Scientists reach a consensus on what killed the Dinosaurs!

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I read this book crazy book where this guy theorized dinosaurs evolved an advanced civilization (Atlantis) at the end of Cretaceous which was destroyed by their own bombs and moved underground with their UFO's which they continue to use to this day. Somehow human males' lack of a penis bone was evidence of this.

mandible corrective (latebloomer), Saturday, 6 March 2010 19:06 (fourteen years ago) link

not all of us lack the historic penis bone.

Cunga, Saturday, 6 March 2010 19:42 (fourteen years ago) link

seriously what are the odds of this happening again?

by another name (amateurist), Monday, 8 March 2010 09:20 (fourteen years ago) link

giant asteroid, i mean, not dinosaurs.

by another name (amateurist), Monday, 8 March 2010 09:20 (fourteen years ago) link

I thought you meant a funny achewood strip OH SNAP

noted schloar (dyao), Monday, 8 March 2010 09:24 (fourteen years ago) link

LOL

bracken free ditch (Ste), Monday, 8 March 2010 13:24 (fourteen years ago) link

None of the other major mass extinctions from the last 540 million years are associated with signatures of asteroid impact like widespread shocked quartz ejecta or iridium spikes. The end-Cretaceous extinction event was by no means the most destructive, its just the last spike on this graph the fraction of genera going extinct at any given time.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/06/Extinction_intensity.svg/400px-Extinction_intensity.svg.png

I'm impressed instead by the theory that most mass extinctions are climate events initiated by flood basalts and massive C02 injections. Subsequent effects include catastrophic global warming, liberation of seabed methanes, ocean stratification, anoxia and photic-zone euxinia (permitting sulfur-reducing bacteria to live near surface), releases of H2S, destruction of the ozone layer, and massive dieoff of land genera, and tremendous erosion. More or less in that order. Peter Ward summarizes this here, and there's increasing evidence from molecular biomarkers like isorenieratene, which is only produced in extinction scenarios like this one.

So, the chance that all of your descendants will die in an asteroid impact seems to be less than thought a decade ago, when paleontologists and geologists were busy scouring all mass extinction horizons for signs of impacts. No, the fruits of life will die in a slower, more insidious and painful manner.

Derelict, Monday, 8 March 2010 16:30 (fourteen years ago) link

ah, well then. i can go back to work.

by another name (amateurist), Monday, 8 March 2010 17:04 (fourteen years ago) link

http://www.aintitcool.com/images2007/chaka.gif

am0n, Monday, 8 March 2010 17:11 (fourteen years ago) link


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