Canada Kicks Ass
Ancient Finned Predator Feasted on Sharks

REPLY



Newsbot @ Thu Oct 23, 2014 2:07 pm

Title: Ancient Finned Predator Feasted on Sharks
Category: Science
Posted By: N_Fiddledog
Date: 2014-10-23 13:59:36
Canadian

   



N_Fiddledog @ Thu Oct 23, 2014 2:07 pm

The link didn't work there.

Try this one.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/ancient-finne ... 47571.html

   



N_Fiddledog @ Thu Oct 23, 2014 2:17 pm

It's part of a larger story anyway.

There was a big conference of the world's Geologists this weekend in Vancouver.

http://www.sciencecodex.com/geologists_ ... sea-143552

There was lots of fascinating stuff discussed. They were really interested in extinction events.

Have we missed a mass extinction? Extra catastrophic event may have occurred 8 million years before the ‘Great Dying’, claim experts

$1:
According to the history books, five mass extinctions have devastated the planet since it formed 4.6 billion years ago.

But history may have to be rewritten after the discovery of fossils that point to a sixth mass extinction taking place 260 million years ago.


Swimming Mammoths Beat Humans to California

$1:
Most researchers blame either the Earth's warming climate or the arrival of humans on the islands for the mammoth's demise, he said.

But pygmy mammoths likely survived a steamier, more severe climate swing about 125,000 years ago. "This new find suggests they had to have lived during a period even warmer than the present," Muhs told Live Science.


Questioning the Impact Theory: What Really Killed the Dinosaurs?

$1:
Doubters of the Alvarez hypothesis don’t question the ‘smoking gun’ evidence that an impact happened near the end of the Cretaceous, but they don’t think it was the main cause of the extinctions.


The invisible extinction

$1:
When Roy Plotnick thinks about species going extinct, he tries to envision how that might look to a scientist millions of years from now. Plotnick, a palaeontologist at the University of Illinois at Chicago, has launched an unusual thought experiment to consider whether animals that vanish today might never be represented in the future fossil record. He calls it the 'invisible extinction'.

Plotnick sat down with Nature this week at a Geological Society of America meeting in Vancouver, Canada, where he put these ideas forward.


and so on...

   



REPLY