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mass extinction |
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mass extinctionEvent that produces the extinction of many species at about the same time. One notable example is the boundary between the Cretaceous and Tertiary periods (known as the K-T boundary) that saw the extinction of the dinosaurs and other large reptiles, and many of the marine invertebrates as well. Mass extinctions have taken place frequently during Earth's history. There have been five major mass extinctions, in which 75% or more of the world's species have been wiped out: End Ordovician period (440 million years ago) in which about 85% of species were destroyed (second most severe); Late Devonian period (365 million years ago) which took place in two waves a million years apart, and was the third most severe, with marine species particularly badly hit; Late Permian period (251 million years ago), the gravest mass Late Triassic (205 million years ago), in which about 76% of species were destroyed, mainly marine; Late Cretaceous period (65 million years ago), in which 75–80 of species became extinct, including dinosaurs. How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Roughly 367 million years ago, once again many species of fish and 70 percent of marine invertebrates perished in a major extinction event. Perhaps, Martin speculates, it was harder for the wolves to find large prey as the extinction event approached, so the animals shifted to eating smaller animals, which have less-tooth-damaging bones. Although more than 60 theories have been developed to explain this mass extinction event, the selectivity of the mass extinction for dinosaurs and their contemporary vertebrates and invertebrates remains unexplained. |
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