- [Joe] I want you to imagine for a moment that you've been instantly transported through time, 50,000 years in the deep past. What you see would shock you. - [Emily] In North America, you'd gaze upon short-face bears larger than a grizzly. Mastodons. Dire wolves. Saber-toothed cats. - [Joe] In Australia, you'd be eye to eye with a gargantuan wombat, and see monitor lizards half as long as a bus. - [Emily] In South America, sloths as tall as elephants. Automobile-sized armadillos. Rodents, the size of small bears. - [Joe] In Europe, towering auroch cattle. Woolly mammoths. Even the lions, hippopotamuses, and hyenas. - [Emily] And in Asia, an elephant that stood a full head above today's largest African bulls. - [Joe] During Earth's glacier-covered Pleistocene Epoch, every continent was home to mammalian giants. The Megafauna. Species that dwarf their relatives alive today. But during the last 50,000 years, these giant mammals, plant and meat-eaters alike, have gone extinct on every continent except one. Today, Africa is home to nearly all giant land animals left on earth. The mystery is why? (gentle lilting music) - These giant animals are so awesome. I wish they were still here. It's not fair. Why did they have to disappear? - I always heard that it was like our fault. Humans, and our spears, hunted mammoths and all that stuff to death. - Well, there's definitely a correlation between when humans arrive in a place and when its megafauna disappear. So the earliest anatomically modern Homo sapiens, they show up around 300,000 years ago in Africa. It wasn't until around 50-70,000 years ago though, that we first left Africa in big numbers. First to Asia and Europe, then to Australia, and finally the Americas. So compared to human origins? I mean, human expansion across the globe, I mean, it just happened so fast. I mean, according to archeological evidence, less than 1,000 years after the first humans that crossed the Bering land bridge, they were already at the tip of South America. So outside of Africa at least, the megafauna, they must have been like, "Wow, there's suddenly humans here." (snaps fingers) Just like that. But you know, at the same time, humans hunting every large animal on five continents to just nothing? It's seems too simple. - Yeah, there's theories to explain the extinction of megafauna and they've been debated really fiercely for decades. - I think what we really need though, is a time capsule. - Lucky for you Trace, we actually have one and it's in the last place you would expect. Right here in Los Angeles. Plot twist! (imitates strobes pulsating) - I thought it was just influencers. (Hosts chuckles) - [Mairin] We've been working with Rancho La Brea fossils since like 2010. I guess you could say that I got stuck. - [Emily] That's Mairin. She's a scientist here at the La Brea Tar Pits, which includes a museum and a research site that's active in lots of different ways. I mean, this is the best place on earth for understanding the Ice Age extinction. This thing is absolutely incredible. I mean, we are looking down into a giant pit. It's bubbling. There are odors. It's exciting. There's pollen. I don't know what's happening. - [Mairin] There are also sounds. You know, as the gases like bubble up to the surface, and make this (mouth plopping). - [Emily] Yeah. - The sound, yeah. - [Emily] It's clearly still a really dynamic place. So- - [Mairin] Mm-hmm? - [Emily] How did all of this come to be? - [Mairin] These tar pits were here since before the City of Los Angeles was established and they've actually been here over the last, at least, 55,000 years. - [Emily] Back then, the tar pits, or more accurately asphalt seeps oozing up and out of the ground, were concealed under water or leaves and anything unlucky enough to go in was also unlikely to get out. - So wait, it's like quicksand? The tar just gets them, sucks them in, and preserves their remains like a giant vat o' sticky pickles? - Yeah, pretty much. - [Mairin] The green flag over there, marks a saber-toothed cat shoulder blade. - [Emily] What? - [Mairin] Yeah, and the blue flag marks a giant ground sloth pelvis- - [Emily] Wow! - [Mairin] or hip bone. - [Emily] Can you imagine giant ground sloths being here in Los Angeles, today? I mean, that in itself is mind-blowing to me. Well then- - [Mairin] Just massive. - [Emily] And then saber cats. I'm sorry, it's like you have a whole party here of all these different animals. So paleontologists love it when fossils are stacked up like a sandwich. They're easier to understand and place in time. But because of this seeping, moving asphalt and the fact that California is still a really tectonically active place? Over thousands of years, the fossils in this soup pot get all jumbled and mingle-mangled. This sticky trap is still sticking today. Just like it was when all these other cool animals were walking around. - I love me a good fossil sandwich with a side of oozy tar soup. Yum! - Like even 2000 years in the future, I think, they would find a really interesting record of life today. - [Emily] Wow. Like maybe plastic or trash even. So to remove