Biggest Arthropleura Fossil Discovery: Unraveling an Ancient Mystery
Deep time really is a funny concept. The era in which we live, the one created by the K-Pg mass extinction, has only existed for about 66 million years. To put that into perspective, the era before that – the Age of Reptiles – lasted for 186 million years. The one before that – the Paleozoic – also lasted for 186 million years. Obviously start and stop points for these chunks of time are largely arbitrary. Scientists have used major earth-shattering events – such as extinctions – as benchmarks for these major chunks of time, and they just so happen to also usher in major shifts in life and death on earth, as well as major shifts in the very makeup of the earth. I bring up this heavy stuff because I want to show you the comparison in the lengths of some of the most well-known or talked about periods of time – such as the Carboniferous period.
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✅ RESEARCH ✅
Davies, Neil S.; Garwood, Russell J.; McMahon, William J.; Schneider, Joerg W.; Shillito, Anthony P. (Dec 21, 2021). “The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation, Northumberland, England)“. Journal of the Geological Society. 179 (3). doi: S2CID 245401499.
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4 months ago 00:10:21 1
Biggest Arthropleura Fossil Discovery: Unraveling an Ancient Mystery
4 years ago 00:08:08 1
Das ist das größte Krabbeltier, das je auf der Erde gelebt hat!