[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Shocking Video Shows Ukrainian Refugee Fatally Stabbed On Charlotte Train By Career Criminal

Man Identifies as Cat to Cop

his video made her stop consuming sugar.

Shot And Bothered - Restored Classic Coyote & Road Runner Looney Tunes Cartoon 1966

How to Prove the Holocaust is a Hoax in Under 2 Minutes

..And The Legacy Media Wonders Why Nobody Trusts Them

"The Time For Real Change Is Now!" - Conor McGregor Urges Irish To Lobby Councillors For Presidential Bid

Daniela Cambone: Danger Not Seen in 40+ Years

Tucker Carlson: Whistleblower Exposes the Real Puppet Masters Controlling the State Department

Democrat nominee for NJ Governor, says that she will push an LGBTQ agenda in schools and WILL NOT allow parents to opt out.

Holy SH*T, America's blood supply is tainted with mRNA

Thomas Massie's America First : A Documentary by Tom Woods & Dan Smotz

Kenvue Craters On Report RFK Jr To Link Autism To Tylenol Use In Pregnancy

All 76 weapons at China 2025 military parade explained. 47 are brand new.

Chef: Strategy for Salting Steaks

'Dangerous' Chagas disease confirmed in California, raising concerns for Bay Area

MICROPLASTICS ARE LINKED TO HEART DISEASE; HERE'S HOW TO LOWER YOUR RISK

This Scholar PREDICTED the COLLAPSE of America 700 years ago

I Got ChatGPT To Admit Its Antichrist Purpose

"The CIA is inside Venezuela right now" Col Macgregor says regime change is coming

Caroline Kennedy’s son, Jack Schlossberg, mulling a run.

Florida Surgeon General Nukes ALL School Vaxx Mandates, Likens Them to Slavery

Doc on High Protein Diet. Try for more plant based protein.

ICE EMPTIES Amazon Warehouse… Prime Orders HALTED as ‘Migrant Workforce’ REMOVED

Trump to ask SCOTUS to reverse E. Jean Carroll sex-abuse verdict

Wary Of Gasoline Shortage, California Pauses Price-Gouging Penalty On Oil Companies

Jewish activist Barbara Lerner Spectre calls for the destruction of European

The Democrats Are Literally Making Stuff Up!

Turn Dead Dirt Into Living Soil With IMO 4

Michael Knowles: Trump & Israel, Candace Owens, and Why Christianity Is Booming Despite the Attacks


Science/Tech
See other Science/Tech Articles

Title: The dinosaurs were already doomed long before the meteorite hit, scientists find
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.sciencealert.com/the-din ... d-long-before-the-asteroid-hit
Published: Apr 19, 2016
Author: FIONA MACDONALD
Post Date: 2016-04-19 00:52:30 by Tatarewicz
Keywords: None
Views: 329
Comments: 3

ScienceAlert...

A new study has revealed that certain dinosaur species were in decline millions of years before the meteorite that's credited for wiping most of them out smashed into Earth.

That's a pretty huge deal, because the results could finally put an end to one of the longest-running debates in palaeontology, and help us understand once and for all what happened in the final years of the non-avian dinosaurs on Earth.

"One of the things that has been long debated about dinosaur evolution is whether they were reigning strong right up until the time of the meteorite impact, or whether there was a slow, gradual decrease in [the emergence of new species] or an increase in extinction before that time," one of the researchers, Chris Venditti, from the University of Reading in the UK, told The Guardian.

To figure out what happened, Venditti and his team used statistical analysis and fossil record data to create a family tree of the three main types of dinosaurs: the ornithischians (beaked herbivores), theropods (carnivores such as T. rex), and sauropods (long-necked plant-eaters).

They found that while dinosaurs began to flourish during the late Triassic period around 220 million years ago, certain species began dying off faster than they could be replaced around 100 million years later.

That's tens of millions of years before the 9.6-km Chicxulub meteorite hit Earth.

Prior to this research, many scientists thought that dinosaurs had been flourishing up until then. But this study suggests that the group was actually in a long-term decline - and that could have been what made them so susceptible to being wiped out.

"While the asteroid impact is still the prime candidate for the dinosaurs' final disappearance, it is clear that they were already past their prime in an evolutionary sense," said lead researcher Manabu Sakamoto, from the University of Reading.

"Our work is ground-breaking in that, once again, it will change our understanding of the fate of these mighty creatures. While a sudden apocalypse may have been the final nail in the coffin, something else had already been preventing dinosaurs from evolving new species as fast as old species were dying out," he added.

What scientists think right now is that when the Chicxulub meteorite hit Earth 66 million years ago, it threw millions of tonnes of dust up into the atmosphere, blocking the Sun's rays and causing short-term cooling and widespread plant die-off.

But while the majority of the dinosaurs couldn't survive those changes, other species, such as the mammals, managed to eventually bounce back.

The team suggests that the weakening dominance of the dinosaurs before the impact could have given mammals the edge to endure the asteroid impact.

"The decline of the dinosaurs would have left plenty of room for mammals, the group of species which humans are a member of, to flourish before the impact, priming them to replace dinosaurs as the dominant animals on earth," said Venditti.

The study can also help us predict groups of animals alive today that will be particularly vulnerable to extinction - namely those that are losing species faster than they can replace them. "This has huge implications for our current and future biodiversity, given the unprecedented speed at which species are going extinct owing to the ongoing human-caused climate change," said Sakamoto.

But there's still one question that everyone's dying to know: does this study mean that dinosaurs would have gone extinct anyway, regardless of the meteorite?

"If they continued on that trajectory, even if that meteor didn’t hit, they may well have been very species-poor in some millions of years or even have gone extinct all together," Venditti told The Guardian.

But palaeontologist Stephen Brusatte from the University of Edinburgh doesn't agree.

"It may be that the effects of the asteroid were a bit worse because you had dinosaurs that maybe weren’t as strong in an evolutionary sense as they once had been," he said. "But I think if there was no asteroid you would still have dinosaurs around today."

The research has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Read these next:

Scientists are about to drill into the dinosaur-killing impact crater for the first time Scientists have grown 'dinosaur legs' on a chicken for the first time The origins of malaria have been traced to the age of the dinosaurs

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

I just rang up Stephen Hawking. He says the dinos evolved into the monkeys that became us.

Ted Crudz: The Mask of Sincerity

NeoconsNailed  posted on  2016-04-19   1:37:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Tatarewicz (#0)

the ornithischians (beaked herbivores), theropods (carnivores such as T. rex), and sauropods (long-necked plant-eaters).

They still live and right now are breakfasting at your bird feeder.

Ada  posted on  2016-04-19   6:55:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Ada (#2)

Pic's & back story here.

Scientists have grown 'dinosaur legs' on a chicken for the first time

"If ignorance is truly bliss, then why do so many Americans need Prozac?" - Dave McGowan

randge  posted on  2016-04-19   9:35:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]