the fossils from this sticky resting place, staff and volunteers have to use airplane degreaser. And afterwards, they're sorted and placed in these collections where researchers can look at them firsthand. - That seems like a mammoth effort. - Ugh! (Trace snickers) - That was a megafauna mega-funny, folks. I mean yeah, this is like putting together a puzzle. One that is a million pieces, and they're all stuck and covered in like gak and sticky stuff, and ugh. - Gak. - Gak. - Gak. - [Mairin] On the left, we have our giant ground sloths, and on the right here, we have other large herbivores. So for example, right now we're passing by bison. - [Emily] We are talking shelf after shelf of ancient Ice Age bison, ground sloths, mastodons, tapirs. Hundreds of thousands of fossils, grouped by species and anatomical element. - Whole shelf of bacula. - That's penis bone. (Joe hems) - [Emily] So these aren't all from one individual? These represent, you know, dozens if not hundreds of different individuals. - [Mairin] Exactly. - That's this bone, there. - This bone over here. - [Emily] That's huge. (Mairin chuckles) - [Emily] And this is from a camel? - [Mairin] From a camel- - [Emily] that lived? - Lived in North America. - [Emily] So that's the big question. They were here and then they weren't? - [Mairin] Mm-hmm. - [Emily] What happened? - Yeah, what happened? - [Emily] Maybe the secret is here in this very drawer? Maybe this bone right here. - This bone right here. - Can hold the secret of why we don't have camels anymore. - Narrator, "Unfortunately it didn't hold the secret." - I wanna get back to the big, important question here. Why don't we, today, have camels and all these other cool animals anymore? How do all these bones pulled from this tar pit tell us why megafauna disappeared? - Yeah, so let's back up and take a look at the competing ideas as to why these absolute units went extinct. Scientists studying the decline of megafauna at the end of the Pleistocene, first focused their attention on North America. Partly because of large troves of fossils like those at La Brea, but partly because that's just where the scientists were from. The sudden arrival of humans in North America and the sudden disappearance of large mammals seemed too closely timed to be a mere coincidence. Likewise, megafaunal extinctions in Australia and on Pacific Islands were also timed closely with early human settlement. Scientists, like Paul Martin, concluded that humans armed with a new stone weapon technology, known as Clovis points, swept through the Americas decimating the large mammal population. It became known as the Blitzkrieg or Overkill Hypothesis. The problem was, we now know there were humans in most parts of North America for thousands of years before Clovis point technology showed up, and we just haven't found any of the large collections of remains that suggest early Americans were hunting on this scale. So Overkill has become more of a no-verkill idea. There was a second idea which also blames our species. A slower drawn out extinction, only partially due to hunting combined with early humans changing the environment through setting fires, deforestation, habitat loss, and negative effects from the critters we brought with us like cats and rats and dogs and things. This may explain the extinctions of giant island-dwelling birds like dodos and moas, but again, there's little evidence that the first humans in the Americas changed the environment to this degree. The fossils at La Brea are helping paint a different picture of the extinction of Pleistocene giants. - So are they only pulling out then, giant extinct species? - [Emily] No, that's the cool thing. They're not. They've recovered coyotes, bobcats, foxes, skunks, and badgers. Species we still have today. - [Mairin] So here we have, you know, our typical coyote skull, for example. It's the same species of coyote that we have today, Canis latrans. - [Emily] Wow. - [Mairin] But found in deposits that are, you know, as old as... I mean, this could be 55,000 years old. - Okay, so wait. Let's put the giants aside for a minute and instead of looking at why megafauna disappeared, I think it's interesting to think about what survived. You know, all the medium things. What happened to let these regular fauna persist? - So think about it. Compared to a giant cave bear or American lion, if you're a raccoon or a skunk? You eat less, probably reproduce faster, and likely have more available habitat. I mean, a badger takes up way less space than a mammoth. - So it seems like the fossils should be able to tell us was this some big extinction like a tidal wave that affected all of the species or were like the big stuff, already, just about to kick the bucket and something pushed them over the edge? - So the clues that can lead us to those answers aren't the fossils we've been talking about. In fact, they're not animal fossils at all. - [Regan] Well, here we are. This is our- - [Emily] Where? - [Regan] paleobotany collection. - [Emily] These four cabinets? - [Regan] Well, there's some more but this is- - [Emily] Okay. - [Regan] This