Before dinosaurs, the age of Lystrosaurs


This video is called Edwin H. Colbert explains Lystrosaurus connection to Drift Theory.

From The Timesin Britain:

September 13, 2008

Long before dinosaurs, this little piggy ruled the Earth

Jonathan Leake, Science Editor

FIRST there was the Permian era; then came the Triassic period. Now palaeontologists have discovered an intriguing interlude, the porcine age, when pig-like creatures ruled the earth.

The animals, known as lystrosaurs, were among the only survivors of the greatest mass extinction event the world has seen, when, around 251m years ago, 95% of all living species were wiped out by a series of volcanic eruptions.

The eruptions eliminated every large predator, so for a million years or more the lystrosaurs had the planet — and all its succulent plant life — almost entirely to themselves.

“They fed and spread. We think there were billions of them,” said Paul Wignall, professor of palaeo-environment at Leeds University. “Their fossils are everywhere.”

The lystrosaurs evolved towards the end of the Permian period, around 260m years ago, long before the time of modern mammals and reptiles and even of the dinosaurs. They belonged to a group called the cynodonts.

No, dicynodonts. See also here.

Reconstructions from fossils suggest they were similar in size and stature to modern pigs, complete with snouts and small tusks for rooting around in vegetation.

This was a period in Earth’s history when complex life had established itself on land and sea, with new species evolving rapidly into every available niche. Early lystrosaurs, with their sprawling gait, ungainly bodies and bulbous heads, would have been easy meat for the abundant predators and so seem to have evolved as underground beasts. Fossils show they dug burrows, which in turn implies they may have been nocturnal and have had the ability to hibernate.

In that period all the continents were joined together in one huge land mass now called Pangaea. Geological records suggest the world was then much warmer, with forests covering Australia, then lying over the south pole, and no icecaps.

About 251m years ago everything changed. “A massive volcanic eruption began in the northern part of Pangaea in what is now Siberia,” said Wignall, speaking at a conference last week. “Over thousands of years about 5,000,000km3 of basalt erupted onto the Earth’s surface and billions of tons of CO2 poured into the air.”

The initial result of each eruption was rapid cooling as the volcanic haze blotted out the sun. Then, over the following decades, the world warmed sharply because of the CO2. The eruptions came in pulses over thousands of years, so this pattern of warming and cooling was repeated several times.

“We can only speculate on how lystrosaurus survived while the rest died, but perhaps its ability to burrow and hibernate protected it from the worst periods,” Wignall said.

A number of species did survive, including other cynodonts. These would later give rise to the mammals and eventually humans. Back then, however, they were just tiny shrew-like creatures. A second group of survivors were diapsids, the group that would later give rise to the dinosaurs, reptiles and birds. They, too, were tiny.

Wignall said: “The remarkable thing about the lystrosaurs was their size. Nothing else that big seems to have got through the destruction, and that is why they were able to dominate the earth for so long afterwards.”

One mystery is why the lystrosaurs did eventually disappear. But Wignall believes their fate and that of other Permian species holds clear lessons for modern humans: “The amounts of CO2 we are emitting are roughly equivalent to those poured into the atmosphere during the Permian eruptions. Our climate is changing like theirs did.”

Did volatile halogenated gases from giant salt lakes at the end of the Permian Age lead to a mass extinction of species? Here. And here.

In the Permian Period, Erupting Super-Volcanoes May Have Killed Half the Planet: here. And here.

Wegener and continental drift: here.

Storm petrels breeding on Ramsey island, Wales


This is a video about giant petrels and storm petrels in the Antarctic.

From the RSPB in Britain:

UK’s smallest breeding seabird weathers the storm

Last modified: 15 September 2008

Seabird monitoring on RSPB Ramsey Island this summer has revealed that storm petrels, the UK’s smallest breeding seabird, are showing signs of breeding on the island for the first time on record.

Greg Morgan, RSPB Ramsey Island warden, discovered five sites with resident storm petrels on the west coast of the island during monitoring sessions in July.

