Frightening study-"We are now entering the sixth great mass
Discussion
... extinction event."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3320...
Not a single event but rather a series that run together to lead to gradual species extinction..
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3320...
Not a single event but rather a series that run together to lead to gradual species extinction..
Mojocvh said:
... extinction event."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3320...
Not a single event but rather a series that run together to lead to gradual species extinction..
Those extinctions leave room for new species, maybe more interesting ones.http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-3320...
Not a single event but rather a series that run together to lead to gradual species extinction..
I'm still waiting for a comet to wipe us out, global warming to drown us all, SARS to kill us all, Ebola to make my eyes bleed and on and on.
Stop fretting.
It reminds me so much of this
http://www.anorak.co.uk/288298/scare-stories/the-d...
Stop fretting.
It reminds me so much of this
http://www.anorak.co.uk/288298/scare-stories/the-d...
Apparently one of the authors is Paul Ehrlich. A post in the Climate Politics thread reminded me that this is the Ehrlich who forecast in 1971 that England would not exist in the year 2000 due to environmental catastroophe besetting the UK. That, and other crystal ball failures, are here; nothing similar seems to be available at The Guardian or The Independent websites.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/12/30/botched-...
Extinction is one natural endpoint of evolution.
http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2010/12/30/botched-...
Extinction is one natural endpoint of evolution.
Moonhawk said:
Simpo Two said:
More room for us I say. Huzzah!
Unless we are one of the species to go extinct. In the grand scheme of things - we haven't been around all that long. There are species that were around for a lot longer than we have been - but which still went extinct.
What event - apart from plantary destruction before we've figured to how to get to Mars - do you think would cause every breeding pair of H. sapiens to die out?
Remember, even if 99.9% of the human population dies from some new disease, there will still be 7,000,000 left.
Moonhawk said:
Unless we are one of the species to go extinct.
In the grand scheme of things - we haven't been around all that long. There are species that were around for a lot longer than we have been - but which still went extinct.
To illustrate just how incomprehensibly long dinosaurs were around for, I once read that a Tyrannosaurus Rex was closer to seeing a Justin Bieber concert than he was to seeing a Stegosaurus. In the grand scheme of things - we haven't been around all that long. There are species that were around for a lot longer than we have been - but which still went extinct.
Simpo Two said:
Yes but they were a bit thick.
What event - apart from plantary destruction before we've figured to how to get to Mars - do you think would cause every breeding pair of H. sapiens to die out?
Remember, even if 99.9% of the human population dies from some new disease, there will still be 7,000,000 left.
I'd say the loss of population isn't as important as the knowledge that'd go with it. What event - apart from plantary destruction before we've figured to how to get to Mars - do you think would cause every breeding pair of H. sapiens to die out?
Remember, even if 99.9% of the human population dies from some new disease, there will still be 7,000,000 left.
Imagine having to invent the internet again.
durbster said:
To illustrate just how incomprehensibly long dinosaurs were around for, I once read that a Tyrannosaurus Rex was closer to seeing a Justin Bieber concert than he was to seeing a Stegosaurus.
Yep - T-rex and Stegosaurus missed each other by around 83 million years, whereas there are only 66 million years between T-rex and Bieber.Moonhawk said:
durbster said:
To illustrate just how incomprehensibly long dinosaurs were around for, I once read that a Tyrannosaurus Rex was closer to seeing a Justin Bieber concert than he was to seeing a Stegosaurus.
Yep - T-rex and Stegosaurus missed each other by around 83 million years, whereas there are only 66 million years between T-rex and Bieber.Gassing Station | Science! | Top of Page | What's New | My Stuff