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tech / sci.bio.paleontology / Re: The change in forest extincted dinosaurs.

Re: The change in forest extincted dinosaurs.

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NNTP-Posting-Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2021 15:35:56 -0500
Subject: Re: The change in forest extincted dinosaurs.
Newsgroups: sci.bio.paleontology
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From: jharsh...@pacbell.net (John Harshman)
Date: Wed, 28 Apr 2021 13:35:56 -0700
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 by: John Harshman - Wed, 28 Apr 2021 20:35 UTC

On 4/28/21 11:18 AM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
> On 28.4.2021. 19:36, John Harshman wrote:
>> On 4/28/21 8:44 AM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
>>> On 28.4.2021. 17:11, John Harshman wrote:
>>>> On 4/28/21 7:47 AM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
>>>>> On 28.4.2021. 15:04, John Harshman wrote:
>>>>>> On 4/28/21 5:41 AM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
>>>>>>> On 28.4.2021. 2:05, nyik...@gmail.com wrote:
>>>>>>>> Hi, Mario!  I hope you didn't give up waiting around for me and
>>>>>>>> are still reading s.b.p.
>>>>>>>> I didn't emerge anywhere on Usenet for three and a half months
>>>>>>>> of 2021, and then
>>>>>>>> I put in a few sporadic posts to talk.origins. But it's close to
>>>>>>>> a week since I was there last,
>>>>>>>> and this is my first post of 2021 to sci.bio.paleontology.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Saturday, April 3, 2021 at 2:16:47 PM UTC-4, Mario Petrinovic
>>>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>>>> On 3.4.2021. 15:42, Oxyaena wrote:
>>>>>>>>>> On 4/2/2021 11:09 PM, John Harshman wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>> On 4/2/21 6:06 PM, Mario Petrinovic wrote:
>>>>>>>>>>>> Just like I said it here, so many months (or could it be,
>>>>>>>>>>>> years?) ago.
>>>>>>>>>>>> So many new scientific ideas originated in my head, but
>>>>>>>>>>>> nobody, ever, gives me any credit for this (except for few
>>>>>>>>>>>> people).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Fortunately, I am well enough known in several branches of
>>>>>>>> mathematics not to
>>>>>>>> be concerned about getting credit for general ideas, anywhere.
>>>>>>>> For instance, I thought
>>>>>>>> I had coined the term "mega-evolution" to denote evolution that
>>>>>>>> produces new orders,
>>>>>>>> classes, or phyla of animals, plants, or fungi.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> That makes it the most interesting kind of macroevolution, which
>>>>>>>> some take to
>>>>>>>> mean "speciation".
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Anyway, Hemidactylus surprised me by posting a once-in-a-blue
>>>>>>>> moon (for him)
>>>>>>>> on-topic post in talk.origins, telling me that George Gaylord
>>>>>>>> Simpson had coined
>>>>>>>> the word long ago -- perhaps even before I was born.  But I
>>>>>>>> didn't mind.
>>>>>>>> In fact, I was sort of relieved to learn that a world-class
>>>>>>>> evolutionary theorist
>>>>>>>> had come up with the term, but I'll save the reason why for
>>>>>>>> another post.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>> https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-56617409
>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> But that isn't what the story says. You have it exactly
>>>>>>>>>>> backwards.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Harshman often hides behind the claim that he has a bad memory,
>>>>>>>> but here he shows that he remembers something I didn't. You
>>>>>>>> said nothing in your OP  that could be construed as backwards
>>>>>>>> from the following.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>> The story says that the asteroid impact caused dinosaur
>>>>>>>>>>> extinction, and
>>>>>>>>>>> the absence of dinosaurs could have resulted in a change in the
>>>>>>>>>>> character of Amazon forests.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> It's some of both, but the article definitely leans in John's
>>>>>>>> direction. But, to use a colloquialism,
>>>>>>>> that has diddly-squat to do with the ACTUAL relative strength of
>>>>>>>> the two directions.
>>>>>>>> Problem is, I may be missing out on some fine points of the
>>>>>>>> opposite direction that you had, Mario.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Now Oxyaena puts in her two cents' worth:
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> Well, I mean, the extinction *did* result in a turnover of
>>>>>>>>>> flora and
>>>>>>>>>> fauna, and for a not-insignificant period of time there were
>>>>>>>>>> no large
>>>>>>>>>> herbivores to affect the Amazon's plant life, and by
>>>>>>>>>> extension, the
>>>>>>>>>> world's. Just because biodiversity will invariably recover
>>>>>>>>>> after a mass
>>>>>>>>>> extinction doesn't mean that said biodiversity will be of the
>>>>>>>>>> same
>>>>>>>>>> character as it was prior to the extinction event in question.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Harshman has been showing less and less interest in exploring
