
"The Day the Mesozoic Died" Topic
6 Posts
All members in good standing are free to post here. Opinions expressed here are solely those of the posters, and have not been cleared with nor are they endorsed by The Miniatures Page.
Please do not post offers to buy and sell on the main forum.
For more information, see the TMP FAQ.
Back to the Prehistoric Message Board
Areas of InterestAncients
Featured Hobby News Article
Top-Rated Ruleset
Featured Showcase Article
Featured Book Review
|
| Tango01 | 03 Dec 2025 12:51 p.m. PST |
"Built upon the slopes of Mount Ingino in Umbria, the ancient town of Gubbio boasts many well-preserved structures that document its glorious history. Founded by the Etruscans between the second and first centuries B.C., its Roman theater, Consuls Palace, and various churches and fountains are spectacular monuments to the Roman, Medieval, and Renaissance periods. It is one of those special destinations that draws tourists to this famous part of Italy. It was not the ancient architecture but the much longer natural history preserved in the rock formations outside the city walls that brought Walter Alvarez, a young American geologist, to Gubbio. Just outside the town lay a geologist's dream—one of the most extensive, continuous limestone rock sequences anywhere on the planet (See Father and Son). The "Scaglia rossa" is the local name for the attractive pink outcrops found along the mountainsides and gorges of the area ("Scaglia" means scale or flake and refers to how the rock is easily chipped into the square blocks used for buildings, such as the Roman theater. "Rossa" refers to the pink color). The massive formation is composed of many layers that span about 400 meters in total. Once an ancient seabed, the rocks represent some 50 million years of Earth's history. Geologists have long used fossils to help identify parts of the rock record from around the world and Walter employed this strategy in studying the formations around Gubbio. Throughout the limestone he found fossilized shells of tiny creatures, called foraminifera or "forams" for short, a group of single-celled protists that can only be seen with a magnifying lens. But in one centimeter of clay that separated two limestone layers, he found no fossils at all. Furthermore, in the older layer below the clay, the forams were more diverse and much larger than in the younger layer above the clay (See Foraminifera). Everywhere he looked around Gubbio, he found that thin layer of clay and the same difference between the forams below and above it…" link link
Armand
|
| rmaker | 04 Dec 2025 10:25 a.m. PST |
You do realize that the impact theory has been discredited, right? Read "The Last Extinction" by Greta Keller. |
| Tango01 | 04 Dec 2025 3:54 p.m. PST |
|
John the OFM  | 04 Dec 2025 7:09 p.m. PST |
You do realize that the impact theory has been discredited, right? Read "The Last Extinction" by Greta Keller. Oh, really? 🙄 |
| rmaker | 05 Dec 2025 7:20 a.m. PST |
Yes, John. Of course, the media still haven't picked up on it (giant meteors are much better story material than extreme vulcanism), but it's a fact. |
John the OFM  | 05 Dec 2025 7:56 a.m. PST |
Oh. Okay. As long as you say "It's a fact", I have to believe you. 🤷 Funny, but there's a lot of "other experts" who would disagree. Nit that my opinion matters one way or the other. |
|