Tiny mammals, giant reptiles: Fossil snapshots of biotic response to climate
- Time:
- Monday, November 4th, 9:30 am to 10:15 am
- Location:
- Century Ballroom B
- Speaker(s):
- Jonathan I. BlochDirector of the Program of Vertebrate Paleontology, Florida Museum of Natural History
What will happen to life on Earth in a rapidly warming planet? Jon Bloch says we have only to look in the fossil record for abundant data from past global hyperthermal events—the big experiments already run by the planet. Along with Titanoboa, the 48-foot long biggest snake ever, he has found the tiny ungulate ancestors of horses, cows, pigs, camels, rhinos and whales during a big planetary warmup around 60 million years ago. Bloch’s recent work in the Americas tells a dynamic story of the biotic response to global climate change. Sharing the stage are early primates, furious battles between invasive and endemic species and, yes, monkeys rafting the open seas.
For more information, see the CASW website.