Back to Show
Eons
The Hellacious Lives of the "Hell Pigs"
Season 2
Episode 24
Despite the name, we don’t know where the so-called “hell pigs” belong in the mammalian family tree. They walked on hooves, like pigs do, but had longer legs, almost like deer. They had hunched backs, a bit like rhinos or bison. But as is often, if not always, the case, there is some evolutionary method to this anatomical madness.
Sign up now for inspiring and thought-provoking media delivered straight to your inbox.
Support Provided By

6:37
Diictodon used burrows to breed and a male parent may have stayed behind to feed it.

8:09
Large feline roamed Eurasia and Its fossils have been found across the continent.

9:05
Ants have been farming for 60 million years! We explore how, when and why they started.

7:56
Would it really be impossible for us to reconstruct their morphology?

7:02
Sour used to be the taste of danger. But, now its role has reversed.

6:52
This tiny, simple animal, the Myxozoans, evolved from something bigger and more complex.

7:50
Only a few million years ago, Hyenas lived very different lives from what we know today.

8:44
A truly enormous ichthyosaur reached its size within just a few million years.

8:50
The giant pterosaur's occupied the empty Hateg Island.

9:12
We learn why all mammals today, from humans to bats, have five fingers or fewer.

6:32
With evidence from from art, archaeology, and ancient DNA, we put together horses history.

8:52
Here's why teeth would go on to disappear in some groups of vertebrate.