We honk our horns so we can hear the echo.
02:55Suddenly we discover that we are in the same boat
02:57And they opened a sprint on the stomach
02:59Sorry, Abu Hamad, I feel you're being very cautious and saying
03:01A tale and a story
03:02What's with this story monster? Talk to us about science, man, may God bless you.
03:05Please, Shahat Science
03:06Mash, my dear, let's hold on, I said, to time again.
03:08We're setting our destination for twenty-three happy years until
03:11We are setting the location to the Australian University of Flinders
03:14Then, my dear, you are the world of the sea lyre.
03:16John McCartney is beating this monster
03:18He says this isn't strange to him.
03:19Firstly, it's not just Scandinavians who have the right to know about this monster.
03:22This had previously appeared in Greek manuscripts under the name Aspidu Chilon
03:25Dr. McCartney met with his colleagues who specialized in Scandinavian literature.
03:29He told him, "Tell me more about this monster."
03:31Because he likened it to a monster that opens its mouth on fish and they go inside it.
03:35And it's a very huge monster
03:36And we, as scholars of literature, are classified among imaginary beings.
03:40Zay Al-Hurriyat, Mermaids, Zabudash, Boba, and Basit
03:43Here's Shawn McCartney, they're all here.
03:44Hey, this isn't a fantasy, this is a real monster, a real person.
03:46Dear Aziza, from the very first moment of this episode, I was speaking to you in Sans.
03:49This sea creature is not a mythical creature or anything
03:51This episode, my dear, is about the largest creature on this planet.
03:54whale
03:55The whale sometimes floats on the surface of the water and is motionless.
03:59And the source of old food scraps
04:01Here, the fish are telling you
04:02What is this free food, we are going to stay together
04:04From here, schools of fish flock to the whale's mouth.
04:07What is the whale doing on it?
04:08And the rest, you know, is the whale's control strategy, called
04:11The soil was fed and scientifically tested only in 2011.
04:14My dear, you'll be surprised, we don't know anything about whales.
04:17First, the method of eating that I will explain to you is called "trap feeding".
04:19This method is not very appealing to whales.
04:21Because some of them have teeth like dolphins
04:23Sperm whales and porpoises
04:25Countries that repel their prey and swallow them whole
04:27There is another type that does not have teeth, called the baleen whale.
04:30He doesn't know you, Sin
04:31The teeth of these whales contained elongated tissues.
04:33Descending from the ceiling of the bedbugs and on the sides
04:35Her name is Balinat
04:36These whales open their mouths and draw in a large amount of water.
04:39Or baits that open their mouths and start collecting the prey that are in the month
04:42Then she stops her mouth and starts squirting water.
04:45These ballasts act like a filter or sieve
04:47Remove the water and trap the fish.
04:48So here you have approximately two types
04:49Fire-catching type and net-catching type
04:51One person scoops and the other scoops
04:52The trap feeding strategy in this legend is what you do.
04:55Few whales in certain conditions
04:57And now the number of whales is much lower than before.
04:59Estimates suggest that before the seventeenth century
05:01There were more than one hundred thousand whales
05:03Hunchback in the North Atlantic
05:05One hundred thousand! In the year 1955
05:07This number has dropped to less than a thousand whales
05:09That means they finished off approximately 99% of their number
05:11So the chances of seeing a whale were much easier than before.
05:13Choose, my dear, there were one hundred thousand whales of this size
05:16Did you see the whale, my dear? Do you hear the whale?
05:17Do you know its size? Enter a fish like this, have you ever seen anything like it in your life?
05:19I saw her in the snow, in a crack
05:20It was three kilos, you turned it into oil and lemons
05:22This blue whale, my dear, is the one that's like that
05:24His tongue weighs as much as an elephant.
05:26That's just the tongue.
05:27Author Simon Bones in his book A History of the World in One Hundred Animals
05:29He says about the blue whale
05:31you think you are ready for the size of the damn thing
05:33but of course you are not
05:34In your mind, can you imagine or comprehend the size of the whale?
05:37But no, the whale is bigger than your imagination can conceive.
05:40My dear, like I told you
05:40The whale's tongue alone is as big as an elephant's
05:42It has a bigger tongue than that.
05:452700 kilos of whale, my dear, that made
05:47This is an earthquake, choose
05:48The rest, my dear, can comprehend
05:5090 tons of food and water
05:52This water, try to remove it, to eat.
