Post-apocalyptic fossils show rise of mammals after dinosaur demise


  • World
  • Friday, 25 Oct 2019

A scenic vista shows Corral Bluffs, near Denver, Colorado U.S. in a picture released October 24, 2019. HHMI Tangled Bank Studios/Handout via REUTERS.

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A revelatory cache of fossils dug up in central Colorado details as never before the rise of mammals from the post-apocalyptic landscape after an asteroid smacked Earth 66 million years ago and annihilated three-quarters of all species including the dinosaurs.

The fossils, described by scientists on Thursday, date from the first million years after the calamity and show that the surviving terrestrial mammalian and plant lineages rebounded with aplomb. Mammals, after 150 million years of subservience, attained dominance. Plant life diversified impressively.

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