Cretaceous Period, in geologic time, the last of the three periods of the Mesozoic Era. The Cretaceous began 145.0 million years ago and ended 66 million years ago; it followed the Jurassic Period and was succeeded by the Paleogene Period (the first of the two periods into which the Tertiary Period was divided). The Cretaceous is the longest period of the Phanerozoic Eon. Spanning 79 million years, it represents more time than has elapsed since the extinction of the dinosaurs, which occurred at the end of the period.
The name Cretaceous is derived from creta, Latin for “chalk,” and was first proposed by J.B.J. Omalius d’Halloy in 1822. D’Halloy had been commissioned to make a geologic map of France, and part of his task was to decide upon the geologic units to be represented by it. One of his units, the Terrain Crétacé, included chalks and underlying sands. Chalk is a soft, fine-grained type of limestone composed predominantly of the armourlike plates of coccolithophores, tiny floating algae that flourished during the Late Cretaceous.
The Cretaceous Period began with Earth’s land assembled essentially into two continents, Laurasia in the north and Gondwana in the south. These were almost completely separated by the equatorial Tethys seaway, and the various segments of Laurasia and Gondwana had already started to rift apart. North America had just begun pulling away from Eurasia during the Jurassic, and South America had started to split off from Africa, from which India, Australia, and Antarctica were also separating. When the Cretaceous Period ended, most of the present-day continents were separated from each other by expanses of water such as the North and South Atlantic Ocean. At the end of the period, India was adrift in the Indian Ocean, and Australia was still connected to Antarctica.
The climate was generally warmer and more humid than today, probably because of very active volcanism associated with unusually high rates of seafloor spreading. The polar regions were free of continental ice sheets, their land instead covered by forest. Dinosaurs roamed Antarctica, even with its long winter night.
The lengthy Cretaceous Period constitutes a major portion of the interval between ancient life-forms and those that dominate Earth today. Dinosaurs were the dominant group of land animals, especially “duck-billed” dinosaurs (hadrosaurs), such as Shantungosaurus, and horned forms, such as Triceratops. Giant marine reptiles such as ichthyosaurs, mosasaurs, and plesiosaurs were common in the seas, and flying reptiles (pterosaurs) dominated the sky. Flowering plants (angiosperms) arose close to the beginning of the Cretaceous and became more abundant as the period progressed. The Late Cretaceous was a time of great productivity in the world’s oceans, as borne out by the deposition of thick beds of chalk in western Europe, eastern Russia, southern Scandinavia, the Gulf Coast of North America, and western Australia. The Cretaceous ended with one of the greatest mass extinctions in the history of Earth, exterminating the dinosaurs, marine and flying reptiles, and many marine invertebrates.
The Cretaceous Period is biologically significant because it is a major part of the transition from the early life-forms of the Paleozoic Era to the advanced diversity of the current Cenozoic Era. For example, most if not all of the flowering plants (angiosperms) made their first appearance during the Cretaceous. Although dinosaurs were the dominant animals of the period, many modern animals, including the placental mammals, made their debut during the Cretaceous. Other groups—such as clams and snails, snakes and lizards, and most fishes—developed distinctively modern characteristics before the mass extinction marking the end of the period.
Marine life
The marine realm can be divided into two paleobiogeographic regions, the Tethyan and the boreal. This division is based on the occurrence of rudist-dominated organic reeflike structures. Rudists were large, rather unusual bivalves that had one valve shaped like a cylindrical vase and another that resembled a flattened cap. The rudists were generally dominant over the corals as framework builders. They rarely existed outside the Tethyan region, and the few varieties found elsewhere did not create reeflike structures. Rudist reeflike structures of Cretaceous age serve as reservoir rocks for petroleum in Mexico, Venezuela, and the Middle East.
Other organisms almost entirely restricted to the Tethys region were actaeonellid and nerineid snails, colonial corals, calcareous algae, larger bottom-dwelling (benthic) foraminiferans, and certain kinds of ammonites and echinoids. In contrast, belemnites were apparently confined to the colder boreal waters. Marine plankton took on a distinctly modern appearance by the end of the Cretaceous. The coccolithophores became so abundant in the Late Cretaceous that vast quantities accumulated to form the substance for which the Cretaceous Period was named—chalk.
Ammonites were numerous and were represented by a variety of forms ranging from the more-usual coiled types to straight forms. Some of the more-unusual ammonites, called heteromorphs, were shaped like fat corkscrews and hairpins.
