Sick Earth may have caused mass extinctions, not asteroids
October 8th, 2008 - 1:38 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Oct 8 (ANI): Scientists have suggested that mass extinctions have happened in the Earths history because the planet got sick.
It is believed that asteroids are the reason behind cataclysmic events leading to mass die-off of life on the planet.
But, many geologists suggest that an asteroid is the prime suspect only in the most recent of five mass extinctions, the catastrophe 65 million years ago that wiped out the dinosaurs.
The other four have not been resolvable to a rock falling out of the sky, Bottjer said.
For example, Bottjer and many others have published studies suggesting that the end-Permian extinction 250 million years ago happened in essence because the earth got sick.
The latest research from Bottjers group suggests a similar slow dying during the extinction 200 million years ago at the boundary of the Triassic and Jurassic eras.
At the 2008 Joint Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of America, USC (University of Southern California) doctoral student Sarah Greene drew similarities between ocean conditions at the Triassic-Jurassic boundary and after the end-Permian extinction.
At both those times, bouquet-like structures of aragonite crystals formed on the ocean floor. Such structures are extremely rare in Earths history.
The fact that these deposits have only been found at these two specific times that are associated with mass extinction suggests at the very least that maybe theres some shared ocean geochemistry that could be related to the cause of the extinctions, Greene said.
The Triassic-Jurassic extinction cause is totally up for grabs at the moment, she added.
Also at the meeting, USC doctoral student Rowan Martindale presented results from her studies of coral reefs during the Triassic-Jurassic extinction.
The coral reefs look actually very similar to modern coral reefs, she said. At the end-Triassic mass extinction, you lose all your reef systems. And nobodys figured out why that is, she added.
Martindale identified two distinct types of ancient reefs: one dominated by coral and another consisting mainly of mud and debris, possibly held together by bacteria.
A theory for the end-Triassic extinction needs to explain how both types of reefs could have been killed off, according to Martindale.
Any knowledge about end-Triassic reef death could be useful in understanding the current reef crisis, widely attributed to climate change. (ANI)
- Fossil site in China offers clues to mass extinction recovery - Dec 23, 2010
- Global extinction was not a sudden event - Feb 05, 2012
- Corals, big mammals to go extinct in future catastrophic event? - Sep 03, 2010
- Fossil discovery of new strong-handed dinosaur to change past notions - Oct 08, 2010
- Massive volcanic eruption 'caused world's largest extinction' - Jan 24, 2011
- 10 coral species may vanish within 50 years - Jan 12, 2011
- Massive volcanic eruptions wiped out life on sea, land - Jan 24, 2011
- 250mn-year-old footprints discovered push back dino evolution by 9mn yrs - Oct 06, 2010
- Ancient global warming turned earth an inferno - Nov 18, 2011
- Alligators' breathing method may explain how dinos ruled the Earth - Jan 15, 2010
- Dino extinction event may have been caused by magnetic chaos - Dec 13, 2008
- Fossil haul shows life's recovery after near-extinction - Dec 23, 2010
- Giant fossils challenge "lilliput effect" in animals after greatest mass extinction - Feb 12, 2010
- Parrotfish play vital role in preserving coral reefs - Dec 12, 2011
- Carbon emissions speed up ocean acidification - Jan 23, 2012
Tags: 65 million years, aragonite crystals, cataclysmic events, coral reefs, doctoral student, earths history, eras, falling out of the sky, geochemistry, geological society of america, mass extinction, ocean conditions, ocean floor, permian extinction, prime suspect, reef systems, sarah greene, triassic, university of southern california, usc university