no reason to argue its an elaborate hoax perpetuated by the Liberals to scare you. That is all it is.
my point about the dinosaurs is global warming/climate change is not man made at all.
02. Why did the dinosaurs die out?
CLIMATE CHANGE
What was the climate like during the Mesozoic Era (250- 65 million years ago)?
When dinosaurs ruled the Earth, the climate was most likely hot and humid. There is no evidence of Ice Ages or glaciations found in rocks of this age. There is a lot of evidence of tropical species existing at this time. Atmospheric carbon dioxide was close to present-day levels. The ice caps at the North and South Pole had melted, resulting in raised sea levels. Australia was breaking away from Antarctica and gradually moving away from the South Pole, closer to the Equator.
Conifers and ferns dominated the landscape and the first flowering plants were appearing. About half of Australia was covered by shallow inland seas. Evidence for this comes from fossils found in the rocks of this region. They contain marine molluscs and large pre-historic reptiles such as ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. Today this area is called the Great Artesian Basin.
Further information on the great inland seas of the Cretaceous period can be found at the following link.
my point about the dinosaurs is global warming/climate change is not man made at all.
02. Why did the dinosaurs die out?
CLIMATE CHANGE
What was the climate like during the Mesozoic Era (250- 65 million years ago)?
When dinosaurs ruled the Earth, the climate was most likely hot and humid. There is no evidence of Ice Ages or glaciations found in rocks of this age. There is a lot of evidence of tropical species existing at this time. Atmospheric carbon dioxide was close to present-day levels. The ice caps at the North and South Pole had melted, resulting in raised sea levels. Australia was breaking away from Antarctica and gradually moving away from the South Pole, closer to the Equator.
Conifers and ferns dominated the landscape and the first flowering plants were appearing. About half of Australia was covered by shallow inland seas. Evidence for this comes from fossils found in the rocks of this region. They contain marine molluscs and large pre-historic reptiles such as ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. Today this area is called the Great Artesian Basin.
Further information on the great inland seas of the Cretaceous period can be found at the following link.

