6 Formerly Kickass Creatures Ruined by Evolution
Evolution isn't perfect. Just as the Kennedy family can produce a Ted, some noble species go down the wrong genetic path and what used to be the Tyrannosaurus Rex can wind up as a modern chicken.
Here are six kickass creatures that evolution apparently decided were just too awesome to exist and then, to add insult to injury, evolved them into the crappiest replacements possible.
Used to be ...
The Hyaenodon gigas was the size of a horse, with jaws as long as an alligator's, specially designed to tear away flesh. They had an acute sense of smell unmatched in the prehistoric world and weighed upwards of a quarter of a ton. They were swift, effective killing machines which traveled in packs and could, as a group, take down anything.
Remember the Velociraptor from Jurassic Park? Give it a sophisticated mammalian brain, warm blood and add a substantial amount of pure animal muscle and you have the Hyaenodon.
The Crappy Evolutionary Spin-off:
The fuzzy little raccoon. Despite its adorable eyes and overall cuteness, this animal doesn't have a lot going for it (though if it was domesticated it'd probably be more popular then dogs, what with their adorable little people-hands).
Far from being the dominant predator on Earth, wandering in vicious packs, raccoons spend their days as minor annoyances who tip over garbage cans. Rather then savaging the carcass of a fresh kill, raccoons hunt for that last bit of orange dust at the bottom of a discarded bag of Cheetos.
How the hell did that happen?
The Hyenadon lost the mammalian evolutionary arms race to larger, more merciless killing machines with more teeth and more muscle, slowly leaving behind only the ones small enough and smart (and cowardly) enough to hide. That's how in the game of evolution, the loser winds up extinct or reduced to stealing doormats.
Used to be ...
Looking at that picture you'll come to two conclusions: This was a huge, badass prehistoric bird thing, and that it was cursed with flamboyant red and blue feathers. Still, this gi-fucking-gantic carnivorous bird took no prisoners in the time period when the Mammalians were just starting to come into their own. This thing devoured our evolutionary predecessors with a hook-shaped beak that could crunch bone like pretzels, and was a couple of late-night eating binges away from wiping hairy, warm-blooded animals off of the Earth.
The Crappy Evolutionary Spin-off:
Essentially anything from the Avian order Struthioniformes is a descendant of this thing, which includes animals as menacing as the Kiwi and the Rhea.
The Rhea is known to frequently run into walls
If you want to hear about dramatic irony, because of human expansion all species of Kiwi and Rhea are endangered. Didn't catch that? The mammalians that their great, epic ancestor once crushed now are wiping what's left of it off of the natural playing field by building strip malls. Take that, assholes!
How the hell did that happen?
At the end of the day, the Gastornis just couldn't make babies as fast as the mammals, which reproduced and evolved faster then the Gastornis could keep up with. Eventually the mammalians overcame the threat and what Gastornis weren't promptly killed by the more numerous mammals were confined to the tropical jungles. This, however, proved to be a poor long-term strategy when a minor event known as the Ice Age upset a few ecosystems and forced them into extinction. The more adapted, furry mammals moved on, leaving this warm-weather flightless bird to die a cold, cold death.
One Gastornis descendant who seems to remember this is the Ostrich, which, at the sight of a human, will go right for the neck.
Used to be ...
Anyone who has seen 10,000 BC (and escaped with their IQ intact) knows about Smilodons. With eight-inch blade-like teeth, these cats were the top predators of the late Pliestocine, and were the last dominant predators before our ancestors came along. They traveled in packs, the sight of which would make our ancestors crap their pants from miles away.
And rightfully so--a pack of these 500-pound beasts would bring their prey to the ground, then unsheath the blades and, with a single coup d'gras, bite through the major blood vessels and the windpipe.
The Crappy Evolutionary Spin-off:
You're probably thinking tigers here, but actually marsupials are all that is left of the classic Sabre-Tooth Cat (the felines were another branch on the evolutionary tree) so, sadly, the closest genetic connection remains adorable Koala Bears, Kangaroos and Opossums. The most common of these is the Opossum, most often seen in their natural habitat (the local freeway) in their instinctive 'bloody smear along the road' stance.
Yes, confronted with powerful human engineering, most of what is left of Smilodons are crunchy speed bumps.
As part of "playing possum," opossums will frequently wear a fake cast on their leg to gain sympathy
How the hell did that happen?
Speaking of powerful human engineering, Homo sapiens have been using its superior brain to destroy the cats since we first met them. Dramatic climate change coupled with the growth of the human race spelled the end for these great predators. Their descendants, led by the Koala Bear, survived by evolving until they were simply too cute to kill.
Though there is one marsupial still holding its ground: the Tasmanian Devil. The usual response to a natural sighting of these godless killing machines tends to be "HOLY SHIT A TASMANIAN DEVIL LET'S GET THE HELL OUT OF HE-(screams of agony)." It feasts on the dead and dying and leaves nothing but crushed bone and echoes of blood-curdling screams in its path.
Some sample comments from that video:
"I know from experience these "cute rats" are not teddy bears in any form. They will leave you with many bloody stitches and infections if bitten."
"one is biting me as we speak"
"i wanna be a tasmanian devil only thing is they don't spin like the cartoons"
Hey, it's YouTube.








OMG the ostrich is trying to eat grownup Steve Irkel.
ReplyFainting goats are our fault, really. They have a genetic disorder - in the wild they'd be wiped out, but humans thought it was neat and selected for it.
