Species Extinction is Nothing New

June 11, 2012 06:16


There were no humans to blame for the Great Permian Extinction when over 90% of all life on Earth was destroyed – animals, plants, trees, fish, plankton even algae disappeared suddenly. And it was not European settlers who wiped out the dinosaurs, diprotodonts, giant kangaroos and other mega-fauna that once roamed outback Australia.

 

 

by Viv Forbes, Chairman, The Carbon Sense Coalition

 

Environmental groups who exaggerated the threat of species extinctions were illustrating their ignorance of the history of species extinctions on Earth.

 

As the global warming bubble deflates, professional alarmists were promoting species extinction as a brand new threat but with the same old guilty party – western industry.

 

However, species extinction, like climate change, is the way of the world.

 

It was not carbon dioxide that entombed millions of mammoths, rhinos and other animals in mucky ice from Iceland to Alaska. It was not steam engines that wiped out the dinosaurs and 75% of other species who had dominated the Earth for 180 million years. There were no humans to blame for the Great Permian Extinction when over 90% of all life on Earth was destroyed – animals, plants, trees, fish, plankton even algae disappeared suddenly. And it was not European settlers who wiped out the dinosaurs, diprotodonts, giant kangaroos and other mega-fauna that once roamed outback Australia.

 

Sadly, history shows that it is the destiny of most species to be destroyed by periodic natural calamities or competition from other species. Earth’s history is a moving picture, not a still life. No species has an assured place on Earth. Some species can adapt and survive – those unable to adapt are removed from the gene pool.

 

Earth’s periodic species extinctions are usually associated with widespread glaciation, volcanism, earth movements and solar disruptions. Most geological eras have closed with such calamitous events. Random and more localised species extinctions are caused by rogue comets. But global warming and abundant carbon dioxide have never featured as causes of mass extinctions.

 

Because of Earth’s long turbulent history, most species surviving today are not “fragile”. Every one of them, including humans, is descended from a long line of survivors going back to the beginnings of life on Earth. And because of the adaptability of life, the Earth today supports more species than ever before.

 

“Man has thrived because of his adaptability, resourcefulness and more recently, his use of science and technology. We cannot now return to a cave-man or hunter-gatherer existence. Without the freedom to explore, develop and utilise our land oceans and minerals, most humans would not survive.

 

Species extinction events are not new, are not caused by burning carbon fuels, and will probably occur again. We will need all of our freedom, ingenuity, technology and reliable energy resources to survive.

 

“Let us not hasten our own species extinction by starving ourselves of food and energy with foolish demonization of carbon, the natural building block of all life forms.”

 

For supporting information see:
http://park.org/Canada/Museum/extinction/extincmenu.html

 

http://www.lakepowell.net/sciencecenter/extinction_events.htm

 

http://bit-player.org/bph-publications/AmSci-2005-07-Hayes-lifecycles.pdf

 

 

Viv Forbes,

Rosewood    Qld   Australia

forbes@carbon-sense.com

 

Viv Forbes has a degree in Applied Science and long experience in helping to explore and unravel the geological history of the great sedimentary basins of central Queensland where, long ago, dinosaurs roamed, brachiopods swam, forests grew and volcanoes spewed massive volumes of lava and ash.

 

 



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