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Dinosaur Extinction Quotes

Quotes tagged as "dinosaur-extinction" Showing 1-2 of 2
Riley Black
“In time, extinction comes for all species. Some leave descendants. Others do not. Beautiful as the image is, there is no tree of life. The shape of biodiversity is more like a chaotic blanket, individual threads splitting, being snipped off, branching again, creating an incredible tangle of species that are both discrete and connected. All the species alive in this moment, at the dawn of the Paleogene, will eventually perish. But some will sprout populations a little different from their point of origin, variations that will survive even as their parent species disappear, and with them the same ecological dance will begin again. The species that exist today will shape what tomorrow looks like, life itself driving the profusion of so many unique forms.”
Riley Black, The Last Days of the Dinosaurs: An Asteroid, Extinction, and the Beginning of Our World

Sahara Sanders
“Why did countless creatures and plants of dinosaur eras have to be made giant?

The enormous amount of bio-organic matter was needed for forming the proper terra firma of the Earth.

When the required vast layers of rich outer crust and soil were formed, the huge-sized species of fauna and flora were carefully removed from the scene of life, by adjusting the planet's climate ‘settings.�

Isn't it obvious that it’s done intentionally?

It created that perfect basis for smaller and more intelligent species to evolve and thrive; slowly but steadily leading to the appearance and progress of the humanity.”
Sahara Sanders, Indigo Diaries: A Series of Novels