Premium Only Content

How the Dinosaurs Died - First Apocalypse - Full Documentary
Sixty-five million years ago the last of the non-avian dinosaurs went extinct. So too did the giant mosasaurs and plesiosaurs in the seas and the pterosaurs in the skies. Plankton, the base of the ocean food chain, took a hard hit. Many families of brachiopods and sea sponges disappeared. The remaining hard-shelled ammonites vanished. Shark diversity shriveled. Most vegetation withered. In all, more than half of the world's species were obliterated.
What caused this mass extinction that marks the end of the Cretaceous and the beginning of the Paleogene? Scientists have yet to find an answer. The one that does must explain why these animals died while most mammals, turtles, crocodiles, salamanders, and frogs survived. Birds escaped. So did snails, bivalves, sea stars (starfish), and sea urchins. Even hardy plants able to weather climate extremes fared OK.
Scientists tend to huddle around one of two hypotheses that may explain the Cretaceous extinction: an extraterrestrial impact, such as an asteroid or comet, or a massive bout of volcanism. Either scenario would have choked the skies with debris that starved the Earth of the sun's energy, throwing a wrench in photosynthesis and sending destruction up and down the food chain. Once the dust settled, greenhouse gases locked in the atmosphere would have caused the temperature to soar, a swift climate swing to topple much of the life that survived the prolonged darkness.
Asteroid or Volcanoes?
The extraterrestrial impact theory stems from the discovery that a layer of rock dated precisely to the extinction event is rich in the metal iridium. This layer is found all over the world, on land and in the oceans. Iridium is rare on Earth but it's found in meteorites at the same concentration as in this layer. This led scientists to postulate that the iridium was scattered worldwide when a comet or asteroid struck somewhere on Earth and then vaporized. A 110-mile-wide (180-kilometer-wide) crater carved out of Mexico's Yucatán Peninsula, called Chicxulub, has since been found and dated to 65 million years ago. Many scientists believe the fallout from the impact killed the dinosaurs.
But Earth's core is also rich in iridium, and the core is the source of magma that some scientists say spewed out in vast, floodlike flows that piled up more than 1.5 miles (2.4 kilometers) thick over 1 million square miles (2.6 million square kilometers) of India. This bout of volcanism has also been dated to about 65 million years ago and would have spread the iridium around the world, along with sunlight-blocking dust and soot and greenhouse gases.
Both hypotheses have merit. Some scientists think both may have contributed to the extinction, and others suggest the real cause was a more gradual shift in climate and changing sea levels. Regardless of what caused the extinction, it marked the end of Tyrannosaurus rex's reign of terror and opened the door for mammals to rapidly diversify and evolve into newly opened niches.
-
6:44
Seeker Land
3 months agoChina's New Deadly Drone Mothership - Jiu Tian - World's First Airborne UAV Launcher
141 -
1:43:38
The Quartering
3 hours agoWar In The Streets & How Bad Will It Get?
65.8K29 -
12:51
Dr. Nick Zyrowski
6 hours agoDoctors Got It Wrong! How to RAISE Testosterone Levels Forever
8574 -
1:14:40
Mark Kaye
4 hours ago🔴 Trump FUMES As Police Abandon Chicago At Pritzker's Orders
5.76K24 -
LIVE
Film Threat
18 hours agoVERSUS: THE SMASHING MACHINE BOMBS + 007 EMASCULATED ON AMAZON | Film Threat Versus
68 watching -
LIVE
The Nunn Report - w/ Dan Nunn
1 hour ago[Ep 763] The Democrat Death Cult – Party of Violence| Judicial Coup & Real Insurrection
175 watching -
LIVE
Owen Shroyer
36 minutes agoOwen Report - 10-06-2025 - Debut Episode Of Your New Favorite Talk Show
1,590 watching -
56:24
DeVory Darkins
3 hours ago $29.67 earnedFederal Judge issues shocking order against Trump as Chicago Mayor pulls insane stunt
71.1K146 -
1:24:59
Sean Unpaved
4 hours agoPoll Plunge & Mile-High Mayhem: Texas & Penn State Crash, Sunday's Fireworks, & Broncos Stun Eagles'
26.7K1 -
9:24
Ken LaCorte: Elephants in Rooms
1 day ago $0.56 earnedThe secret of Indian store owners
3.74K4