05:54How much does the imagination of the Wardah cost? The one, Abu Hamid?
05:56This food does not affect the heart.
05:57Let him tell you, my dear, that the heart of a whale can hold you and five others.
06:00Your friends have a heart wider than a whale's.
06:02The elevator, the big one, the one with the six riders, that's the heart of the whale.
06:04Do you know how much the whole animal weighs?
06:06I swear, my dear, I don't know where we'll get it from.
06:08A scale that can handle these weights
06:10All of this is what I'm saying to you in the heart of the human being
06:12I ate it, I didn't talk to you in the chat
06:14The weight of the whale here is calculated like the weight of the fetus.
06:16Let him take his tragedy and his body's burdens and expect his weight
06:18And with this calculation, my dear, the weight of the whale
06:20It reaches one hundred and ninety tons
06:23Its length is about thirty meters
06:24This, my dear, is not a creature, this is Mall of Arabia.
06:26It was, my dear, this huge
06:28It lives on crustaceans
06:30He eats things similar to shrimp, maybe, my dear?
06:32They consume from it in one day
06:34Forty million? He's in front of a television.
06:35No, my dear, I'm not impressed by this information yet.
06:38I'm not here to talk to you about the blue whale.
06:39Neither dolphins nor sperm whales
06:41But I'm talking to you about a whale that's much more powerful than them.
06:44First whale
06:47Dear viewer, let us take you to the city of Paris
06:50Specifically, in the Natural History Museum
06:52We will see there the skeleton of a wild animal called the buxetus
06:55The first fossil discovered by scientists was an incomplete ganglion.
06:58Then we find other fossils of the same animal
07:01After the studies, we connected all his bones.
07:03We created an almost complete structure for it.
07:05Let's learn about a rare species of amphibious whale.
07:08Pixitus
07:09Genetic data in the 1990s confirmed that whales are part of the same evolutionary lineage.
07:14The one who gave birth to cows, pigs, giraffes, and camels
07:17This is a well-known difference in biology, my dear.
07:19They have double toes and hooves.
07:21By analyzing their DNA, you will find
07:23The closest living relative of this species is the hippopotamus.
07:26This, my dear, does not mean that the whale is related to the hippopotamus.
07:28This means you are saying that they are a common ancestor with the rest.
07:31My dear friend, scientists say
07:33Based on the studies and evidence that it has obtained
07:35Whales once had four legs
07:38Yes, Muhammad, that's true.
07:39This is what you were told, my dear.
07:40My dear whale, there was a time when whales walked on land.
07:43This, my dear, is amazing
07:44Amazing
07:45Here, my dear, I see the comment that says
07:47I love you, Abu Hamad
07:47I respect your content
07:48But let's not talk about development that comes with poverty.
07:50My dear, I want to use the famous quote in biology, which is my specialty.
07:54What I studied, I specialize in, to be honest.
07:56It doesn't mean he has a PhD yet.
07:57Nothing in Biology Mixes
07:59Nothing in the biological world makes sense except in light of evolution.
08:04This is extremely important, my dear.
08:05When you hear the story of this creature and change it from this to that
08:08And the evidence that scientists find
08:10And he tries to deduce from it how this form of development occurred?
08:13From what to what?
08:14I'm in Jeddah, something amazing
08:15And again, my dear, developing doesn't necessarily mean the imprisoner.
08:17So that it's clear
08:18So please, I'm with you completely. I see this topic as extremely interesting and extremely important.
08:22My dear friend, if you are good at dealing with poverty right now...
08:25How can a fish-like animal swim in water when it's so huge?
08:29Is his grandfather still a wild animal when struck by a man the size of a dung heap?
08:33any?
08:34He went to play the glory
08:35Shall we tell you, my dear, how we found out if the information is there?
08:38The pachystheus is so named because its fossils were found in Pakistan.
08:41Pakistius means whale, so its literal name is the whale of Pakistan.
08:44The fossil is fifty million years old
08:46At that time, Pakistan was experiencing a period of heavy rain.
08:49The fixed sea of ​​Ankh is small and large, its name is the Sea of ​​Tis.
08:52This sea stretches from the Mediterranean Sea to India.
08:55We didn't find fossils of this creature in the sea sediments, but where?
08:59In the river deposits and plains next to it
09:01This fossil tells us a lot about the behavior and appearance of this creature.
