Post-apocalyptic fossils show rise of mammals after dinosaur demise
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[October 25, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A revelatory cache
of fossils dug up in central Colorado details as never before the rise
of mammals from the post-apocalyptic landscape after an asteroid smacked
Earth 66 million years ago and annihilated three-quarters of all species
including the dinosaurs.
The fossils, described by scientists on Thursday, date from the first
million years after the calamity and show that the surviving terrestrial
mammalian and plant lineages rebounded with aplomb. Mammals, after 150
million years of subservience, attained dominance. Plant life
diversified impressively.
With dinosaurs no longer eating them, mammals made quick evolutionary
strides, assuming new forms and lifestyles and taking over ecological
niches vacated by extinct competitors. Within 700,000 years of the mass
extinction, their body mass had become 100 times bigger than the mammals
living immediately after the mass extinction.
"Were it not for the asteroid, humans would never have evolved," said
Ian Miller, curator of paleobotany and director of earth and space
sciences at the Denver Museum of Nature & Science. "One message I would
like people to take from this is that their earliest ancestors - and by
ancestors we're talking fuzzy little squirrel-like critters - had their
origins in the wake of the extinction of the dinosaurs."
The thousands of well-preserved animal and plant fossils, unearthed just
east of Colorado Springs, illuminate a time interval that had been
shrouded in mystery.
"Essentially, we were able to tease out details of the emergence of the
modern world - the age of mammals - from the ashes of the age of the
dinosaurs," Miller said.
Sixteen mammal species were discovered, with skulls and other bones
fossilized after being buried in rivers and floodplains. Until now, only
tiny mammal fossil fragments from that time had been discovered.
"For the first time, we were able link together time, fossil plants,
fossil animals and temperature in one of the most critical intervals of
Earth's history," said Tyler Lyson, the museum's curator of vertebrate
paleontology and lead author of the research published in the journal
Science.
The asteroid strike, which ended the Cretaceous Period and opened the
Paleogene Period, laid waste to the world, eradicating the dinosaurs
except their bird descendants, seagoing reptiles that dominated the
oceans, and important marine invertebrates and numerous plant species.
Plant life also was hit hard by the global environmental catastrophe
that followed the crash of the six-mile-wide (10-km) asteroid off
Mexico's coast, with new forms evolving in the aftermath. The
earliest-known legumes - bean pods - were among the Colorado fossils.
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Fossilized mammal skull fossils and lower jaw retrieved from the
Corral Bluffs site in Colorado dating from the aftermath of the mass
extinction of species 66 million years ago is seen in a picture
released October 24, 2019. HHMI Tangled Bank Studios/Handout via
REUTERS.
Evolutionary events set in motion by the mass extinction led much
later to the appearance of the primate lineage that includes
monkeys, apes and eventually, roughly 300,000 years ago, the
appearance of our species Homo sapiens.
SHADOW OF THE DINOSAURS
Mammals had lived in the large shadow of the dinosaurs, never
getting bigger than a small dog until the mass extinction. The
mammals that survived the asteroid were mainly small omnivores - the
largest being the size of a rat and weighing about a pound (0.5 kg).
Within 100,000 years of the extinction event, mammals reached about
13 pounds (6 kg). By 300,000 years after the extinction, they got to
55 pounds (25 kg), with the first purely herbivorous mammalian
species. By 700,000 years after the asteroid, some mammals weighed
more than 110 pounds (50 kg).
"When the dinosaurs go extinct, mammals proliferate, and fast,"
Miller said, for the first time becoming the top predators and
herbivores on the landscape.
The largest mammal among the Colorado fossils was wolf-sized
Eoconodon, followed by Taeniolabis, the size of a capybara. The
largest predators were 5-foot-long (1.5 meters) crocodilians, with
blunt teeth useful for cracking turtle shells rather than gobbling
mammals.
Egg-shaped rocks called concretions that over time formed
concentrically around some kind of nucleus - in this case mammal
skulls - provided a bonanza. Most of the 16 mammal species belonged
to a diverse group called "archaic ungulates" related to modern-day
hoofed mammals like deer, cows and pigs. The plant fossils included
pollen, leaf impressions and petrified wood.
The mass extinction was the second worst on record - exceeded by one
252 million years ago thought to have been caused by extreme
volcanism - that helped pave the way for the first dinosaurs.
"Mass extinctions," Lyson said, "are the biologic reset button."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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