is part of it. Here's some of the wood that's preserved. - Oh my gosh. - [Regan] Yeah, it's a beautiful brown texture because of the asphalt that stains it. This is from juniper, and that's probably the most common wood fossil that we have here. - [Emily] So they find plants at La Brea too, and what's so cool about all the plants they find here? They have modern relatives. Meaning, they still exist. - [Regan] Look at these, so these are Oak leaves- (Emily gasps) - [Regan] and they're just like perfectly preserved, right? - [Emily] They look exactly just like- - Here, you can hold this one. - the leaf litter. Oh my gosh, ah! They look- (Regan chuckles) - [Emily] They look just like something you would find on the sidewalk like on a fall day. - [Regan] Exactly. - You'll notice these fossils are quite a bit smaller. They're all in their own vials. (Regan chuckles) - [Emily] They're tiny. I'm seeing this one. It's like in a pill capsule. - [Regan] Yeah, exactly. - [Emily] That's so tiny. Every time I see stuff stored in pill capsules, I have the like innate urge to just swallow it. (Regan chuckles) - [Emily] You know? - [Regan] Yeah. These are from Pit 91. So they're from the top of Pit 91. So this is probably right around the time of the extinction, so- - [Emily] So this is a pretty significant specimen. - [Regan] It is actually is, yeah. - [Emily] Wow, so I could be like ingesting the- - [Regan] You could. - mysteries of the universe. These plant microfossils from bits of leaves to seeds and pollen greens. Stuff so small, you need a microscope to see 'em. These micro plant parts paint an even more detailed picture of what was happening than even those large mammal fossils do. But finding these itsy-bitsy, teeny-weeny, bits of leafy greeny isn't easy. - It's like looking for a literal pine needle in a tar pit. - Yeah, but what's so cool is that those really small bits can be big clues. How did these fossil plants and their remnants fit into this bigger story? - [Regan] In order to understand the ecosystem at all, you have to start with the primary producers. - [Emily] Yeah. - How does changing climate affect animals? - [Emily] Mm-hmm. - [Regan] It affects them through the plants that they eat, that they live in, their habitats. And so really understanding the plants, and what happens because of the climate to the plants, is key to understanding the response to the animals later. - So let's say you find pollen from ragweed, junipers, pines, daisies, and sunflowers, that would indicate this region had a dry arid climate, not unlike today. - Okay, but how do you go from pollen to the extinction of gigantic mammals? - Maybe they sneezed to death. - No, Trace! But you can compare these microscopic plant fingerprints over time to see how the plant species change, and that's a really good indicator of the overall climate. What scientists at La Brea have noticed is that the plant species did in fact start to change about the same time these megafauna disappeared from the tar pits, right around 12,000 years ago, which was also just a few thousand years after humans show up in North America. - Now that is quite a coinkydink. - I know, but it's more than that. The plants tell us at the end of the Pleistocene, Earth's climate was changing drastically. Likely effecting what giant animals could eat, where they could live, and how they could move from one place to another. - Okay, so that makes sense. The effects of a changing climate is likely a big reason why Earth's megafauna went extinct. So does that mean that it wasn't humans fault? - Not necessarily. Humans still probably had an impact here. For example, we've got evidence at the tar pits of more fires, but why? Because it's getting hotter and dryer, or because people were setting them, or something else? - Obviously alien space lasers and very large magnifying glass. I know it's not either of those things. - This is what I mean when I say that extinction is a messy business, right. I mean, nature is pretty resilient. Short of like an asteroid or something, extinctions are usually just not caused by one thing. I think with these complex systems, you have to change a few things in huge ways or a lot of things in pretty big ways. You know, between people and plants, and animals and the climate. - Our current best understanding of what happened in North America, is also kind of messy. It probably wasn't just one thing but many disruptions of a complex web of interactions. Decreasing habitats. Human impacts. Global climate change. These trends are really familiar to us today. - This past that we've been talking about was really not so long ago on the scale of life on Earth, at least. You know, understanding how things played out then can inform our future and theirs. That combination of factors that wiped out so many prehistoric megafauna species. You know, climate change and humans killing them and changing their habitat. I mean, these are the same challenges facing Africa's giants today. Only all those factors are taking place at scales and speeds that just dwarf the changes of the past. Our impacts reach every corner