09:05His skeletal structure, for example, shows us that the digestion of his legs was thick.
09:08The thickness of these limbs makes them susceptible to injury if he is running on the ground.
09:11Now? Or what does he do with it, Abu Ahmad?
09:13I'm telling you, this is a type of water lion exploited by malevolent forces.
09:16Like the river's opportunities, for example
09:17To prevent it from rising to the surface, its heavy weight causes it to sink to the bottom, allowing it to walk on the bottom of shallow rivers and lakes.
09:26They also help with movement; their tails are suitable for camping, and their toes are long.
09:30The scars on her indicate that she was holding on with strong muscles separating their fingers.
09:35Exactly like the blind tails of aquatic animals
09:37We also learned from his lessons that he used to chew and cut meat.
09:40It is likely that he was eating fish because he often splashed in the water.
09:47He was walking on the bottom and coming with the fish from below, seeing in him the work of Shiloh Colmes
09:51Well, Abu Hamad, his story is beautiful, and scholars respect everything.
09:55But he proved to us that this whale could be a sea fox
09:58If there's no sea dog, then there's a sea fox.
10:00Before you answer, my dear, let me spread you out from Paris to Giza.
10:03The zoo, Abu Hamad? No, my dear, Giza Square.
10:05Abu Hamad, I would sacrifice six of the videos I was watching on the Champs-Élysées
10:17A dog and a pig, and this poor student is required to identify which animal's bone belongs to which animal.
10:22This, my dear, is comparative anatomy.
10:25Comparative anatomy is an important science for classifying animals.
10:28Determining the relationship between the foreskins is done through anatomy.
10:30When we compare the structures of different animals, we can determine if
10:33These animals belong to the same taxonomic group
10:36They are not different animals; we make the tree a family
10:39And when the anatomy is done, they belong to a creature from the outside.
10:40Therefore, they look at the bone to be able to classify the organism.
10:44And they see who he resembles and who he doesn't resemble
10:45For us, the whale could be a huge fish.
10:48But for anatomists, they will look at three types of skeletons.
10:51First, what is known as homogeneous structure
10:53These are parts of the body
10:54It has a similar structure in other organisms.
10:57For example, the front end is a medic
10:59This is the front end of the word
11:00This is the front end of the horse.
11:01This is the bat and this is the hedgehog
11:03My dear friend, the wall has almost the same greatness
11:05Shoulder bone, upper arm, and forearm, two epics, no elbow
11:08They also have a right to it, just like us.
11:10When you remove the fat and fin organs
11:12You will find it correct
11:13Every animal has a forelimb that helps and serves it in its home.
11:16And he exploits it for whatever he wants.
11:18This means the horse's limbs help it to run.
11:19The bat in order to fly
11:20The fence so he can throw
11:22Humans need to grasp tools and tree branches.
11:24But anatomically, all mammals, my dear, despite their differences in their environments
11:29However, it has the same anatomical structure.
11:31Well, never mind, Abu Ahmed, it's as clear as day.
11:33What is the fish-like enclosure?
11:34Why are we surprised this year?
11:35Why do we remove fat and muscle and look underneath?
11:38Will the mammals be healthy?
11:39No, my dear, this is different from the skeletal hyca symmetry.
11:41The one I'm telling you about
11:42The fish bone is different from the hedge bone.
11:44What you're talking about is known in evolutionary science as convergent evolution.
11:48Simply put, two organisms living in the same environment will adopt the same physical characteristics.
11:53Regardless of their proximity
11:55I have examples of this such as the Arctic fox, the tarpon, and the polar bear.
11:58He does tell them they are white, but they are not related.
12:00This is just the color that will help them hide if they are hunting or if someone is hunting.
12:05Because they are in a field in that
12:06The pole of the sky, whose environment is governed by them.
12:08The same applies to the streamlined body, fins, and tail.
12:11These countries help the fish or whale to move in the water.
12:15Actually, my dear, we don't need an anatomical history to tell the whale that it's a sadist.
12:18The whale has a placenta, carries and gives birth, and protects its young.
12:22Sadists
12:23This one has gills like a fish; this one has lungs and breathes open air.
12:25This is my dear sadist
12:26With a document from the maternity hospital proving that he is a sadist
12:29After that, my dear, the naturalized person I told you about
12:31There are what are called archaeological structures
12:35It left behind parts that, over time, lost some of their original functions.
