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Fossil leaves yield extinction clues. (Earth Science).


Analyses of fossil leaves provide more evidence that the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was sudden and probably brought about by an extraterrestrial impact.

The demise of the dinosaurs coincided both with a major extraterrestrial impact and massive volcanism volcanism
 or vulcanism

Any of various processes and phenomena associated with the surface discharge of molten rock or hot water and steam, including volcanoes, geysers, and fumaroles.
 in India. Both of those events--one sudden, the other unfolding over as many as 2 million years--would have dramatically influenced Earth's climate by pumping carbon dioxide and other gases into the atmosphere. Some scientists have proposed that volcanism alone was enough to have caused the extinctions.

David J. Beerling of the University of Sheffield The University of Sheffield is a research university, located in Sheffield in South Yorkshire, England. Reputation
Sheffield was the Sunday Times University of the Year in 2001 and has consistently appeared as their top 20 institutions.
 in England and his colleagues looked to fossil leaves for clues about how quickly the mass extinctions may have occurred. The proportion of leaf area occupied by stomata--the pore cells that leaves use to take in carbon dioxide and send out oxygen--is directly related to the concentration of planet-warming carbon dioxide in the air. The scientists' analysis of ginkgo ginkgo (gĭng`kō) or maidenhair tree, tall, slender, picturesque deciduous tree (Ginkgo biloba) with fan-shaped leaves.  leaves from the million years before the worldwide dinosaur die-off suggests that the carbon dioxide concentrations in the air fluctuated between 350 and 540 parts per million parts per million

mg/kg or ml/l; see ppm.
 (ppm) during that period.

Evergreen ferns that lived just after the mass extinctions grew in a much different atmosphere, which held at least 2,300 ppm carbon dioxide. Such a sudden spike in carbon dioxide doesn't match what would be expected from a long period of sustained volcanism, says Beerling. However, an asteroid or comet splashing down in the shallow sea off ancient Mexico could have instantly vaporized va·por·ize  
tr. & intr.v. va·por·ized, va·por·iz·ing, va·por·iz·es
To convert or be converted into vapor.



va
 enough carbonate sediments to boost carbon dioxide to the higher concentration. That change would have raised average global temperatures about 7.5[degrees]C, says Beerling.

After another half-million years, the stomata sto·ma·ta  
n.
A plural of stoma.
 on leaves of the same ginkgo species--which had vanished from the fossil record for a while--showed that concentrations of carbon dioxide stabilized at around 340 ppm. Beerling and his coworkers present their results in the June 11 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, usually referred to as PNAS, is the official journal of the United States National Academy of Sciences. .--S.P.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Jul 13, 2002
Words:331
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