Greg said: ‘Storm petrels nest underground in burrows and inside rock crevices so we use a recently developed method of checking whether a potential nest site is occupied. We play a tape-recording of the male bird’s call at the entrance to likely habitat and listen for a response.

‘Repeat visits are needed to capture all the responses for an area as not all birds respond all the time. This is quite time consuming so a full survey will be carried out in 2009. However, given that we had responses from five sites on several different visits this year during the breeding season, we are confident that the birds were breeding here.’

The discovery of the nest sites is extremely encouraging and is testament to the success of the rat eradication project, carried out on the island in 1999. Manx shearwaters [see also here], another ground nesting seabird, have also increased in numbers over recent years.

Greg continued:
‘Rats found their way onto the island around 200 years ago, probably from shipwrecks. Nine years ago we made a concerted effort to eradicate the rat population to make the island a more suitable nesting site for certain bird species. The arrival of storm petrels here is a sign that our conservation efforts are working and we hope to see their numbers increase here over the years to come.’

Storm petrels have a later breeding season than many other seabirds, so if the birds have produced young this year, they could be expected to fledge during the next month. The birds will then leave the island to spend winter off the coast of South Africa but it is hoped that they will return again in May for another breeding season.

Other breeding seabirds monitored on Ramsey Island this year had a productive season, including kittiwakes, razorbills and guillemots.

Though the cliff-nesting seabirds have left the breeding colonies to spend winter at sea, September and October are great months to visit Ramsey Island and see hundreds of Atlantic grey seal [see also here] pups on its beaches. To find out more about how to get there, visit www.rspb.org.uk/reserves. or to book your trip, contact Thousand Island Expeditions (01437) 721 721.

Puffins of Skomer island: here.

Guillemots on Skomer Island are at the forefront of a project to use computers to monitor vulnerable habitats: here.

Bush’s racist allies in Bolivia


This video from Democracy NOW! in the USA is called “Welcome to the Axis of Evil” -Pres. of Bolivia-1/2.

Part 2 of this interview with President Evo Morales is here.

As talks are under way in Bolivia now, aimed at ending the bloodshed by far Right extremists there

From Dutch NOS TV, interviewing a sixteen year old paramilitary child soldier of the extreme right separatist movement in Bolivia. Headline:

“I am here to kill those fucking Indians”

Further, from the same interview:

We are of European ancestry.

That boy, politically, is from a lineage of the extreme Right in Bolivia, dating from Klaus Barbie and other World War II nazi criminals who fled to Bolivia; and dictator Hugo Banzer.

See also here; with photo of nazi swastika sign on Bolivian separatists’ car. And here.

These are the people whom George W. Bush subsidizes with the tax dollars of the people of the United States.

See also here. And here. And here. And here.

Rows in British Labour party


This video from Britain says about itself:

John McDonnell MP addresses the Hands Off The People Of Iran weekend school on June 14-15 about the anti-war movement and the political challenges HOPI faces.

From British daily News Line:

Environment Secretary Hilary Benn said: ‘Everybody in the [governing Labour] party is worried about the fact that we are behind in the polls. The question is what is the right thing to do, and I don’t think changing our leader is the right thing to do.’

Benn went on to claim that [Prime Minister Gordon] Brown ‘was chosen overwhelmingly by the party when he was elected last year and I think he’s the right man for the job’.

In fact, there was a ‘coronation’ of Brown last year and no election.

John McDonnell, MP for Hayes and Harlington, who sought to stand against Brown last year [but was prevented by the party bureaucracy from being a candidate], said: ‘Most Labour Party members are looking on aghast as the Blairites and Brownites fight an irrelevant turf war.’

He said that there were ‘no policy differences whatsoever between the Blairites and the Brownites’, adding that it is their policies that are making the Labour government so unpopular in the opinion polls and their conflict was ‘like watching the crew having a punch-up on the deck of the Titanic’.

He went on to call for an election where policy differences should be aired and voted upon.

More extensively, at McDonnell’s blog: here.

See also here. And here.

Labour party activists polled: here.