>>>>>>>> scientific
>>>>>>>> issues, so he hasn't replied to either Oxyaena or to you.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> As for Oxyaena, she started her own new thread on the extinction
>>>>>>>> less
>>>>>>>> than 15 minutes after posting the above, but Harshman' never showed
>>>>>>>> interest in it. In fact, nobody has posted there after that OP
>>>>>>>> of hers.
>>>>>>>> Not even her comrade-in-arms, Erik Simpson.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> It should have been (of the same character). I discussed this
>>>>>>>>> already
>>>>>>>>> (with Peter, I believe). There is no reason for herbivores to
>>>>>>>>> evolve out
>>>>>>>>> of mammals, and it took 10 million years for mammals to acquire
>>>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>>>> niche, if you already had seeds of dinosaur herbivores alive.
>>>>>>>>> Why would
>>>>>>>>> life wait for 10 million years for mammals to adapt for that,
>>>>>>>>> dinos were
>>>>>>>>> already adapted?
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> There actually were mammalian herbivores that survived the K-T
>>>>>>>> extinction,
>>>>>>>> among the Multituberculata and a number of other now-extinct
>>>>>>>> branches of
>>>>>>>> mammalia.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> But if you are thinking of *large* herbivores, yes, I believe
>>>>>>>> the first really
>>>>>>>> large ones were among the Pantodonta, and it took them 10
>>>>>>>> million years to get to that point.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>> No, this was a system failure. Failure of the character that
>>>>>>>>> prevented
>>>>>>>>> plants which couldn't reach the sunlight to grow, and this is
>>>>>>>>> what,
>>>>>>>>> actually, killed *all* the dinosaurs, without leaving pockets
>>>>>>>>> of them
>>>>>>>>> alive, here or there. And that happened when avian dinosaurs
>>>>>>>>> (or, I
>>>>>>>>> would say, dinosaurs which had bills) survived.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> You ought to be a little more specific here: "survived" doesn't
>>>>>>>> hit the spot.
>>>>>>>> "Evolved into more fearsome forms" might be closer to what you
>>>>>>>> had in mind, Mario.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> There are other problems with what you wrote in the preceding
>>>>>>>> sentence, but I need to get
>>>>>>>> back to grading the last test I've given ca. 75 students, so
>>>>>>>> I'll tackle them another day, hopefully tomorrow.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>          Thanks, Peter.
>>>>>>>          Well, so far I don't see a problem here. They did
>>>>>>> survive, and they did evolve, everybody who survives evolves. The
>>>>>>> point is, they didn't go extinct. You don't go extinct without a
>>>>>>> reason. Herbivores of mammalian type didn't go extinct (as you
>>>>>>> mentioned), large herbivores of mammalian type didn't exist (as
>>>>>>> far as I can grasp), or, at least, didn't exist in areas where
>>>>>>> they emerged 10 my later. The fact is that all fern eaters of a
>>>>>>> dino type (and their predators) went extinct, while not all dinos
>>>>>>> went extinct. So, the problem was in eating ferns.
>>>>>>>          The fact that ecology changed is in tune with that. The
>>>>>>> question was, did ecology change because of dinos went extinct?
>>>>>>> There is no reason for just a specific type of dinos to go
>>>>>>> extinct, or, at least, nobody mentioned it anywhere, nobody knows
>>>>>>> for the reason, there is no theory about that reason, there is no
>>>>>>> idea about the reason, there is no just-so story about the
>>>>>>> reason, absolutely nothing, there is only a "possibility" that
>>>>>>> this could have happened (but no reason for that). I mean, there
>>>>>>> is a possibility that life on Earth was started by aliens, but,
>>>>>>> hey, are we at that level of reasoning? Or, is science on that
>>>>>>> level of reasoning? If it shouldn't be, then why it behaves like
>>>>>>> they are on that level?
>>>>>>>          On the other hand, there could be some reason for
>>>>>>> ecology to change. My *idea* is that plants that crave for
>>>>>>> sunlight already evolved at poles (definitely there is some logic
>>>>>>> in it). The impact created the lack of sunlight (there were
>>>>>>> already some theories about that), so the plants that are able to
>>>>>>> collect more sunlight prevailed over ferns. This is one simple
>>>>>>> and logical explanation for this mechanism. For the mechanism
>>>>>>> that only some types of dinosaurs went extinct there is no
>>>>>>> explanation of mechanism.
>>>>>>>          I believe that I am clear enough.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> How is that group coming along?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>          Ah, thanks, :). Besides me there are two more members,
>>>>>>> Daud Deden and Marc Verhaegen, but there is no discussion going
>>>>>>> on at all. So far I am happy, this is a good start, :) .
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> One problem with your theory is the post-Cretaceous "fern spike".
