mass extinction
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
mass extinction the extinction of a large percentage of the earth's species, opening ecological niches for other species to fill. There have been at least ten such events. The five greatest were those of the final Ordovician period (approximately 435 million years ago), the late Devonian period (357 million years ago), the final Permian period (250 million years ago), the late Triassic period (198 million years ago), and the final Cretaceous period (65 million years ago). The most devastating was that at the end of the Permian period, when an estimated 95% of marine species and 8 of 27 insect orders were lost. The best-known mass extinction is that at the end of the Cretaceous period, when the dinosaurs and many other plants and animals disappeared and up to 75% of all marine genera were lost. The most recent mass extinction was that of the late Eocene epoch , approximately 54 million years ago. Understanding and definition of these events have changed rapidly as information from more and more complete fossil samplings is compiled in larger and more comprehensive databases and as computer modeling of such events becomes more sophisticated. For example, studies of the geologic record released in 2007 found that such conditions as an increase in carbon dioxide (and a decrease in oxygen) in the air and a warming of the water in tropical seas are generally associated with mass extinctions.
Theories regarding the causes of mass extinctions abound and are the subject of intense study and debate. In general it is believed that the extinctions resulted from drastic environmental changes that followed events such as meteorite or comet impacts or massive volcanic eruptions. For example, the final Permian extinctions have been linked to huge volcanic eruptions in what is now Siberia. These eruptions, which continued for up to 800,000 years (a relatively short period of time by geological standards), spewed out dust and droplets that blocked the sun, causing global cooling that trapped sea water in the polar ice caps. The levels of inland seas and oceans lowered significantly, eliminating or changing marine habitats. Alternatively, it has been suggested that carbon dioxide and other gases released by the volcanic eruptions may have raised temperatures by 20-50°F (10-30°C) in an extreme greenhouse effect and disrupted ocean circulation patterns, or that the gases produced acid rain and depleted the ozone layer, creating conditions inhospitable to many species. Other theorized causes for the Permian extinctions include the effects of the breakup of the supercontinent Pangaea (which include the huge volcanic eruptions), a large meteor impact, and a supernova that exploded near enough to the earth to bathe it in radioactivity that destroyed the ozone layer.
The most popular theory of the final Cretaceous extinction is that one or more asteroids or comets hit the earth, lifting massive amounts of debris and sulfur in the air and blocking the sunlight from reaching the earth's surface. In 1980 Walter Alvarez of the Univ. of California at Berkeley found a layer of iridium in sediments that dated from the time of the final Cretaceous extinction. Iridium is rare on earth, but is concentrated in meteors and comets. In 1991 the Chicxulub crater was discovered on the Yucatán peninsula in Mexico. Some 180 km (112 mi) wide, it is wide enough to have been created by the 10-km (6-mi) diameter asteroid thought necessary to cause the environmental upheaval required to precipitate a mass extinction. Large amounts of sulfur found in the Chicxulub soil lend credence to the hypothesis that sulfuric acid dispersed into the atmosphere after the collision creating a dense haze that could have cooled the earth by 20 to 30°F (10-17°C). Some scientists believe global wildfires that incinerated as much as one quarter of the earth's vegetation followed the impact. There is also evidence of other asteroid collisions at about the same time.
Another theory concerning the cause of the final Cretaceous extinction is that it resulted from the huge volcanic eruptions that created the lava flows of the Deccan Traps in what is now India. One model has put these theories together (both for the Permian and Cretaceous extinctions), hypothesizing that shock waves from the impact of a large asteroid moved through the earth, shaking the earth's crust and triggering or intensifying the volcanic events.
In addition to eradicating large percentages of both land and sea creatures, mass extinctions also opened new ecological niches, permitting surviving species to thrive in new habitats and encouraging diversity. The extinctions, however, did not conform to the usual evolutionary rules regarding who survives; the only factor that appears to have improved a family of organisms' chance of survival was widespread geographic colonization at the time of the event.
Author not available, MASS EXTINCTION.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Mass extinctions and macroevolution
Paleobiology; 1/1/2005; Jablonski, David; 13222 words;
Abstract.-Mass extinctions are important to macroevolution ... background extinction and the major mass extinctions. In any case, the failure of many ... traits to predict survivorship during mass extinctions is a more important challenge to ...
|
|
On the continuity of background and mass extinction
Paleobiology; 10/1/2003; Wang, Steve C; 6213 words;
Abstract.-Do mass extinctions grade continuously into the background ... quantitative characteristics of mass extinctions (such as metrics of extinction ... with background extinctions. If mass extinctions are outliers, or are separated ...
|
|
Origination, extinction, and mass depletions of marine diversity
Paleobiology; 10/1/2004; Bambach, Richard K; Knoll, Andrew H; Wang, Steve C; 10682 words;
... big five" global intervals of mass extinction. Plotted by magnitude, extinction ... five traditionally recognized mass extinctions located in the upper tail. Plotted ... qualify as globally distinct mass extinctions. Each of the three has a unique ...
