Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Re: [Geology2] Plant-Eating Dinosaur Discovered in Antarctica



Throughout the history of our planet there is ALWAYS an Ice Age when there is a land mass located over one of the poles and a Torrid Age when not... and yes, we are still in an Ice Age by definition although in an Interglacial Period of this current Ice Age. Someday after we are long gone the current Ice Age will end when plate tectonics moves Antarctica off of the South Polar region.

Kimmer

On Tue, Dec 20, 2011 at 12:37 PM, Rick Bates <HappyMoosePhoto@gmail.com> wrote:
 

Probably a greenhouse.  Reptiles like it warm.  Hmm, so do I, does that have meaning?

 

Merry Christmas,

Rick

 


From: Victor Healey

Well, for plants to be in Antarctica could we have had at one time a global climate like a greenhouse?

 

If so could all those fearsome teeth have been used to tear and eat leafy vegetation, a different diet?

 

On Dec 20, 2011, at 2:38 PM, Lin Kerns wrote:

Plant-Eating Dinosaur Discovered in Antarctica

ScienceDaily (Dec. 19, 2011) — For the first time, the presence of large bodied herbivorous dinosaurs in Antarctica has been recorded. 




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