12:39But it still has an effect on the body.
12:41The scientists here conclude that there was a common ancestor in this accumulation.
12:46And my dear, it shows how little we know about walls at all.
12:49For example, my dear, if we look at the structure of the spine, we will find parts of bone underneath it.
12:53Not connected to anything around him, his bones stand like that, with no connection to bring them together.
12:57My dear, scientists analyze this to mean that it's a remnant of the pelvic bone, femur, and tibia.
13:02All of these bones are located in the pelvic muscle.
13:04These bones are more visible in older whales.
13:06Like the psyllid whose fossils were discovered in Wadi Al-Hitan in Al-Fayoum
13:10For a long time, my dear, we considered this type of bone to be the remains of parts that had no use.
13:16The remains of Damra, and if we were to give the whales thousands of years, they would disappear from it.
13:20But my dear, scientists have discovered that she takes such an important mate in mating.
13:24Therefore, it was subject to what is called sexual selection.
13:27The male whale that has this bone will be able to go further
13:31Therefore, he surpassed even more, for after his genes, he had more children, and they would have a dear, forgiving nature.
13:36Even sperm whales, my dear, are born with small hind limbs protruding from the body.
13:41Some dolphins have hind legs
13:44This, my dear, is something called atavism or evolutionary regression.
13:47This occurs when an animal is born with a trait that disappears, or when a trait is present in the embryo and disappears after birth.
13:52Also, some whales, like the beluga whale for example, have a primitive ear canal.
13:56This, my dear, is a feature that doesn't benefit any animal that doesn't have blood.
14:00This reflection might reduce his swimming efficiency.
14:03But also, our limited knowledge about whales might be serving a function we are unaware of.
14:06We discovered how they feed mommy in 2011
14:08Most whales still have small muscles dedicated to external earlobes, which are not actually present.
14:13These, my dear, are remnants of the time when her hands moved when she was a wild second.
14:18It used to be used in directional hearing.
14:21All of these things lead scientists to conclude that, folks, this is a creature that doesn't originate in water.
14:26This is a creature that came from Earth; this is a creature that still carries the history of its Earthly ancestors.
14:31We see this at the level of anatomy, we see this at the level of beauty, we see this at the level of DNA.
14:36Hamad, excuse me, I have a simple question.
14:38And you didn't bring it to me
14:39This is the Baxitius
14:39How did we get so disgusted by him being a whale?
14:41What remains is a dowry opportunity.
14:42There are no dowry opportunities
14:42Let me take you, my dear, to the third type of structure, which is what anatomists look at.
14:47What made this pachytius join the whale corridor?
14:51It shares the same anatomical characteristics that whales have together.
14:54For example, my dear, the group to which horses belong is a group of animals that includes the horse, the donkey, the twain, and the rhinoceros.
15:01Family countries
15:01The anatomical characteristic that unites them, my dear, is that they simply walk on one toe.
15:06My dear, a horse walks on one toe.
15:08The whole area became known as finger vocabulary
15:11Any animal possessing this characteristic is classified in this category.
15:14Then they started to determine his relationship to them.
15:16Here, scholars must agree on the distinctive characteristics of the Shihiyya.
15:20So that they can classify the animal as a cetacean
15:23What is this?
15:24What is the quality of cunning?
15:25This is a whale
15:26I want you to guess, my dear
15:27What is this quality?
15:28I know, Abu Hamad, fins
15:29The shark has fins
15:30You're breastfeeding a sea dog, my dear, and you're doing this?
15:33Abu Hamad, the smooth flow remains.
15:35What is Lordiana doing?
15:36Has Lordiana been classified?
15:37Cetaceans?
15:38He said to them, "What do you say to me, Abu Hamad, regarding the description?"
15:39In the beginning, my dear
15:40Your uncles, the scholars, told you to look at this description.
15:44It is the blowhole found in the whale's basket.
15:47But scientists found that there were ancient whales
15:50Like Protost Day
15:51The blowhole wasn't on top of his head.
15:53No, that was in the middle.
15:54They classify it as a cetacean.
15:55No, Abu Hamad, how do they know that they are cetaceans?
15:59If they were to grasp the need that they see for the cetaceans, it must be there
16:02The brave one means the Gryffindor de Fougeres is well known
16:05So what's going on?
