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News: USA showered by a watery comet ~11,000 years ago, ending the Golden Age of man in America
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Fossil Corals Show Catastrophic Sea-Level Rise?

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Bianca
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« on: April 27, 2009, 10:20:47 am »









                                       Mystery Undersea Extinction Cycle Discovered






John Roach
for National Geographic News
March 9, 2005

Robert Rohde and Richard Muller are vexed. For the past 542 million years the number of animal species living in the world's oceans has risen and fallen in a repeating pattern, and the scientists haven't the foggiest idea why.

"I wish I knew what it all meant," said Muller, who is a professor of physics at the University of California, Berkeley.

The pattern includes a rise and fall of marine animal diversity every 62 million years and a weaker cycle of rising and falling marine diversity, which repeats every 140 million years. The researchers think that expanding and retreating glaciers may explain the 140-million-year cycle, but they are stumped over what drives the 62-million-year cycle.

The declines in the 62-million-year cycle correspond with some of the best known mass extinctions on Earth.

Among them are the die-off caused by the asteroid or comet widely believed to have doomed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago and the "Great Dying" of 250 million years ago. During the Great Dying, some unknown cause wiped out most life on Earth.

The patterns found in the new study identify five additional declines in marine-animal diversity. Muller and his graduate student Rohde say the pattern is too regular to occur by chance. But they have failed to find a plausible explanation for its existence.

The pair looked for a pattern of asteroid and comet impacts, global climate shifts, volcanic eruptions, fluctuating sea levels, changes in the total amount of plant and animal life, and the reshuffling of the continents. None fit.

Muller went so far as to purchase a lava lamp, plug it in, and studiously gaze at how often the blobs rose to the surface. He thought perhaps magma bubbles from the Earth's core rise in a cyclical pattern. "It's not regular enough," he said.

The researchers' report will appear in tomorrow's issue of the science journal Nature.
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