Dinosaurs
Dinosaurs: How they became extinct Something happened 65 million years
ago, at
the end of the Cretaceous period, something so devastating that it
altered the
course of life on earth. It seems like it happened so sudden, as
geologic time
goes, that almost all the dinosaurs living on earth
disappeared. So how did
these dominant creatures just die off? Was it a slow
extinction, or did it
happen all of the sudden? These questions bring rise to
many different beliefs
on how the dinosaur disappeared over 65 million years
ago. Extinction itself is
easily defined: When the birth rate fails to keep
up with the death rate, it is
called extinction. But, the definition does not
answer the question about the
nature or causes of extinction. Paleontologists
generally divide extinctions
into two types, for that of different causes
arose. The first is called
background extinctions, isolated extinctions of
species due to a variety of
causes. Included is out competition, depletion of
resources in a habitat,
changes in climate, the development or destruction of
a mountain range, river
channel migration, the eruption of a volcano, the
drying of a lake, or the
destruction of a forest, grassland, or wetland
habitat. The second type of
extinction is called mass extinctions. There are
four main components involved:
Large numbers of species go extinct; many
types of species go extinct; the
effects must be global; and the effects must
occur in a geologically short
period of time.1 The dinosaur could not have
lived for ever. No creatures, no
plants, no tiny bacteria are forever, not
even Homo sapiens. Extinction is the
fate of all species. One theory on how
the dinosaurs became extinct is that of
carbon dioxide, and the ³greenhouse
effect². Volcanoes produced the proposed
conditions. A massive volcanic
eruption could have saturated the atmosphere with
carbon dioxide so that it
caused a sharp rise in temperatures worldwide. The
excessive carbon dioxide
would have permitted solar energy to enter the
atmosphere but would have
blocked the radiation of most surface heat back out
into space, therefore
causing the ³greenhouse effect². Rising temperatures
could have killed off or
reduced the activity of plankton, disrupting food
chains and also messing up
the plankton¹s normal role in converting carbon
dioxide to oxygen through
photosynthesis. From there it would not have been long
for all the dinosaurs
to have been suffering, and then to become extinct.