ReplyOh, geez. Hyenadon is a Creodont, an order of mammals which shares a common ancestor with the order Carnivora, which contains raccoons but also lions, tigers, and bears. Gastornis is a member of the order Anseriformes, meaning it's related to ducks and the like. Smilodons are not even close to being marsupials. Entelodon and Andrewsarchus are more closely related to hippos than to pigs or goats. Where'd the author get this crap?
ReplyRaccoons may be cute, but you forget that they can be quite vicious.
ReplyThe bird thing looks like the thing you ride in Golden Axe.
Smilodons weren't marsupials, but there was a similar animal that was, as mentioned by others in the comments. Until 1936, the devil wasn't the most badass marsupial, it was the thylacine, though they were pretty much badass in looks only despite what was beleved about them at the time.
As for pigs, you forget it's wild variety, which can be as big as a small bear and filled with rage against all living things, instinctively going after your inner thigh so you bleed to death. Going by your description of the entelodont, it seems like it's modern form is an improvement.
Bahh, bull$h!t. Let me start from the beginning and work my way down. Hyenadon Gigas has NO modern decendants, it is as closely related to a Racoon as it is to A. angustidens, the largest and one of most badass land mammal to ever.
ReplyGastornis has no modern decendants either. 99% of apex predators DON'T evolve into smaller animals like the Kiwi.
Smilodont is just one example of this; this article has refereed to the base of mammalian ancestory, way back from the cretaceous (when dinosaurs were alive). We, humans are closer related to a Smilodont then a marsupial. Bears and Racoons are even closer related. Stupid. Also, Smilodon is too new to be able to have descendants. Stupid.
Megatherium is as closely related to modern slothes as we are to monkeys. Enough said.
Entelodont had no modern descendants.
Andrewsarchus has no modern relatives either. It is equally close to a Big Horn Sheep as it is to a goat. So yea, not a descendant
I have to say I'm finding it just a tad hard to be dissappointed these freaky-ass things are no longer with us. Otherwise we'd all be fucked.Especially number 1, that is the stuff of nightmares! :-O
ReplyTasmanian Devils are dying out from a form of face cancer. There are only a few colonies on the mainland which are free from it.
ReplyYou lose Devils.
Hey now, goats can be scary. If you've got food and they want it then watch out!
ReplyCoup de grâce, not coup d'gras. The biggest problem here is that you only ever use d-apostrophe in front of words that start with vowel sounds. "De" is used before consonant sounds.
ReplyWhat's worse, the Smilodon was part of the feline family, which marsupials do not come from, so your account of the evolution is wrong.
Smilodon was a placental North American mammal. Thylacosmilus was a sparassodont in what is now South America, related to marsupials (according to Wikipedia). It didn't become the opossum: it was a distant relative.
ReplyHumans have been ruined by evolution.
ReplyWe used to be vicious, blood-soaked, demented, murderous rapist beastmen. And now...well, just look at even the people on this site.
Quite a step down.
I'm would look at the people on this site but the last time i did so my eyes melted and soul caught on fire :/
No, were not "murderous rapist beastmen," and is that necessarily a bad thing? We can however build somthing like the ATOMIC-FUCKING-BOMB!!! So I say we definitely win over any other known species in the history of the planet. Our brains are more developed. So, we can build things like guns, swords, flails, shields, and, again, BOMBS, to totally obliterate any potential predators. Therefore we don't need things like giant heads full of teeth. We carry those in our pocket, and can throw them with an insane amount of force and accuracy.
Look at that pig. He thinks he's puppy. xD
Replyf**k that pig.
Mortimer, I believe this enforces your comment.
Smilodon is not a marsupial. WTF
ReplyThat's because it came before them.
EmmaObata is right, Smilodont's ONLY relation is one dating back to during the dinosaurs. It's not enough to count. Marsupials have been their own separate thing for millions of years, smilodont COULDN'T have been related.
So tl;dr humans, ice age, and predators destroying resources fucked these great beats over.
Replyg*******t that tiger wolf looking thing is fuckign amazing. And now its just an a*****e goat that rams you because it feels like it.
Im giving all my money to sceience to bring these bad ass mother fuckers back to life, because seriously thats bull shit.
"humans[...]destroying resources fucked these great beats over."
OWN THE f**k OUT OF EVERY SPECIES
I remember reading this for the first time and thinking, "Wow. Someone just finished Walking With Prehistoric Beasts."
ReplyWHY ARE ALL THE COMMENTS IN BOLD ITALICS?!
Replybecause the article is feeling Marioish today, that why!
also, it's an old article and they tend to act up.
The Bold/Italic closing tags in the coding of the article are missing or screwed up, that's all. :) Happens with a lot of the older articles, so I assume it was a coding change where everything was just run through some kind of "translator" between coding languages.
i have heard that a saying goes in China like this "Only one himself knows if the shoes match his feet or not“If u really love her /him ,nothing matters, let alone the age . I met my BF through Agedate*com. a nice place for younger women and older men, or older women and younger men, to interact with each other. he is 12 older than me ,but we think we did find the true love. BTW ,Ever feel that you would best enjoy someone who is not in your age group? If u are interested in it, maybe u wanna check it out or tell your friends.
ReplyThere's a reason why they call those tasmanian devils, devils.
ReplyIt's than you fool not then! As in more than not more then. Arghhhhhhhhhh! Rant Over
ReplyYour own grammar is far too lacking for you to try to correct that of someone else.
I sympathize, 88. He did it 3 different times and it annoyed the crap outta me. You'll find that the older articles on here are not so much on the proofreading.
Amazing, Cracked. The only two entries that are correct are for the pig and sloth. Everything else is so far off I'm not even sure where this writer got his material to begin with.
Replywhere is your evidence to back up your statement mr know it all