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that we're alive right now, and it's a blue whale. And it's evolved relatively recently. And the earliest blue whale fall, whale falve, I think, to about 145 million years ago. And it's about 98 feet long and more than 200 tons. And the whale is larger than any mammoth or dinosaur. And it's always had a greater amount of smaller species than larger ones, even during prehistoric ages, with all this metafauna. Our ecosystems are still in a, which are referred to as a, a megafaunal drop that began at the close of the ice age. This is repeaters nation kilo, kilo seven, November, Quebec, November. All star notes from North America during the crisis scenes between 11,000 years and 200 years ago. The land masses used to have multiple forms of mannip mastodons, giant brown spots, enormous armadillos. And various species of saber-capped, saber-toothed tigers, and calf, huge bison, entire wolves, and other huge creatures that formed an ecosystem. That's what I like as we have today. In addition, species like jaguars, black bears, coyotes, even white-tailed deer, golden eagles. They're also back then. Elsewhere in the world, we have terra birds. These are taller than an adult human. Wombat, mention a wombat the size of a car. Willy rhino, a variety of elephants. Pareto, waktoban, and a mannip. There's another one there. And other animals, ecosystems. Evil, supreme, and giant were the norm, rather than the exception for tens of millions of years. The giant death plots were among the greatest success stories back then. The herbivores, they evolved on South America. I think it was on an island continent. They only moved into Central and North America in the prehistoric bandana connected to land masses, which was about 2.7 million years ago. Some were small. They were all big, like the one I was telling you. At the museum, some were small, like the living two and three tool swabs, while others had a range of all sizes, right up to the size of an elephant. One in particular also was the omega theria.

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