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Post Info TOPIC: The Pleistocene


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Pleistocene Climate Transition
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Recent Deep Sea Extinction Much Bigger Than Thought

A team of Auckland-based geologists from Geomarine Research have just published a 400 page book that shows that the last major extinction period in the deep sea had a much bigger impact than previously thought. The book, published by the Cushman Foundation in Washington DC, gives an account of the team's global studies over the past 10 years. This youngest period of rapid extinction in the ocean depths occurred during the middle Pleistocene Climate Transition, between 1 million and 600,000 years ago. At that time the global climate changed dramatically with the rapid growth of the northern hemisphere ice cap and onset of much colder ice age periods.
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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Snowmass
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 NOVA - Ice Age Death Trap

In the Rocky Mountains, archeologists uncover a unique fossil site packed with astonishingly well-preserved bones of mammoths, mastodons, and other giant extinct beasts. The discovery opens a highly focused window on the vanished world of the Ice Age in North America.



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L

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RE: The Pleistocene
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Snowmass, Colorado. - Two different time scales collided in this place.
More than 130,000 years ago in the chilled depths of the Illinoian ice age, an errant glacier left a hole atop a 9,000-foot-high ridge near what would become the town of Aspen in the central Colorado Rockies. The depression filled with snowmelt, and for tens of thousands of years, the little lake attracted the giants of the Pleistocene - mammoths, mastodons, ground sloths half again the size of grizzly bears, supersize bison, camels and horses - that came to drink, and in many cases to die, in the high alpine mud.

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Title: A phase-space model for Pleistocene ice volume
Authors: John Z. Imbrie, Annabel Imbrie-Moore, Lorraine E. Lisiecki

We present a phase-space model that simulates Pleistocene ice volume changes based on Earth's orbital parameters. Terminations in the model are triggered by a combination of ice volume and orbital forcing and agree well with age estimates for Late Pleistocene terminations. The average phase at which model terminations begin is approximately 90 ±90 degrees before the maxima in all three orbital cycles. The large variability in phase is likely caused by interactions between the three cycles and ice volume. Unlike previous ice volume models, this model produces an orbitally driven increase in 100-kyr power during the mid-Pleistocene transition without any change in model parameters. This supports the hypothesis that Pleistocene variations in the 100-kyr power of glacial cycles could be caused, at least in part, by changes in Earth's orbital parameters, such as amplitude modulation of the 100-kyr eccentricity cycle, rather than changes within the climate system.

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A man walking in a small Northwest Territories community has stumbled across what palaeontologists believe could be the carcass of a steppe bison that roamed before the last Ice Age.
The remains of the beast were uncovered in the permafrost near an eroding cliff, said Shane Van Loon, who first came across the pre-historic find last week while walking along the riverbank in Tsiigehtchic, about 230 kilometres south of Tuktoyaktuk.

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L

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RE: The Pleistocene extinction
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The extinction of many large mammals at the end of the Ice Age may have packed an even bigger punch than scientists have realised. To the list of victims such as woolly mammoths and saber-toothed cats, a Smithsonian-led team of scientists has added one more: a highly carnivorous form of wolf that lived in Alaska, north of the ice sheets.
Wolves were generally thought to have survived the end-Pleistocene extinction relatively unscathed. But this previously unrecognised type of wolf appears to have vanished without a trace some 12,000 years ago.
The study, which will be published in the June 21 online issue of Current Biology, combined genetic and chemical analyses with more conventional palaeontological study of the morphology, or form, of the fossilised skeletal remains. This multifaceted approach allowed the researchers to trace the ancient wolves genetic relationships with modern-day wolves, as well as understand their role in the ancient ecosystem.

"Being able to say all of those thingshaving a complete pictureis really unusual" - lead author Jennifer Leonard, a research associate with the Smithsonian Genetics Program, and currently at Uppsala University in Sweden.

The researchers extracted mitochondrial DNA from the fossil wolf bones preserved in permafrost and compared the sequences, called haplotypes, with those of modern-day wolves in Alaska and throughout the world. The fossils showed a wide range of haplotypesgreater in fact than their modern counterpartbut there was no overlap with modern wolves. This was unexpected.

"We thought possibly they would be related to Asian wolves instead of American wolves because North America and Asia were connected during that time period. That they were completely unrelated to anything living was quite a surprise" - Jennifer Leonard.

The result implies that the Alaskan wolves died out completely, leaving no modern descendents. After the extinction, the Alaskan habitat was probably recolonised by wolves that survived south of the ice sheet in the continental United States, Leonard said.
The ancient Alaskan wolves differed from modern wolves not only in their genes, but also in their skulls and teeth, which were robust and more adapted for forceful bites and shearing flesh than are those of modern wolves. They also showed a higher incidence of broken teeth than living wolves.

"Taken together, these features suggest a wolf specialised for killing and consuming relatively large prey, and also possibly habitual scavenging" - Jennifer Leonard.

Chemical analyses of the bones back up this conclusion. Carbon and nitrogen isotope values of the Alaskan wolf bones are intermediate between those of potential prey speciesmammoth, bison, musk ox and caribousuggesting that their diet was a mix of these large species.
The cause of Pleistocene extinction (called the megafaunal extinction because of the large size of many of its victims) is controversial. It has been variously blamed on human hunting or climate change, or on a combination of factors as the Ice Age waned.
For the specialised Alaskan wolves, the story is perhaps less complicated.

"When their prey disappeared, these wolves did as well. There may be other extinctions of unique Pleistocene forms yet to be discovered" - Jennifer Leonard.

But the results of this study also imply that the effects of the extinction were broader than previously thought.

Source : Smithsonian

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Posts: 131433
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RE: The Pleistocene
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Southern California has a rich geologic and palaeontologic history. Because of an unparalleled confluence of geologic factors, including activity along the San Andreas Fault and associated fault zones, our region presents a wealth of rocks containing fossils that range in age from a few thousands of years to hundreds of millions of years.
The Pleistocene Epoch, from nearly 2 million years ago to around 11,000 years ago, is particularly well-represented geologically and palaeontologically in southern California, as well as in southern Nevada. This epoch ­ the "Ice Ages" ­ saw our region, and indeed most of North America, teeming with life that included wonderful animals like mammoths, mastodons, ground sloths, giant bears and lions, and sabre-toothed cats, to name just a few. These great beasts went extinct at the end of the Pleistocene, as did North American horses, camels, tapirs, and ­ in some areas ­ ancient bison. The reason behind this extinction remains a mystery.

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Fifth-grader Xu Ruinong of Yuren Elementary in Taizhong was on a natural science museum field trip this past July in Tainan County near Cailiao Creek when he discovered a sparkling stone. Who could have imagined that the stone was none other than a 400,000-year-old tooth from a Taiwan tiger? The boy donated the fossilised tooth to the museum to help with research into Taiwan's extinct species.

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