MEDIA ADVISORY
TO: News Directors, Education and Science Reporters
FROM: University Relations
SUBJECT: UAF Researcher Co-author of Article in Journal, Science
DATE & TIME: Friday, May 17, 2002
While the extinction of dinosaurs is now commonly attributed to the ecological
effects of a comet or asteroid impact about 65 million years ago, scientists
using new methods of analyzing sediment from the Triassic-Jurassic boundary,
suggest the rise and subsequent 135-million-year reign of large dinosaurs
may also have been in part due to an earlier comet or asteroid impact
about 200 million years ago.
The research, featured in the May 17, 2002 issue of the journal, Science,
brings together years of research into the duration, magnitude and probable
cause of late Triassic floral and faunal extinctions in order to reconstruct
the ecological conditions surrounding the dinosaurs rise to dominance
during the subsequent Jurassic period. The authors conclude that the after-effects
of an asteroid impact may have killed off or reduced many competitive
reptilian groups, clearing the way for dinosaurs to diversify and flourish.
The article, Ascent of the Dinosaurs Linked to an Iridium Anomaly
at the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary, was co-authored by Sarah Fowell,
a faculty member in the University of Alaska Fairbanks Department of Geology
and Geophysics. Fowell was among a team of geologists who analyzed footprints,
bones and plant spores in more than 70 locations in eastern North America.
They also examined iridium dust and magnetic fields in four correlative
sediment layers of the Newark Basin in present day New Jersey. Fowell
noted that the abundance of fern spores increased briefly yet dramatically
at the end of the Triassic period, coincident with the regional disappearance
of several common Triassic plant types. Ferns are ecological opportunists,
typically found in higher quantities after a catastrophic event.
We submit that the demise of numerous non-dinosaurian reptiles
and the subsequent, rapid evolution and diversification of the dinosaurs
coincides with an ecological disaster that affected both the flora and
fauna at the end of the Triassic period, said Fowell. Whether
the event was an instantaneous collision with an extraterrestrial object
or the result of a more protracted episode of volcanic activity or both,
we cannot currently determine. Regardless, the growth of Jurassic dinosaurs
in size and diversity can be viewed as the result of expansion into empty
niches vacated by the mass extinction of their ecological competitors.
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CONTACT: Sarah Fowell, UAFs Alaska Quaternary Center at (907) 474-7810 or e-mail ffsjf@uaf.edu.
CJB//05-16-02/02-071ma