16:06The whale remains without the opening
16:07My dear, it's a secret to scientists because of its power.
16:09Deeper than skin and muscle
16:11The secret of the skull
16:12paleontologist Hans Teussen
16:13The person who made the greatest contribution to the field of whale evolution
16:16The discoverer of the Albax fossil, Tussen
16:18Images in his book The Walking Whales
16:19For anatomists
16:21Whales are the bones of the ear
16:23any?
16:23And we don't have a firebrand, Ahmed, or bones.
16:25Victory
16:25Mysterious dramatic exit
16:26Mariam's dramatic comeback
16:28You know everything
16:29Or you won't know
16:31The paxtius was between land and sea
16:33His skull and jaw were similar to those of a whale.
16:36His outer ear had a sound passage like the second sadists
16:39Hassan can hear the sound normally from the air.
16:40Like you and me
16:42But the bones of his inner ear, especially the auditory bulla
16:45This is a hollow bony structure in the skull of chordate lions.
16:49It includes the middle ear bones
16:51The smallest bone in your entire body
16:52The buttonhole was large
16:53The hammer, anvil, and stirrup
16:55That's you, my dear
16:56Even my dear friend, look at the eloquence! He tells you, "So-and-so was caught between a rock and a hard place."
17:00This, my dear, is much deeper than the bottle itself.
17:02These bones were dense and thick.
17:04The thick part of the auditory canal is suspended.
17:06So when the sound waves come, they shake this suspended part.
17:10The wave was generated and spread across the skull.
17:12The spiteful one allows
17:13Usually, the sound waves present in the circus
17:15It is reflected on the skull
17:16This happens because there is a difference in density.
17:18Between bone and air
17:19What's happening now, my dear?
17:20If you go to a place like water
17:21Water density can remain close to bone density.
17:25Contrary to the wind
17:25The chick was moving from the water to the star of the buxetus
17:28If you looked at this greatness
17:29In the whale's bay, you'll find it so thick that it has a special name.
17:32The Info Lakram
17:33And I, my dear, am the scientists who confirm and decide.
17:36The pixitus is an ancient whale
17:38Because it possesses this characteristic or quality
17:40You tell me, "That's fine, Abu Ahmed, we're still separated by the whales."
17:43But my dear, I don't want you to imagine the matter in that way.
17:46The simple outfit
17:46Hamad, who told you the matter is simple?
17:48Ever since we left that part, the situation has become increasingly complicated.
17:50Let me take you to India, my dear, 2007
17:52If only, my dear, in India, 24 years after the discovery of the Pexitus skeleton
17:55Pixitus
17:56They surprise us
17:56They are announcing the discovery of a 48-million-year-old fossil in India.
18:01The scientist Hans Teussen and his colleagues
18:03They analyzed their discovery of a small, hoofed mammal called Handu Yus
18:08What happened, my dear, is that Hans's message
18:11Breaking the excavation by mistake
18:12They saw the middle part of the animal
18:14So that they might be surprised by a thick, brittle bone
18:17Exactly like the whales
18:19Although this creature was not a cetacean
18:21He did not resemble them
18:22But he provided a very, very important missing piece
18:26In the evolutionary puzzle of the whale
18:27And where did our first whale inherit this characteristic?
18:31This creature was a small animal
18:32Slow on the ground because of the bone of the weakling
18:35But he had a strategy to escape the predators.
18:37He is speaking to the water and hiding beneath it for a few minutes.
18:41He's holding his breath
18:42And the weight that prevented him from running
18:44And its absence on land
18:45A major advantage remained within the water.
18:47His bones were thinning, so he was going down to the hall.
18:49And he is one of the hidden ones
18:50He used to sit and say what he lived on in the plants underwater
18:52Order from Amwaj Mabsoot
18:54Sani, you one, Abu Ahmed
18:55The pain is because you kept doing this
18:57It means a small, thick-boned animal.
19:00He didn't know how to escape the predators
19:02He became so preoccupied with himself that he lost his mind.
19:03But my dear, allow me to introduce you to the two water chevrons.
19:06The water-loving lizard, my dear, is the most disgusting animal for Indians.
19:09He escapes from the predatory birds of prey in the water.
19:12And it's also possible to focus on the water, preferably four or five minutes.
19:15He kept quiet in the hall
19:16This isn't a fossil; it's an animal that lives in Africa today.
