This video says about itself:
May 4, 2011
The “Last Day of the Dinosaurs” is a documentary about the extinction of the greatest animal species that ever lived. It portrays an asteroid hitting the Yucatan Peninsula as the cause of their demise.
From Reuters:
Mammals burst on the scene after dinosaurs’ exit
June 20, 2007
By Julie Steenhuysen
CHICAGO – The discovery of a primitive, shrew-like mammal fossil in Mongolia has revived the view that its modern mammal cousins arrived just as the dinosaurs made their dramatic exit about 65 million years ago, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.
Recent studies have placed the arrival of modern mammals at anywhere from 140 million to 80 million years ago, long before an asteroid crashed into Earth and wiped out the dinosaurs.
“The fossil itself is the least interesting part of the story scientifically,” said John Wible of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh, whose research appears in the journal Nature.
He said the discovery of a new shrew-like mammal in 1997 — Maelestes gobiensis — led to an exhaustive analysis of the fossil record that dates the emergence of modern mammals at the end of the Cretaceous period 65 million years ago.
Recent molecular studies have held that modern mammals may have lived long before the dinosaurs died out at the end of the Cretaceous period, which began 145 million years ago and ended with a bang 65 million years ago.
Placental mammals — like dogs, cats, mice, whales, elephants, horses and humans — give birth to live young after a long gestational period. Of the 5,416 species of living mammals, 5,080 are placentals.
The rest are marsupials like kangaroos, which nourish their offspring in a pouch, and the very rare monotremes, such as the egg-laying duck-billed platypus.
‘OKLAHOMA LAND RUSH’
“We wanted to test whether there were any Cretaceous placentals,” Wible said in a telephone interview.
“If the molecular dates are correct, we should be finding things that look like modern placentals in this time period and we are not.”
They found that none of these Cretaceous forms of early mammals are related to any living placental mammals. “They are just extinct dead ends,” he said.
Wible said his work reinforced the idea that the death of the dinosaurs created an opportunity for explosive growth of modern mammals.
“You’ve got all of these ecological niches that were occupied by the dinosaurs. They go extinct, and you’ve got wide open spaces. It’s like the Oklahoma land rush,” he said.
The analysis all began with the discovery of Maelestes, an unusually complete fossil discovered in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia during a joint expedition of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences and the American Museum of Natural History.
The rodent-like creature — one of those evolutionary dead-ends — lived 75 million years ago, about the time of the Velociraptor, Oviraptor [see also here] and Protoceratops.
“It looks like road kill. It is very well preserved,” Wible said.
He and colleagues classified the toothsome creature as a new eutherian mammal, a broader group that includes placentals and their extinct relatives.
“He would have been a voracious little predator,” he said, but it was not a modern placental mammal.
“The beauty of this fossil it that it forced us to do the analysis.”
See also here.
Cancer and the extinction of dinosaurs: here.
A series of monumental volcanic eruptions in India may have killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, not a meteor impact in the Gulf of Mexico: here.
Cretaceous stagodont marsupials: here.
Did some dinosaurs survive into the Cenozoic? See here.
Related articles
- Tunisian dinosaur age mammal tracks discovery (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Dinosaur age mammal discovery in Japan (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Tyrannosaurus rex excavation update (dearkitty1.wordpress.com)
- Our Mammal Ancestor? (wildaboutlydia.wordpress.com)
- Fossilized remains of “burrowing” dinosaur found in Montana (aristotelistsirigos91.wordpress.com)
- Cretaceous Period: Facts About Animals, Plants & Climate (livescience.com)
Asteroid “crime family” blamed in dino
wipeout:
Scientists say they’ve learned where the thing that
killed the dinosaurs probably came from.
http://www.world-science.net/othernews/070905_baptistina.htm
LikeLike
Small asteroids may do major damage:
A new look at a 1908 event suggests disaster from
space could be more common than once thought.
http://www.world-science.net/othernews/071221_tunguska.htm
LikeLike
Pingback: Dinosaurs extinct, why not freshwater life? | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Did insects, not asteroids or volcanoes, kill the dinosaurs? | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: New Mexico dinosaurs, new study | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Mongolian dinosaurs’ eggs discovery | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Ancient Indian primates discovered | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: Australian echidnas help other wildlife | Dear Kitty. Some blog
Pingback: New bird-like dinosaur discovery | Dear Kitty. Some blog