Dinosaur Extinction Theory

ELKCHSR

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I just wanted to toss this out there so that it helps to show that no matter what we do, ( Disclaimer: I don't condone every thing Man does! )
and yes I understand this happened quite a while ago, but it is just to show that this earth is a lot more resilient than we give credit for, can rebound from what ever forces seem to buffet her. This one lasted thousands of years so the story/theory goes. I would also suspect that it had a little to do directly with what the weather was about for the time leangth stated, and the Earth still came out of it. Yes it is longer than you or I would want to see it, but if it weren't for the true scientists slowly plugging away at the facts instead of jumping to conclusions on half baked theories and then crying the sky is falling as some are apt to do...

Fossil Evidence Backs

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fossil plankton dating from 65 million years ago helps confirm the theory that a dark winter lasting many thousands of years doomed the dinosaurs, researchers said on Wednesday.

Many experts believe that an asteroid struck the Earth back then and kicked up dust that obscured the sun, and that the impact also set off volcanic eruptions that disrupted the climate for centuries.


These changes forced many species into extinction, including the dinosaurs. The ancestors of today's mammals survived to later emerge and fill the empty niches left by their former rivals and predators.


Evidence of a giant crater dating back to around the right time has been found in what is now Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula area.


Writing in the journal Geology, a team of scientists, led by Simone Galeotti of the University of Urbino in Italy and Henk Brinkhuis of the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, said a Tunisian site called El Kef had now yielded evidence of the sudden cooling that would have followed.


The evidence comes in the form of small, cold-loving ocean organisms called dinoflagellates and benthic formanifera. They seem to have appeared suddenly in an ancient sea that had previously been very warm, said Matthew Huber of Indiana's Purdue University, who worked on the study.


"The fossils indicate that something suddenly made the water cold enough to support these tiny critters," Huber said in a statement.


"We theorize that the meteor strike produced huge quantities of sulfate particles, such as are often blown high into the atmosphere during a volcanic eruption, and these particles shielded the Earth's surface from sunlight. The decrease in solar energy ultimately caused a long cold spell, called an 'impact winter,' that persisted for years."


Huber, an assistant professor of earth and atmospheric sciences, said this was the first time anyone had found fossil evidence of the cooling, although there has been geologic evidence.


The findings can also help experts understand today's climate changes, said Huber.


"This discovery, which certainly has relevance to theories about dinosaur extinction, is also significant because it confirms our computer models of the Earth's climate -- they predict that the climate would respond in this way under the circumstances."
 

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