19:18Go, my dear, to Africa and ask about the two water lips.
19:20known
19:21As if a mouse's mouth
19:22His body is like a gazelle's
19:23This is my dear aunt, if she recovers, she won't send you a message on WhatsApp.
19:25Friday, 9 AM
19:27We will all know these two codes.
19:28The important thing is that we did it 8 times after a thorough analysis.
19:30Researchers are revealing similarities between skulls
19:33ear bones and limbs
19:35Between the small animals I was telling you about
19:36and the whale
19:37So we can discover that the great ancestor of whales wasn't an animal like shit.
19:41But it's a cat-sized animal
19:43About 2 million years after the Anglius
19:44He'll come back again, a whale we know
19:46It is the ampulla situs
19:48That, my dear, was the crocodile's counterpart in the Sadiqat.
19:50He decided, through dialogue, that he waited for the DJ's drinks so he could ignore her.
19:52And what did he find himself doing in this residence?
19:54So he decided to roll up his sleeves and go down to the water
19:56Delve into the river mouths of the sea
19:58Tethys decided he was living a more aquatic lifestyle.
20:01The difference here is that it has a higher salt content.
20:04River outlets to the Great Sea
20:06Wait one, Abu Hamid
20:07How did you come to know this?
20:08Dear friend, there is a very important rule in biology.
20:10That the animal eats and drinks
20:13Saltwater and freshwater contain different proportions of oxygen isotopes.
20:17When the scientists unearthed the ambulolocites fossils
20:19They pressed oxygen isotopes that entered the bone and teeth
20:23And it merged with him during his prophecy
20:25And look how they knew from this that he drank salt water and fresh water
20:29It means he lived among rivers and open oceans
20:32The whales that evolved after the ampullocates
20:34It contains higher levels of oxygen isotopes than saltwater.
20:37This, my dear, indicates that she drank salt water.
20:40Her outfit today
20:42The cotsytos that acted like a water ox
20:44That, my dear, was the point after which things would never return to what they were before.
20:48By examining it, he indicates that there are semicircular canals in the inner ozone.
20:52That's her job, my dear; she's responsible for balancing the sadists on Earth.
20:56This is what creates the feeling of balance
20:57Those who weren't worried that it had shrunk and lost its function
20:59This change was a decisive moment; the whales would not return to the other shore.
21:03There are no more amphibious creatures, only water ones remain.
21:05At the same time or shortly thereafter, Rodwell appeared.
21:07It is said that she used to go ashore to give birth
21:10And she walks like a seal
21:11This seal is from Azizi, you can feel it in joy
21:14You won't distribute fake sex tapes.
21:16Although there is more aquatic life
21:18The nostrils are now further away from the bananas.
21:20So, my dear, the proto-city whales remained.
21:23Tell us about her breathing, her mannerisms, and her position.
21:26Like the whales we know today
21:27You may have noticed, my dear, that the Proto-City Day fossil
21:30A tablet in Egypt dates this fossil back 45 million years.
21:33This means that it was the first known whale
21:36It goes out to all the oceans in the world
21:38Over time, the whale's tailbone began to shrink and separate from the spine.
21:43And this, my dear, reflects the increased use of the spine in movement over time.
21:47The entire spine, including the back and tail.
21:50If you saw a video of a dolphin or a whale
21:51You'll find that, my dear, he cares about it in a different way than fish.
21:54Think about it for a bit and tell me
21:55What's different?
21:56The fish burns its fin right and left in a horizontal manner.
21:59Look at the shark doing this
22:01Dell will keep doing that
22:02But whales and dolphins do that.
22:04And he burns his fin above and below
22:06Leave the cheetah alone while it runs
22:08This, my dear, is because the whale, the grandfather and his six, used to walk on the earth.
22:12The spine doesn't bend to the side.
22:15Up and down
22:16We'll tell you, my dear, that up to today
22:18We are discovering different types of whales
22:20The latest of these was reported by international newspapers.
22:222023
22:23When paleontologists from Mansoura University
22:26Municipalities means from Arabic
22:28Dr. Hisham Salam
22:29Dr. Abdullah Jawhar and Dr. Muhammad Sameh
22:31Those who squeezed the smallest excavation
22:34solitary whale
22:35Berries, cytus, raya ninsus
22:36Abu Hamad, I hear Muhammad, Samih, and Jawhar
22:39Why didn't you name this absence slip "Egyptian"?
