Historical Geology

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Transcript Historical Geology

The five largest mass extinctions in Earth's history occurred during:
1.The late Ordovician period (about 438 million years ago) - 100 families extinct - more than half of the bryozoan and
brachiopod species extinct.
2.The late Devonian (about 360 mya) - 30% of animal families extinct.
3. At the end of the Permian period (about 245 mya) - Trilobites go extinct. 50% of all animal families, 95% of all marine
species, and many trees die out.
4. The late Triassic (208 mya) - 35% of all animal families die out. Most early dinosaur families went extinct, and most
synapsids died out (except for the mammals).
5. At the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary (about 65 mya) - about half of all life forms died out, including the
dinosaurs , pterosaurs , plesiosaurs, mosasaurs, ammonites, many families of fishes, clams, snails, sponges, sea urchins
and many others.
Extinction Processes
1. Extinction strikes in both the land and the sea.
2. On the land, while animals suffer repeatedly, plants tend to be highly
resistant to mass extinctions.
3. Preferential disappearance of tropical forms of life during mass extinctions.
4. Tendency of certain groups of animals to experience them repeatedly
(for example, trilobites and ammonoids).
5. Alleged equal spacing, or periodicity in geological time (occurring about
every 26 million years).
These similarities between distinct extinction occurrences aid paleontologists
in determining the agents the agents that perpetuated the disappearances of species in each extincti
event. Such agents are currently divided into two types:
-Catastrophic Agents- such as meteorite impacts and comet showers,
-Earth Agents- such as volcanism, glaciation, variations in sea level, global
climatic changes, and changes in ocean levels of oxygen or salinity
-Combination of the two - could catastrophic agents trigger these earth agents?
Although these agents can explain mass extinction, the causes of mass extinction events remains
relatively unknown.
http://www.nexialinstitute.com/26.2%20MY%20mass_extinct.htm
Terrestrial Agents:
A.
Magnetic field switch
This theory believes that a switch in the Earth's magnetic field allowed an influx of deadly radiation. The problem with this theory is why wo
this have affected only the larger animals, and selectively at that? Sea creatures would also be unlikely to be affected, being partly shielded by
the water.
B. Climate change
This theory holds that changes in continent position killed dinosaurs by decreasing temperature. During the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods t
continents were separating and oceans opening, leading to cold and changeable conditions that dinosaurs could not adapt to, and that also
affected plankton and disrupted the food chain.
C. Volcanic activity
The idea here is that extreme volcanic activity caused huge dust clouds that blocked off much of the sun's heat and light for many months,
even years, leading to a dramatic drop in temperature in both land and sea and a decrease in photosynthetic activity in such organisms as
marine plankton and land plants. These organisms are at the base of the food chain, and any changes at their level are magnified repeatedly
as you go up the chain, with maximum effects at the top among the larger predators and herbivores.
D. Acid rain
Shells of microfossils show a sharp increase in strontium isotope ratios up to the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T ) boundary and then a slow decrea
afterwards. The strontium is derived from weathering of rocks, runs off into rivers and seas and is absorbed by the shells. The rapid increase is
interpreted as due to a dramatic increase in such weathering due to acid rain, and is much greater than could reasonably be explained by the impact
of a large meteorite. It could, however, be associated with increased volcanic activity.
Extraterrestrial Agents:
A.
Cosmic rays
This theory maintains that cosmic rays from an exploding star caused mutations or killed the animals outright. The question must be asked
- Why were these mutation effects so selective? Why were all organisms not affected? A further problem with this idea is that no supernova
is known from the right time period.
B.Meteor impact
In this theory a 10Km diameter meteor hit the Earth. Such a meteor has more explosive power than all current nuclear weapons combined,
and would punch a hole and lift 10,000 cubic kilometers of dust into the air, darkening the sky for months and causing temperatures to drop
from 20 to -10 degrees centigrade. Evidence produced in favour of this theory rests largely on a thin layer of clay deposited world wide at the
end of the Cretaceous period that contained unusually high levels of iridium. Iridium is an element once present in the earth's crust. However,
even at the time of the dinosaurs most terrestrial iridium had long since sunk into the molten core of the earth, and little remained in the crust.
Meteorites are relatively rich in iridium and associated metals, and many also contain minute diamonds fractions of micrometers in diameter
that are also found in large numbers in the K/T boundary clay.
http://www.isgs.uiuc.edu/faq/dino-faqs/pdq201-b.html
http://www4.tpg.com.au/users/tps-seti/crater.html
Extinctions-flood basalts
http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/template.cfm?name=fbasalts
Global Climatic Cycles in Geologic Time
from L E Waite (2002), modified from Fischer (1984)
Coral/Algal Extinctions
from L E Waite (2002)
Temperature change last 2000 years
http://dels.nas.edu/dels/rpt_briefs/Surface_Temps_final.pdf
Temperature change @ different time scales…
Glacial and
Interglacial Periods
http://dels.nas.edu/basc/Climate-LOW.pdf