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SGT Mary G.
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Good article and very informative about snakes. I didn't know any of that information about snakes.
Our local museum teaches that small critters were able to survive because they could find cover - underground and hibernate - like snakes did. Also the death of the dinosaurs did not happen all at once immediately worldwide, though the must have in the region of impact. The changes in weather caused from the impact lasted a very long time, so that we actually can see a record of trends that indicate climate change over hundreds of thousands of years. The lava floods in Siberia and India also contributed to those changes over hundreds of thousands of years time which some scientist say had already contributed to the decline of the dinosaur by the time the asteroid arrived. In the immediate vicinity of the impact, even as far north as Montana there is evidence of catastrophe. Did a series of tidal waves from the impact reach that far north? The impact may have contributed to creating the inland sea that extended from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic. At our local history museum a short film of a recreation of the Chicxulub impact was a favorite of visitors.
Here is a link that provides an idea of the immediate regional effects of the impact. It is interesting how the ejecta correspond to a supervolcano in NM and also to what looks like locations of Yellowstone hotspots in that region associated with its eruptions. Perhaps locations of ejecta are coincidental; or perhaps they thinned the crust enough at the location to eventually become hot spots. I haven't seen any research concerned with that question. But surely other folks have wondered too.
https://www.lpi.usra.edu/science/kring/Chicxulub/regional-effects/
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