• Possible Impact crater in Australia

    From erik simpson@eastside.erik@gmail.com to sci.bio.paleontology on Tue Sep 24 16:48:26 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    https://www.sci.news/geology/massive-australian-precambrian-cambrian-impact-structure-13283.html

    If this crater (inner ring ~600 km, outer ring ~2000 km) proves out,
    this would make it the largest known impact event. Chixilub is small
    potatoes compared to it. Controversy surrounds the finding.

    Publication in scientific literature is forthcoming, but not yet
    available. This would have obvious implications for the end-Ediacaran
    mass extinction.
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  • From x@x@x.org to sci.bio.paleontology on Wed Sep 25 02:46:01 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    On 9/24/24 16:48, erik simpson wrote:
    https://www.sci.news/geology/massive-australian-precambrian-cambrian-impact-structure-13283.html

    If this crater (inner ring ~600 km, outer ring ~2000 km) proves out,
    this would make it the largest known impact event.-a Chixilub is small potatoes compared to it.-a Controversy surrounds the finding.

    Publication in scientific literature is forthcoming, but not yet available.-a This would have obvious implications for the end-Ediacaran
    mass extinction.

    What evidence do you have for the idea that there was a mass
    extinction at the end of the Ediacarian?

    With the Paleozoic, you had the formation of hard materials
    that could more easily fossilize.

    Was the lack of fossils just lack of hard structures.

    Your use of the words 'end-Ediacaran mass extinction'
    implies that you think that a mass extinction during
    the time period was at least obviously true to yourself.

    If you are interested in convincing others that such
    a mess extinction existed, provide evidence.


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  • From erik simpson@eastside.erik@gmail.com to sci.bio.paleontology on Wed Sep 25 08:10:49 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    On 9/25/24 2:46 AM, x wrote:
    On 9/24/24 16:48, erik simpson wrote:
    https://www.sci.news/geology/massive-australian-precambrian-cambrian-impact-structure-13283.html

    If this crater (inner ring ~600 km, outer ring ~2000 km) proves out,
    this would make it the largest known impact event.-a Chixilub is small
    potatoes compared to it.-a Controversy surrounds the finding.

    Publication in scientific literature is forthcoming, but not yet
    available.-a This would have obvious implications for the end-Ediacaran
    mass extinction.

    What evidence do you have for the idea that there was a mass
    extinction at the end of the Ediacarian?

    With the Paleozoic, you had the formation of hard materials
    that could more easily fossilize.

    Was the lack of fossils just lack of hard structures.

    Your use of the words 'end-Ediacaran mass extinction'
    implies that you think that a mass extinction during
    the time period was at least obviously true to yourself.

    If you are interested in convincing others that such
    a mess extinction existed, provide evidence.


    The end-Ediacaran extinction is well known. Almost all the Ediacaran
    fauna disappeared. The classical explanation includes increased oxygen
    in the water column, predation by early Cambrian animals with hard
    feeding appendages and bioturbation of the bacterial/algal mat that
    supported the "mudstickers" of the Ediacaran.

    There are plenty of soft-bodied organisms fossilized in the Cambrian.
    I'm not interested in convincing you or anyone else in the reality of
    the extinction. A little research is all anyone neeeds.
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  • From x@x@x.org to sci.bio.paleontology on Wed Sep 25 15:26:48 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    On 9/25/24 08:10, erik simpson wrote:
    On 9/25/24 2:46 AM, x wrote:
    On 9/24/24 16:48, erik simpson wrote:
    https://www.sci.news/geology/massive-australian-precambrian-cambrian-impact-structure-13283.html

    If this crater (inner ring ~600 km, outer ring ~2000 km) proves out,
    this would make it the largest known impact event.-a Chixilub is small
    potatoes compared to it.-a Controversy surrounds the finding.

    Publication in scientific literature is forthcoming, but not yet
    available.-a This would have obvious implications for the
    end-Ediacaran mass extinction.

    What evidence do you have for the idea that there was a mass
    extinction at the end of the Ediacarian?

    With the Paleozoic, you had the formation of hard materials
    that could more easily fossilize.

    Was the lack of fossils just lack of hard structures.

    Your use of the words 'end-Ediacaran mass extinction'
    implies that you think that a mass extinction during
    the time period was at least obviously true to yourself.

    If you are interested in convincing others that such
    a mess extinction existed, provide evidence.


    The end-Ediacaran extinction is well known.-a Almost all the Ediacaran
    fauna disappeared.-a The classical explanation includes increased oxygen
    in the water column, predation by early Cambrian animals with hard
    feeding appendages and bioturbation of the bacterial/algal mat that supported the "mudstickers" of the Ediacaran.

    There are plenty of soft-bodied organisms fossilized in the Cambrian.
    I'm not interested in convincing you or anyone else in the reality of
    the extinction.-a A little research is all anyone neeeds.

    Sounds like a bunch of hand-waving, because.

    You are not interested in what is true.

    I will not give you any benefit of doubt.

    But it seems feasible to me that there might have been one
    at the time, who knows.


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