Terrestrial life
Although the fossil record is irregular in quality and quantity for the Early Cretaceous, it is obvious that dinosaurs continued their lengthy dominance of the land. The Late Cretaceous record is much more complete, particularly in the case of North America and Asia. It is known, for instance, that during the Late Cretaceous many dinosaur types lived in relationships not unlike the present-day terrestrial mammal communities. Although the larger dinosaurs, such as the carnivorous Tyrannosaurus and the herbivorous Iguanodon, are the best-known, many smaller forms also lived in Cretaceous times. Triceratops, a large three-horned dinosaur, inhabited western North America during the Maastrichtian Age. The titanosaurs, a group of sauropods that included Argentinosaurus and Dreadnoughtus, emerged during the second half of the period and were the largest land animals that ever lived.
Various types of small mammals that are now extinct existed during the Triassic and Jurassic, but two important groups of modern mammals evolved during the Cretaceous. Placental mammals, which include most modern mammals (e.g., rodents, cats, whales, cows, and primates), evolved during the Late Cretaceous. Although almost all were smaller than present-day rabbits, the Cretaceous placentals were poised to take over terrestrial environments as soon as the dinosaurs vanished. Another mammal group, the marsupials, evolved during the Cretaceous as well. This group includes the native species of Australia, such as kangaroos and koalas, and the North American opossum.
In the air, the flying reptiles called pterosaurs dominated. One pterosaur, Quetzalcoatlus, from the latest Cretaceous of what is now Texas (U.S.), had a wingspan of about 15 metres (49 feet). Birds developed from a reptilian ancestor during the Jurassic and Cretaceous. Hesperornis was a Cretaceous genus of flightless diving bird that had large feet and sharp backward-directed teeth adapted for preying on fish.
The land plants of the Early Cretaceous were similar to those of the Jurassic. They included the cycads, ginkgoes, conifers, and ferns. The flowering plants (angiosperms) appeared in the Early Cretaceous, became common by the beginning of the middle of the Cretaceous, and came to represent the major component of the landscape by the mid-to-late Cretaceous. The oldest known fossil angiosperm is Montsechia vidalii, an aquatic plant that has been dated to 130 million to 125 million years ago. The angiosperm group included figs, magnolias, poplars, willows, sycamores, and herbaceous plants. With the advent of many new plant types, insects also diversified.
Cretaceous Era (Part one) : The pinnacle of the dinosaurs reign :croc-pog:
Prehistoric Planet series :grumpy-lizard:
Cretaceous Era (Part two) : pinnacle before the end :gator-bi:
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cw: Andrew Tate
why of all god damned people is Andrew motherfucking Tate going off against imperialism to Piers Morgan? he called the west the biggest terrorists and asked why we're spending millions on bombs to drop on farmers while we refuse adequate pay to nurses. the man is the dumbest motherfucker alive - I believe that he's never read and understood a book in his life. it's like he's so dumb the imperial propaganda just flew straight past him.
and then he goes back to talking about women being property. petition to ship him to the Taliban as a pet.
There are people who are like: "end the drone wars and bring them back here to police our neighborhoods" a lot of people are just totally incoherent, and then top it off with having Tate's brain and there you go. He almost certainly didn't arrive to that position because of rigorous materialist analysis or listening to someone else, he wanted to be contrarian and get a rise and I guess he figured this would do it. I doubt he believes it, belief necessitates action and he is not acting on any of those "beliefs"
He converted to Islam, presumably because he thought it's the religion that hates women the most, maybe interacting with Muslims is what's lead him to some revelations about US imperialism?
Request: Ironman mode for hexbear. If you hit a 400 or 401 error, your account gets deleted instead of logged out.
Americans have the weirdest beliefs about Central Americans. We're apparently all 100% indigenous and "Mayan." I'm mestizo and I've had Americans tell me that I have no European ancestry whatsoever. Probably explains why they immediately assume white Guatemalans are American expats.
I'm still logged in :soypoint-2:
:mission-accomplished-1::mission-accomplished-2:
I've been cutting down on social media use lately, lots of "good ideas for posts" have turned into "interesting thoughts I've had" and I never have to reword the idea to be more understandable, or decide what audience would be interested in this idea the most, or come back to my thought to check how many likes it got
It feels ironic to make this post since I've been thinking about the concept a lot, but I feel that sharing too many of your own thoughts online can be harmful, getting point-based feedback for every human thought you have can be unhealthy. It can reshape your thoughts to try to be more marketable and can get you really defensive when 30% of people disagree with your mildly controversial take
Does this make any sense? Am I stating the obvious? Or is it just that I'm bad at persuasive writing and normal people can get their thoughts out just fine? Idk
You are 100% on point with this, and it should be talked about more.
