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lizards

10 November 2016
Biology

At http://phys.org/print397740334.html … leaf fossils from Patagonia display evidence of insect feeding at the Cretaceous/Palaeogene boundary. AQs such, researchers claim that the ecosystem in South America recovered earlier than it is thought to have done in North America after the K/T boundary event. This appears to be a somewhat roundabout argument as it is only the uniformitarian dating of sediments just before and just after the hypothetical asteroid strike that allows mainstream to suppose a long period of time is relevant. Once those sedimentary layers are interpreted in a catastrophist fashion the anomaly disappears.

At http://phys.org/print397727808.html … remains of a new large lizard that apparently lived in what is now a small island on the tip of the West Antarctic peninsular has been found – dating to the Late Cretaceous. It appears to be a relative of modern lizards.

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