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Uploaded by on Dec 22, 2009

Giovanni Ribisi discusses his role as Parker Selfridge in James Cameron's new epic film, Avatar. Now playing in theaters worldwide.

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Film & Animation

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  • "Did you see that"

    "Yes, sir"

    "No you didn't, you were looking at the monitor!" lol

  • I am soo sick of these so called "free" movie streaming sites.

    THERE NOT FREE!!!!!

    you have to fill out some damn survey to get to unlock the site where you have to subcribe to something for 20 bucks a month on your phone and when you do sign up you end up in a never ending cycle of so called "free" offers

    DON'T DO IT PEOPLE, IT'S A SCAM!!!!!!!

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  • @bassplaya1549 J'adore ce passage ! ;)

  • @thelittlemind No, there's plenty of evidence. There were far more species living at that time than just Mammoths. Such enormous extinction events does not occur during warming periods. The introduction of new species into an ecosystem however can change it very drastically, and Humans was a new addition to the American ecology at the time, and they multiplied and spread across the continent very quickly.

  • @Cordar i understand that. but they dont have prrof that it did or didnt.... because they never had anything to compare it too.. u see my point

  • @thelittlemind Tell that to the paleontologists, they studied the fossils quite thoroughly, particularly the growth rings in the Mammoth skeleton's tusks.

  • @Cordar not to burst your bubble but theres no way u know that an animal died from dehydration especially from that time period

  • @thelittlemind Actually, according to later studies of the Mammoth's remains and pleistocene by paleontologists, there were very little indication they suffered from dehydration. A warmer climate having killed off the majority of America's megafauna are considered by scientists as extremely unlikely. Since never in other recorded warming up periods after previous ice ages have there been even remotely similar extinction events.

  • @Cordar right so when was the last time u seen a person wearing a winter coat during the summer? the animals were built for winter not heat sooo they would die from dehydration

  • @thelittlemind Overlooking the fact that the mass extinction of most of America's megafauna happened at the time after Humans arrived at the continent is pure idiocy. We are talking about animal species that have existed for up to several million years, that included many environmental changes. Only to suddenly die off merely because of increased heat? You gotta be joking.

  • @Cordar NOTHING points to the humans being the main cause only one of the causes... and if ur telling me this then from what i understand is that a mammoth died in arizona cause of human hunting and not from heat...

  • @thelittlemind You overlook that most of those species have survived previous ice ages and climate changes in the past and thus there is no way that they could not have survived another one. You have to note that the pleistocene mass extinction occurred AFTER Humans arrived at the American continent, not before. There have been many theories, but most of the evidence points towards Humans as the primary cause.

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