I assume he means the Earth was warming up at the time...
When Issi saaneq was alive, the supercontinent Pangaea would have been starting to break apart, forming the Atlantic Ocean in the process. It's this shifting geography that means we now have dinosaur fossils spread out all across the world.
"At the time, the Earth was experiencing climate changes that enabled the first plant-eating dinosaurs to reach Europe and beyond," says sedimentologist Lars Clemmensen from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.
Would someone please get this to Cop26
Maybe it's time for paleontologists to talk to climatologists. Have your guy talk to my guy. Because it seems to me this stuff is cyclical, and the only mass extinction events to worry about are an asteroid impact or nuclear holocaust.
When Issi saaneq was alive, the supercontinent Pangaea would have been starting to break apart, forming the Atlantic Ocean in the process. It's this shifting geography that means we now have dinosaur fossils spread out all across the world.
"At the time, the Earth was experiencing climate changes that enabled the first plant-eating dinosaurs to reach Europe and beyond," says sedimentologist Lars Clemmensen from the University of Copenhagen in Denmark.
Would someone please get this to Cop26
Maybe it's time for paleontologists to talk to climatologists. Have your guy talk to my guy. Because it seems to me this stuff is cyclical, and the only mass extinction events to worry about are an asteroid impact or nuclear holocaust.