of the planet today, and it's playing out faster than at any time since our species evolved. We need to understand that while our impact may be larger than other species on Earth. We aren't the only species on Earth, right? - To find a place that's still so full of this rich megafauna is so rare nowadays. It's very much something that puts you in place in the world. You know, to see this sense of scale. Just how large the Savanna is and all the megafauna and these incredible vistas. I dunno, there's something very humbling about that. And you know, putting it in a grander sense of scale, this is where humanity developed. This is the cradle of mankind. - [Joe] Think about that. The earliest human ancestors descended from their australopithecine predecessors right here in the Rift Valley of East Africa, nearly 3 million years ago. That is an incredible sense of connection. - This is kind of where we evolved. Isn't it cool? - And this gets at one possible reason why African megafauna made it. For more than 100,000 years, Africa's giant species were co-evolving with us, with Homo sapiens, and they lived alongside our species ancestors before that. Early humans in Africa, they certainly hunted these giants and modified the habitat in big ways, but living alongside humans for so long, co-evolving? That could have given Africa's megafauna a resilience that other giants just didn't have. Outside of Africa, human's sudden global expansion combined with rapid climate change at the end of the Pleistocene. I mean, that might have meant that evolution couldn't keep up. - There's a lesson in the past, hidden in those tar pits. If the environment changes too fast? Things disappear on massive scales. - And the story locked in those plant fossils, that ancient climate change happened over tens of thousands of years. The climate changes we're seeing today, they're happening on the scale of decades and they're even more severe. That really puts into perspective how quickly our climate is changing today. - Megafauna aside, places like the tar pits are offering more supportive evidence of how our climate slowly shifted in the past in comparison to this rapid shift we're seeing today. - I mean, big things disappeared more than once on five different continents. We have to understand that that can happen again. - There's really nowhere else on Earth that you find the scale of animals in number, but also like I said in size. It would be cool if there was elephants walking around everywhere but, you know, we've changed the planet in ways that just doesn't seem to be able to support what we see here, and I think that's just what makes it even more special, is something to remind us of how much of the world used to be. - And you know, to be able to study these ecosystems with, you know, the megafauna intact, gives us a much better understanding of, you know, how environments change and we could lose all of this. - Think for a second about how we're trying to protect the surviving giants today. We're drawing lines on maps creating these protected places, but that's not enough to protect these species and these ecosystems because the challenges that we're facing today, they don't pay attention to those borders. And think about the risks of losing these ancient migrations, these deep animal cultures, these long lasting relationships, highly developed skills and senses. I mean, the ways of surviving in this place and all of these places, it'll take tens of million of years to restore the biodiversity that has disappeared from Earth just since the dawn of our species. But these are things that are built into them with millions of years of evolution, to do the things that they do in this place. Changing that in a few, you know, a few human years- - Yeah. - is asking a lot. Maybe too much with these species. So you may not be able to go to Africa, yourself, or fix climate change on your own or save every species from extinction with your own hands, but there has never been a better time for individuals to make a positive impact. - So true. Volunteers help protect that mission, blue butterfly, and scientists climb trees to understand how to save forests. Passionate people listen to birds singing during a pandemic. All of these people do their part and we don't know how big our impact might be, but we have to try because the only way to find the answers is to keep look looking for them. - When I was at La Brea, I saw just how much there is to still learn about our place in all of this. It kind of blows my mind. Like 100 years ago, the people who were initially excavating these pits could probably not have any idea that you'd be able to look at this on literally such a granular scale. - [Regan] Yeah, and think, you know, I'm the only other person that's ever looked at this. So you're the second person in the world. - [Emily] What? - [Regan] In the history, in the whole record of time to see these specimens. - [Emily] That's pretty amazing. I could discover a new species today- - You probably already did- - [Emily] Here on camera. - [Regan] and you just didn't know it. (gentle wistful music)