>>>>>> For a short time after the impact ferns dominated the terrestrial
>>>>>> vegetation. Another problem is that the poles get much less
>>>>>> sunlight than the tropics, so plants that "crave for" sunlight
>>>>>> would be less likely to be located there than elsewhere. And
>>>>>> third, the post-K-T lack of sunlight could have lasted a couple of
>>>>>> years at most. Finally, you have no evidence that herbivorous
>>>>>> dinosaurs were dependent on ferns, which seems very unlikely on
>>>>>> its face.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> There also are theories about why the dinosaurs and not birds or
>>>>>> mammals went extinct. They were large. If, as is commonly thought,
>>>>>> extinctions mostly happened as a result of radiant heat from the
>>>>>> sky resulting from the re-entry of small ejecta, big animals would
>>>>>> be less able to hide under rocks and in burrows than small ones.
>>>>>> And there you have the filter to explain the extinction.
>>>>>
>>>>>          Thanks John.
>>>>>          "Fern spike", I'll have to examine this.
>>>>>          Not necessarily "crave" for sunlight, but definitely being
>>>>> better in scooping the sunlight. Like hemoglobin in blood, which
>>>>> extracts oxygen. If oxygen levels fall, obviously the animals
>>>>> adapted to low levels will thrive.
>>>>>          A couple of years could be enough.
>>>>>          I believe the teeth of dinosaurs were adapted just to
>>>>> strip ferns (but I am not sure about it).
>>>>>
>>>> Yeah, you should check out the fern spike. Do you have any evidence
>>>> that arctic plants are better at scooping up sunlight than tropical
>>>> ones? You should probably check out the difference between C3 and C4
>>>> plants. And no, a couple of years isn't enough at all; you should
>>>> probably check out the term "seed bank". In general, you should
>>>> learn something about botany. And what you believe about the teeth
>>>> of dinosaurs is not supported by anything that I know of and, I
>>>> strongly suspect, not anything that you know of.
>>>
>>>          I don't need evidence that at poles you would have, both,
>>> plants and animals adapted to better scoop sunlight.
>>>          I know the difference between C3 and C4 pathways, but I
>>> don't see your point.
>>>          About the teeth I heard, in one documentary, a long time
>>> ago. And, it looks logical. Those teeth look like they are for
>>> stripping ferns, those dinosaurs ate ferns, so, I would presume that
>>> they are adapted to eat it. I see no problem in this, whichever way
>>> you put it.
>>>          Regarding "a couple of years", here it is a scenario for
>>> "many years", and it involves what you just said. Yes, dinosaurs were
>>> pretty damaged by the event. All the dinosaurs, all the birds, all
>>> other animals, all plants, everybody. The question is why some
>>> dinosaurs actually went extinct.
>>>          The answer is in trees. Narrow canopy trees didn't grow
>>> anymore? Why? Well, ferns deprived them from sunlight. In normal
>>> conditions those ferns were eaten by dinosaurs. But now, dinosaurs
>>> were very damaged, not a lot of dinosaurs left. So, not a lot of
>>> narrow canopy trees grew among all those uneaten ferns. But, some
>>> other types of trees were better adapted to the conditions, so those
>>> types of trees started to grow. And those types overwhelmed ferns.
>>>          I'll take a look at what happens after fern spike in real
>>> world, what kind of plants grow in such a situation, and why.
>>>
>> C4 plants are the ones adapted to high temperature, high insolation
>> environments, and they're the plants that are most efficient at
>> photosynthesis in such environments. Needless to say, they aren't
>> found at the poles.
>>
>> I will have to agree that if you heard something in a documentary some
>> time long ago it must be true and is decisive confirmation for your
>> theory.
>>
>> Then again, your theory is hopelessly confused. The dinosaurs kept the
>> ferns down? The ferns kept the angiosperms from growing? The
>> angiosperms killed ferns and that killed the dinosaurs? What?
>
>         Well, it may be complicated, but, of course, this is why it
> isn't obvious, and this is why this is still a question that needs the
> answer.
>         I know that this story is much simpler, asteroid came, and
> killed just the right animals. Nice and simple, just like 'God said: Let
> there be light.", and it was light.'. Everybody likes simple
> explanations. Sheer beauty.
>         So, simple is nice, complicated is complicated. The only
> problem is, simple has no logic, and the complicated way has much more
> sense, and it is a better theory.
>
Please provide a coherent and complete explanation of your theory, which
you have never managed to do so far. Try to use complete sentences with
grammatical English, as best you can. Try to provide a clear
cause-and-effect scenario.

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o Re: The change in forest extincted dinosaurs.

By: nyik...@gmail.com on Wed, 28 Apr 2021

25nyik...@gmail.com
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