|
|
Bone of contention: palaeontologists disagree on whether meteorites or volcanic eruptions caused mass extinctions. The good news is, starting them is not easy.(Mass extinction)
Chemistry and Industry; 11/20/2006; Evans, Jon; 1393 words;
Rather worryingly, mass extinctions seem to have occurred fairly ... the Earth has experienced 27 mass extinction events, where a large number ... affected, but five were major mass extinctions that decimated all forms of ...
|
|
DIVERSITY AND DISTRIBUTION OF TRIASSIC BRYOZOANS IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE END-PERMIAN MASS EXTINCTION
Journal of Paleontology; 3/1/2008; Powers, Catherine M; Pachut, Joseph F; 7755 words;
... the aftermath of the extinction was unusual in that it ... the survivors of the extinction. The Early Triassic is ... Erwin and Pan, 1996). An extinction event followed near/at ... 1991). The end-Triassic extinction.-The end-Triassic extinction is marked by the disappearance ... Beauvais, 1984) ... .
|
|
Geographic variation in turnover and recovery from the Late Ordovician mass extinction
Paleobiology; 7/1/2007; Krug, Andrew Z; Patzkowsky, Mark E; 11494 words;
... these databases that mass extinctions were recognized and ... ecological impacts of both mass extinctions and their subsequent ... Miller and Mao 1998)/ extinctions (Shen and Shi 2002 ... evolutionary roles of mass extinctions are to be understood ... diversity, origination, and ...
|
|
Why Britain's disappearing butterflies may be early victims of the sixth mass extinction.(News)
The Independent (London, England); 3/19/2004; Connor, Steve; 1102 words;
... evidence yet that we are on the verge of a mass extinction of global wildlife - the sixth mass extinction in the history of life on Earth. Scientists ... provides tentative support of the sixth mass extinction event, he added. In 1999, Lord May of ...
|
|
Improved confidence intervals for estimating the position of a mass extinction boundary
Paleobiology; 1/1/2004; Wang, Steve C; Marshall, Charles R; 6488 words;
... extinct simultaneously in a mass extinction event, their last occurrences ... stratigraphic position of a simultaneous mass extinction boundary, taking into account ... the position of a hypothesized mass extinction boundary. Using Strauss and ...
|
|
Catastrophes and lesser calamities: the causes of mass extinction.(researched by Tony Hallam)
Chemistry and Industry; 3/6/2006; Thompson, Robert; 1250 words;
... lesser calamities: the causes of mass extinction Tony Hallam We have seen the ... earth scientists who study such mass extinctions by tracking the fossil records ... evidence for both major and minor mass extinctions, and the causes that various ...
|
|
The geochronology of large igneous provinces, terrestrial impact craters, and their relationship to mass extinctions on Earth
Journal of the Geological Society; 9/1/2007; Kelley, Simon; 13131 words;
... catastrophic events and sudden mass extinctions on Earth has attracted a great ... crater formation and ages of mass extinctions is related as much to crater ... either LIPs or HVIs and global mass extinctions of life on Earth. However, there ...
|
|
Distinctions between extinctions. (differences between background and mass extinctions)
Science News; 2/1/1986; 320 words;
... relatively brief and rare episodes of mass extinction that punctuate the history of ... the chances of survival during mass extinctions. Currently evolutionary theory ... scientists have assumed that mass extinctions simply accelerate or emphasize ...
|
|
Rolling over the ocean. (mass extinction research)
The Economist (US); 11/16/1991; 1055 words;
A MASS extinction is not that spectacular ... scientists think about mass extinctions. Some embraced the idea ... though, it looks as if other mass extinctions also struck like bolts ... discovered the cause of a mass extinction involving more prosaic ... dwellers, underwent their ...
|
|
Michael J. Benton. 2003. When Life Nearly Died: the Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time.(Book Review)
International Journal of Humanities and Peace; 1/1/2003; Belle, Sarah; 900 words;
... Life Nearly Died: The Greatest Mass Extinction of All Time. Thames and Hudson ... IMPACTS, snowball earth, sudden mass extinctions--earth scientists today seriously ... Benton's special interest is the mass extinction at the end of the Permian period ...
|
|
Experts warn of mass extinction of wildlife
New Straits Times; 4/11/2004; Sarah Sabaratnam; 776 words;
... Times 04-11-2004 Experts warn of mass extinction of wildlife Byline: Sarah Sabaratnam ... the prime cause of the latest mass extinction, according to scientists. The ... Malaysia, he said. Unlike previous mass extinctions caused by meteorite collisions ...
|
|
Groups surviving mass extinction still go bust. ((Evolution's Death Row).(Brief Article)
Science News; 6/15/2002; Cobb, K.; 535 words;
... persist through major extinction events only to die off ... and casualties of these mass-extinction events (SN: 2/24/01, p ... Cretaceous-Tertiary, or K-T, extinction, which wiped out the dinosaurs ... the recovery phase of a mass extinction. His results, presented ... Jablonski compared ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
|
|