22:41My dear Mansoura, they deal with the International Group
22:45So they want him to bring them things that people can understand.
22:47The mulberry tree is from the mulberry tree of Khamon
22:49Cetos means whale
22:50And behind me are the names of Wadi Al-Rayyan.
22:52Let me tell you, my dear, that the journey of whale adaptation
22:56Adapting to its environment is a complex and exhausting journey.
22:59These are organisms that have completely changed their environment.
23:01On a journey, I achieved different levels
23:03In terms of body shape, physiology, and genes
23:05I'll leave you some very important links in the sources.
23:07She's talking about a more specific topic
23:08If you are interested
23:09This is a journey that scientists say took place over 10 million years ago.
23:12It's good that this is a large number.
23:13Let me tell you that this is in relation to the history of planet Earth.
23:15This is why you don't repeat it
23:16The planet Earth is four billion years old.
23:18A billion means a thousand million
23:20But let me tell you, my dear
23:21The pressure of the new environment
23:22It was a predator of geothermal diseases
23:25All this, my dear
23:26Epilepsy from the change that has occurred to the whales
23:28One example that shows us something similar
23:30What happened in Yellowstone Park in America
23:32This was a large diet with animals
23:33Deer costumes, tank costumes, and more
23:35The deer had no predators to challenge them
23:37Not only did their number increase, but by five hundred percent.
23:39Don't worry, her behavior has started to change.
23:41And the flooding began in the rivers
23:43So I finished off the plants on the riverbanks.
23:46The river began to widen, swell, and become shallower.
23:49The entry was forty-one and forty-one times.
23:51Our aim was to protect them from what we read.
23:53This change will cause dramatic transformations.
23:56Zab began to control the deer
23:58Those who started avoiding places where they were trapped
24:01Like valleys and riverbanks
24:03So, I started to see places recovering environmentally within six years.
24:06The height of the trees on the riverbanks increased fivefold.
24:09And there are no more herbivores that can reach the tall trees.
24:11The birds came to nest
24:13And the number of water beavers that love forests has increased.
24:15And the dams that these beavers built
24:18She slowed down the fish's movement, causing it to become more and more agitated.
24:21All this for forty zeem
24:22Mating rates increased seventy-five times because of the beavers
24:26The match also specified the cuteness
24:28The rabbits and the birds increased
24:30The vultures, weasels, and foxes have recovered.
24:33All of this is not just about diversity and a major change in the ecosystem.
24:36no
24:36This is the porter who reversed the geography
24:37Trees on the riverbank
24:39The river's course was determined after it had been in a state of chaos.
24:41And the river's flow and its swell began to remain for two more weeks.
24:44And the package of channels coming out of it narrows it down and pools form
24:47And all of this has consequences and consequences and consequences
24:50Small change in one year over a short period of time
24:53Purine is a precise indicator of the interconnectedness of environmental elements.
24:56All of this avoids speed in terms of cost-effectiveness.
24:58With any new change that occurs to it
24:59Secondly, my dear, we are talking about a short time.
25:01Little inspiration from the environment
25:02Do you have in mind things that have been happening for millions of years?
25:05There are many factors, not just one.
25:07Not because we entered 40 degrees
25:08So, if it was a year, then it might be one
25:10Changed differently
25:12It was possible we would see completely different walls at that time.
25:14In structure, colors, and behavior
25:16A small change would make all the walls crumble
25:19Every animal that exists on Earth today
25:21He went through a journey of millions of years
25:23So that we can see it as it is today
25:25Living organisms are not as static as they appear.
25:27Even if it is big and gigantic
25:29And its weight is 3 tons
25:32The world is changing and the challenges never cease to emerge.
25:34Flexibility and resilience have always been the only means of stability.
25:37The only constant is change.
25:39That's all, Aziz
25:40These creatures
25:40I won't change
25:41Do you remember the last episode?
25:42Next episode
25:43If you look at the sources
25:43If we're on YouTube, we'll subscribe
25:44Channel
25:44Dear Aziza, there's something very important; there's information I've been hiding from you.
25:47for him?
25:47Why are the walls so hot?
25:48Even if they revealed it to us
25:49Woe to you
25:51Will
25:51Research Translation
25:53I'll leave the comedy to the market guy now.

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