I would go a lot further that this. I suspect that a population of dinosaurs lived
into the Ice Age in the Australian New Guinea Sub continent called the Sahul. This was a mostly vast rain forest in the
Northern reaches and likely around fifteen degrees further south if we accept
the Pleistocene Nonconformity as ending the Ice Age.
The fauna is largely unlike the
old world fauna and it is reasonable that a number of dinosaur species could
well have held out here. Besides, this a
complexly opposite the Yucatan
which we recognize as the impact zone for the KT event. It should have been the least affected place
on Earth and only came under serious pressure with the advent of the sudden
collapse of the Ice Age which inundated the rain forest in particular.
We have also learned that a sub
group of dinosaurs were adapted to swamplands and had excellent chances of
surviving anything as did the crocodiles and many other reptiles there. I suspect that our most famous reptile known
as Tyrannosaurus Rex was aquatic and hunted crocs. Certainly we have evidence of such a remnant
population in the remnants of the Sahul that is surely aquatic. (google this
blog for Burrunjor)
Thus it comes as no surprise that
survivors made it through even in the old world mostly depending on their
ability to retreat to swamps. Highlands and forest would have been covered with ash and
dust throughout the Northern Hemisphere at least and geology suggests that just
about everywhere had a ash problem.
Thus outside of swamps, survival
was scant. Afterward the tide against
the dinosaurs became overwhelming in the old world also in the Sahul.
What ended was the use of large eggs
as a method of raising the next generation. Two separate strategies evolved but
those reptiles dependent on protecting large eggs died out. It obviously remains in use for birds but
attempts by large birds to survive have generally been too difficult. We like to blame humanity for these
extinctions but any aggressive mammal can do it as rats on many islands have
shown.
In the event the dinosaurs
survived but massively decimated in numbers from which it appears that they
never recovered.
Dinosaurs survived for at least 700,000 years after meteorite collision
Dinosaurs survived for more than 700,000 years after the earth was hit
by a massive meteorite originally believed to have caused their extinction,
according to new research.
28 Jan 2011
Many palaeontologists believe that all non-avian dinosaurs disappeared
almost 66 million years ago - after debris from the meteorite blocked out the
sun and caused extreme climate conditions, killing vegetation worldwide.
But new tests on a fossilised bone of a plant eating dinosaur
discovered in New Mexico
found that it was only 64.8 million years old - meaning that it was alive about
700,000 years after it was thought to have died.
A team at the University of Alberta , Canada , used a new
"direct-dating" method called U-Pb (uranium lead) dating to establish
the age of a hadrosaur's thigh bone much more accurately.
A laser beam removes minute particles of the fossil, which then undergo
radioactive dating - which allows the age of the fossil bone to be determined
and can even tell what type of food the dinosaur ate.
Living bone contains very low levels of uranium, but during
fossilisation (typically less than 1000 years after death), this level
increases.
The uranium atoms in bone decay spontaneously to lead over time and,
once fossilisation is complete, the uranium-lead "clock" starts
ticking.
By measuring the radioactive decay it is possible to establish
accurately the age of the hadrosaur, a giant plant eating dinosaur with a
platypus-like bill.
Currently, palaeontologists date dinosaur fossils using a technique called
'relative chronology' which means establishing the age of sedimentary rocks
above and below the layer in which the fossil is found.
But a potential weakness for this approach is that over millions of
years geologic and environmental forces may cause erosion of the fossil-bearing
layer causing it to move from its original position in relation to other rock
layers.
Led by Larry Heaman from the Department of Earth and Atmospheric
Sciences, the team say there could be several reasons why the New Mexico hadrosaur
came from a line of dinosaurs that survived the great mass extinction of the
late Cretaceous period (KT extinction period).
Dr. Heaman said it is possible that in some areas the vegetation wasn't
wiped out and a number of hadrosaur species survived.
The researchers added that the potential survival of dinosaur eggs
during extreme climatic conditions also needed to be explored.
They believe if their new uranium-lead dating technique bears out on
more fossil samples then the KT extinction paradigm and the end of the
dinosaurs will have to be revised.
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