we watch "Jurassic" Dino-movies every week. — Michael Ossipoff
Yes, there are some very interesting facts concerning the earth. — Metaphysician Undercover
The equator is not stable, to begin with. The magnetic poles do not line up with the true poles, and are moving. And, the north/south axis flips from time to time, to mention a few, other than the wobble. — Metaphysician Undercover
So look to the biologists for answers. As a side note, I visited the Alaskan rain forest and also a small patch of woods just outside that zone which we dubbed 'honey I shrunk the kids'. Many plants were recognizable (the same ones I have at home), but about 4x the size I normally see. The dandelions stood about a meter high for instance.I did acknowledge that earlier in the thread. It remains mysterious, however, why the mega-fauna of that age was so much bigger than anything that exists today. Some of the brachiopods weighed as much as today's whales. I was wondering if there is any global change that might explain this disparity. — Wayfarer
Why couldn't very big muscles attached to very big bones with big connective tissue (tendons, ligaments, cartilage, etc.)? Maybe there were large ganglions located in the lower back to help coordinate tail and leg movement? — Bitter Crank
The exceptionally large size of the terrestrial animals of the Mesozoic era is not a subtle oddity to be dismissed but rather it is a glaring paradox that must be investigated. The essence of science - our belief that we exist in a rational reality - is at stake here.
800,000,000,000 tons, or 725,747,792,000,000 kg if my calculation is correct. Dr Google tells me the mass of the earth is 5.972 × 10^24 kg. — Wayfarer
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