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Flowers! | EurekAlert! Science News


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VIDEO: What happened in the tropics when an asteroid hit the planet and how did it shape today s rainforests?
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Credit: Monica Carvalho
Tropical rainforests today are biodiversity hotspots and play an important role in the world s climate systems. A new study published today in
Science sheds light on the origins of modern rainforests and may help scientists understand how rainforests will respond to a rapidly changing climate in the future.
The study led by researchers at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute (STRI) shows that the asteroid impact that ended the reign of dinosaurs 66 million years ago also caused 45% of plants in what is now Colombia to go extinct, and it made way for the reign of flowering plants in modern tropical rainforests. ....

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute , United States , Smithsonian Institution , District Of Columbia , United Kingdom , Distrito Federal , Boise State University , Panama City , College Park , Mato Grosso , Estado Do Rio , University Of Houston , Universidad Nacional De Colombia , Distrito Capital , Norfolk Island , National Museum Of Natural History , Conrad Labandeira , Paleoflora Ltda , Instituto Amaz , Fabiany Herrera , Carlos Jaramillo , Negaunee Institute For Conservation Science , University Of Maryland , University Of Florida , Capital Normal University , University Of Fribourg ,

New study investigates how life on land recovered after


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IMAGE: The plant-eating pareiasaurs were preyed on by sabre-toothed gorgonopsians. Both groups died out during the end-Permian mass extinction, or The Great Dying.
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Credit: © Xiaochong Guo
SAN FRANCISCO (March 16, 2021) - Over the course of Earth s history, several mass extinction events have destroyed ecosystems, including one that famously wiped out the dinosaurs. But none were as devastating as The Great Dying, which took place 252 million years ago during the end of the Permian period. A new study, published today in
Proceedings of the Royal Society B, shows in detail how life recovered in comparison to two smaller extinction events. The international study team composed of researchers from the China University of Geosciences, the California Academy of Sciences, the University of Bristol, Missouri University of Science and Technology, and the Chinese Academy of Sciences showed for the first time that the end-Permian mass ....

United States , Mike Benton , Peter Roopnarine , Yuangeng Huang , Zhong Qiang Chen , China University Of Geosciences , Academy Curator Of Geology , California Academy Of Sciences , Proceedings Of The Royal Society , University Of Bristol , Missouri University Of Science , Great Dying , China University , California Academy , Missouri University , Chinese Academy , Academy Curator , Professor Mike Benton , Professor Zhong Qiang Chen , North China , Ecology Environment , Earth Science , Temperature Dependent Phenomena , Algorithms Models , Climate Change , மிச Ou ரி ,

Study Uses Stomach Stones to Show Wyoming Dinosaurs Migrated


Written by Andrew-Rossi on March 17, 2021
Research suggests millions of years ago, migrating dinosaurs traveled to Wyoming on a full stomach of stones from hundreds of miles away.
Research conducted by scientists at the University of Texas discovered new information on the life and times of  Jurassic dinosaurs in Wyoming. But the discovery didn’t come from dinosaur bones – it came from dinosaur stones.
Gastroliths are smooth, shiny stones often found next to the skeletons of long-necked dinosaurs like Brontosaurus. They called trace fossils – not bones or teeth, but something left behind by a prehistoric creature. Footprints and coprolites – fossilized poop – are other examples of trace fossils. ....

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TU Graz Researchers Identify Chemical Processes as Key to Understanding Landslides


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IMAGE: Mass movements (like a landslide in the picture) cause considerable damage year after year. A study by TU Graz now identifies the triggers of such events.
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Credit: © Kieffer - TU Graz/DCNA
Mass movements such as landslides and hill-slope debris flows cause billions of euros in economic damage around the world every year. Between 20 and 80 million euros are spent annually from the disaster fund to repair disaster damage in Austria, 15 to 50 percent of which is attributable to mud flows and landslides. Now, a team of geologists from Graz University of Technology (TU Graz), in cooperation with the Burgenland state road administration, identified for the first time the chemical influencing factors and triggers for recurrent mass movements in fine-grained sediments. From results published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, preventive measures and strategies can be derived to guard against such events. ....

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For the Next Generation: A Conversation with Mongolian Civic Leader and Writer Oyungerel Tsedevdamba


By Raymond Lam
Image courtesy of Oyungerel Tsedevdamba
For the past few decades, Oyungerel Tsedevdamba has been prominent as a civic leader and household name in Mongolia. Her interest in human development and the arts is expansive: she spent 18 years in public service, serving as former minister of culture, tourism and sports and as an member of parliament and an advisor to the prime minister. She served as president of the Democratic Women s Union of Mongolia and as a staff and later non-staff advisor to Mongolian president Elbegdorj Tsakhia (2009–17). She is a human rights advocate and co-founder and president of Local Solutions, an NGO. Through Local Solutions, Tsedevdamba launched an ongoing campaign called “Let’s Change Our Toilets” to remove the stigma around toilets and sanitary hygiene, educating people across Mongolia in the importance of good toilets in the home especially in traditional off-grid communities since 2017. She is also the author of ....

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