Episodes

  • 19. Dinosaurs were doing fine (before the asteroid), with Steve Brusatte. part 2
    Dec 23 2025

    Part 2: Around 66 million years ago an enormous asteroid barrelled into the earth and wiped out ichthyosaurs, pterosaurs, and dinosaurs*. Debate has raged back and forth as to whether the dinosaurs were already in decline before this mass extinction or were still going strong. This week, Susie and Rob are joined by Prof. Steve Brusatte to take a look at what vertebrates were doing just before the asteroid hit. In part 2 we discuss what would have happened if the asteroid had missed, Steve's new upcoming book, Jurassic World, and Nannotyrannus.

    *except birds of course.

    Widescreen artwork by Natalia Jagielska

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    32 mins
  • 18. Dinosaurs were doing fine (before the asteroid), with Steve Brusatte. part 1
    Dec 16 2025

    Around 66 million years ago an enormous asteroid barreled into the earth and wiped out icthyosaurs, pterosaurs, and dinosaurs*. Debate has raged back and forth as to whether the dinosaurs were already in decline before this mass extinction or were still going strong. This week, Susie and Rob are joined by Prof. Steve Brusatte to take a look at what vertebrates were doing just before the asteroid hit. We discuss his new paper on fossil vertebrates from New Mexico, its implications for scenarios of dinosaur evolution and extinction, and what is life is like for a working palaeontologist, digging up Cretaceous fossils.

    This week's paper is "Late-surviving New Mexican dinosaurs illuminate high end-Cretaceous diversity and provinciality" by Andrew Flynn, Steve Brusatte and colleagues, published in Science in October 2025. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adw3282

    *except birds of course.

    Widescreen artwork by Natalia Jagielska

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    40 mins
  • 17. Will palaeontologists go extinct? AI & the future of palaeo
    Dec 2 2025

    Artificial Intelligence seems to be changing everything, everywhere, all at once. But how will the science of studying the very old be transformed by the technology of the new? In this episode Susie and Rob take a look at the risks and opportunities for palaeontology with the application of AI: palAIontology. Can we use AI to find, identify, and classify fossils?

    The paper's discussed this week are: "Artificial intelligence in paleontology" by Congyu Yu and colleagues published in Earth Science Reviews May 2024 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2024.104765 and "Early humans and the balance of power: Homo habilis as prey" by Marina Vegara-Riquelme and colleagues published in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences in September 2025 https://doi.org/10.1111/nyas.15321

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    49 mins
  • 16. Rotting crocs, the dino bus, and engineering skulls: Day 3 at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
    Nov 21 2025

    In the last of our series from the massive Society of Vertebrate Paleontology meeting, Susie and Rob finally manage to catch up for a gossip. In this episode with get a disgusting taste of rotting crocodile experiments with Stephanie Drumheller of the University of Tennessee, an insight into the Dinosaur battle bus education project that has been travelling the Mongolian steppe with Bolor Minjin of the American Museum of Natural History and the Institute for the Study of Mongolian Dinosaurs, and finally how engineering approaches can help us figure out what fossil organisms were up to long after their death with Emily Rayfield, University of Bristol.

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    38 mins
  • 15. Swimming robots and walking fish: Day 2 at the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology
    Nov 15 2025

    New fossil discoveries keep coming thick and fast, but we managed to sit down with the researchers as they present them. In this episode Susie and Rob catch up (in person!) on their second day in Birmingham and talk to the researchers tackling important transitions in vertebrate evolution: the transitions of moving onto land, into the sea, into the air. This includes Emily Hillan of University of Chicago and her discovery of a new specimen of the walking fish (?) Tiktaalik, Dave Hone of Queen Mary University London on his new research on pterosaurs and spinosaurs, Dean Lomax about his new research on ichthyosaurs and his latest book, and Luke Muscutt of Imperial on his swimming plesiosaur robot.

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    36 mins
  • 14. Nanotyrannus and vertebrate origins: day 1 at the society of vertebrate paleontology
    Nov 13 2025

    The Fossils Files are on Tour! Susie and Rob are in Birmingham for the massive Society of Vertebrate Paleontology conference which has made a rare trip to Europe. We will be meeting and chatting with palaeontologists from all over the world and bringing you the latest discoveries and hot gossip. On day 1 we join the Nanotyrannus craze and chat to co-author of that study, James Napoli of Stoney Brook NY. The amazing "Duelling Dinos" specimen has been released the world by the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and has sent dinosaur fans aflutter with its implications for tyrannosaurs. We also catch with Yara Haridy of the University of Chicago. She has been revealing lots of new insights into vertebrate origins and evolution with high powered synchrotron analyses. With also catch up Steve Brussatte of the University of Edinburgh as a preview of a longer episode coming up.

    For more information on Nanaotyrannus: https://naturalsciences.org/calendar/news/nanotyrannus-confirmed/

    And for more information on vertebrate origins, check out our earlier episode "Our deep origins and the vertebrate that wasn't"

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    30 mins
  • A new head banging dinosaur
    Nov 3 2025

    A newly discovered fossil from the Cretaceous of Mongolia tells us an interesting story about the purported head butting behaviour of dinosaurs. Pachycephalosaurs are famous for their thick domed heads but it has been disputed how or when this evolved. The beautifully preserved Zavacephale rinpoche has a well preserved skull and dome but also loads of details of the body and tail as well. What is suprising is that this individual is much smaller, and occurs much earlier, than other pachycephalosaurs. We take a look at this new fossil and what this means for interpreting the evolution of dinosaur behaviour.

    This week's paper is "A domed pachycephalosaur from the early Cretaceous of Mongolia" by Tsogtbaatar Chinzorig and colleagues from Mongolia and North Carolina, published in Nature in September 2025. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09213-6

    Wide screen palaeoart by Masaya Hattori.

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    37 mins
  • Cretaceous zombie ants
    Oct 21 2025

    Cordyceps is a weird fungus that can take over the brain of ants and spiders causing them to go zombie and commit suicide in order to spread disease. Weirder still, some new fossils from the Cretaceous have directly captured this nightmarish behaviour for the first time. We take a look at these interesting fossils, their potentially shady origin story, and their implications for reconstructing evolution of this unsual parasitic behaviour. Side-note: did fungus cause the extinction of dinosaurs?

    The main paper discussed this week is by Yuhui Zhuang and colleagues "Cretaceous entomopathogenic fungi illuminate the early evolution of insect–fungal associations" published in Proceedings of the Royal Soceiy B in June 2025, (https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2025.0407), free version here.

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    37 mins