Posted on 11/25/2006 3:34:53 PM PST by SunkenCiv
The earth experienced its biggest mass extinction about 250 million years ago, an event that wiped out an estimated 95% of marine species and 70% of land species. New research shows that this mass extinction did more than eliminate species: it fundamentally changed the basic ecology of the world's oceans... Specifically, the data and analyses concern models of relative abundance found in fossil communities throughout the Phanerozoic. The ecological implications are striking. Simple marine ecosystems suggest that bottom-dwelling organisms partitioned their resources similarly. Complex marine ecosystems suggest that interactions among different species, as well as a greater variety of ways of life, affected abundance distributions. Prior to the end-Permian mass extinction, both types of marine ecosystems (complex and simple) were equally common. After the mass extinction, however, the complex communities outnumbered the simple communities nearly 3:1.
(Excerpt) Read more at physorg.com ...
It's quite a coincidence that there is evidence for both impact and volcanism as the cause for at least two of the major mass extinctions (K-T and P-Tr), or is it?
It's not? So, howcome you capitalized it? ;o)
Nova on PBS blamed the extinction on global warming caused by volcanic CO2.Of course -- the global warming demagogues and "Sixth Extinction" demagogues are trying to sell it because they're trying to sell their political agenda. I appreciate what you're saying though:
It's quite a coincidence that there is evidence for both impact and volcanism as the cause for at least two of the major mass extinctions (K-T and P-Tr), or is it?There really isn't any evidence for massive volcanism at the boundaries, but if there were (and it is often said that there is, such as on that NOVA program), what could have caused it just at those times when mass extinction occurs?
I have yet to hear of a reason for the sudden appearance (concurrent with formation the Snake River Basalt) of what is now the Yellowstone Hot Spot some 17mya, other than an impactor.
I don't doubt that local volcanism might result from impact, but not worldwide volcanism. :') I just cone accept that. [rimshot!] Magma told me there'd be days like these. [rimshot!]
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1743929/posts?page=3#3
"He asserted that he has found evidence -- in the form of gravity anomalies and certain rock deposits -- for such an impact in the South Atlantic, in an area where, many scientists believe, South America, Africa, and other land masses fit together in the primordial supercontinent called Gondwanaland. Rampino claims that the gradual breakup of Gondwanaland into present-day continents may have been initiated by the catastrophic impact."
"Broken window" theory does not work in economics, but apparently *can* work in ecosystems.
I have some guesses why, I'd like to get your take on it.
Cheers!
"Thus, when a very unobtrusive Oxford man named John Boulnois wrote in a very unreadable review called the Natural Philosophy Quarterly a series of articles on alleged weak points in Darwinian evolution, it fluttered no corner of the English papers; though Boulnoiss theory (which was that of a comparatively stationary universe visited occasionally by convulsions of change) had some rather faddy fashionableness at Oxford, and got so far as to be named Catastrophism."
Cheers!
Bush's fault!!!
Wow, they were actually able to determine this due to what was found in fossil communities throughout the Phanerozoic. Amazing.
Ive never been a Phanerozoic, but I still tune in. ;')
Chesterton was an adult convert to Catholicism and an ardent anti-evolutionist ;-)
Odd that you should call Gould's punk-eek "spin-doctoring"; I thought it was a fairly well-supported description of discontinuties in the rate of mutations and/or speciation.
...and as such, might cause problems with a simplified 'DNA clock' method of dating things. :-)
Cheers!
...and as such, might cause problems with a simplified 'DNA clock' method of dating things.Well put.
Evolutionary Dynamics: Models of ExtinctionExtinction has played an important role in the development of life on the Earth... It is important first to understand the nature of extinction in the fossil record, before one can undertake any modeling efforts to try to explain that extinction. In recent years a number of claims have been made about apparent trends in the fossil record of extinction which might point to interesting underlying dynamical processes in the biosphere. Stuart Kauffman (biology, Bios, SFI External Faculty), for example, has argued that the distribution of the sizes of extinction events approximately follows a power-law form, taken by some to be indicative of criticality in the processes giving rise to extinction. Sneppen et al. have suggested that the distribution of the lifetimes of genera may also be a power law, and Ricard Sole (ecology, Barcelona, SFI External Faculty) et al. have presented evidence that the power spectrum of extinction intensity during the Phanerozoic has a 1/f form.
Gunther Eble, Smithsonian Institution, SFI Postdoctoral Fellow
Mark Newman, SFI Research Professor
Kim Sneppen, Niels Bohr Institute
Per Bak, NORDITA, SFI External Faculty
David Raup, Palentology, University of Chicago (Retired), SFI Science Board
Simon Levin, Ecology, Princeton, SFI Science Board
Power Spectra of Extinction in the Fossil RecordAbstract: Recent Fourier analyses of fossil extinction data have indicated that the power spectrum of extinction during the Phanerozoic may take the form of 1/f noise, a result which, it has been suggested, could be indicative of the presence of "critical dynamics" in the processes giving rise to extinction. In this paper we examine extinction power spectra in some detail, using family-level data from a variety of different sources. We find that although the average form of the power spectrum roughly obeys the 1/f law, the spectrum can be represented more accurately by dividing it into two regimes: a low-frequency one which is well fit by an exponential, and a high-frequency one in which it follows a power law with a 1/f2 form. We give explanations for the occurrence of each of thse behaviours and for the position of the cross-over between them.
M. E. J. Newman and Gunther J. Eble
1998-12
I was on hiatus from FR but am now putting my head back underwater so to speak; but only for a short time.
Cheers!
Never gonna happen until we round up and hang the global warming demagogues and other single party state advocates.
The evo-crevo wars get lots of attention these days, but I'm convinced the advance of junk science in aid of political liberalism is doing serious damage to the reputation of science and scientists among lay people.
Sounds like a lab experiment ended and a new one began.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.