Sorry to gas you up over your post though, seems like it goes against the original purpose of it.
I don't like the attention I receive for making threads, but there's always tons of things I'm interested in reading/posting about. Like right now I'm reading about the mesoamerican "Maya Blue" pigment and how it resists fading over time due to complex "powder diffraction" that westerners didn't even understand until somewhat recently (1950s), over a thousand years after it's invention
Making up a new type of guy:
Guy who doesn't get that queer people are making fun of him by calling him a breeder because it aligns with his fetish.
I think there are a lot of question people might have but they're too afraid to ask because they don't want to get cancelled for not already having the perfect opinions in our highly politicized and social media run world. Like, can I take the water from my dehumidifier and pour it into my Brita filter?
There's no filtration at all with the dehumidifier so it will likely have more large particulate in it then tap water, dust and such, which will shorten the life span of the brita filter but other than that there's no reason not to.
Thank you for being reasonable, most people I try to talk to are complete wokescolds about it.
I get the knee jerk "yuck" reaction to it but if you stop and think there's no reason for it.
The water is as clean as the dehumidifer tank. I'd miss the fluoride and lead from tap, personally
I figure if it's going through the Brita that'd clean it up. No sense letting good grey water go to waste.
Well, this is the second time I've had one of my exes kill themselves after breaking up with me. Idk how I feel about this.
Sorry if this is not a good place to post this.
The first one I'm not really 100% sure what they were thinking when they did it. Maybe they ran out of ways to escape the consequences of their actions and saw the walls closing in? It also could have been just acting on short term impulses, like most cases are.
The second one I know exactly why, and it's really frustrating because I can't think of anything that can be easily done when people get that way. It was that kind of depression that legitimately happens for no reason. Not "my life is terrible and I want to stop experiencing it", more like "I'm going to deliberately make my life bad because that seems like the right thing to do." The kind that can't be reasoned with, and can't even be fixed by better material conditions because they will simply reject any improvements to their life.
They deliberately tried to hurt me because I tried to help them, too. Fuck them for that, but also I feel that could have been resolved if they were still around? I feel like I'm supposed to feel bad for them but I'm mostly just irritated they wasted my time.
i think this is an alright place to post it, but maybe spoiler it with a cw?
I know we say fascism is imperialism turned inwards a lot, but, I'm reading about beans (:bean:) and came across ricin/castor oil, which is a poison that causes intense intestinal distress and found this part:
A heavy dose of castor oil could be used as a humiliating punishment for adults. Colonial officials used it in the British Raj (India) to deal with recalcitrant servants. Belgian military officials prescribed heavy doses of castor oil in Belgian Congo as a punishment for being too sick to work.
The most famous use as punishment came in Fascist Italy under Benito Mussolini. It was a favorite tool used by the Blackshirts to intimidate and humiliate their opponents. Political dissidents were force-fed large quantities of castor oil by Fascist squads. This technique was said to have been originated by Gabriele D'Annunzio or Italo Balbo. Victims of this treatment did sometimes die, as the dehydrating effects of the oil-induced diarrhea often complicated their recovery from the nightstick beatings they also received along with the castor oil; however, even those victims who survived had to bear the humiliation of the laxative effects resulting from excessive consumption of the oil.
Send some good karma my way, I'm going to run out of meds next week and the center I go to was really wishy-washy over the phone about refilling my meds without seeing my doctor. I don't have an appt until Jan and if I run out of meds either I withdrawal or I go to the hospital or an urgent care in the hopes they can fill my script for me. All really shitty options if the center doesn't pull through.
They filled my script that was fast lol, they sounded combative over the phone about it :what-the-hell:
Been thinking a lot about my friend I made on here who I talk to off the site, he hasn't been good and he's not replying to my messages. I'm worried about him but he lives very far away from me. :sadness: I just hope he's doing fine and is ignoring me instead.
Hard not to worry in situations like that. Sometimes people really need time to themselves, so maybe he'll reach out again when he's up for it. If what you posted before is any indication, it sounds like a friendship you both value :heart-sickle:
He's said some things before in the past that sounded like suicidal idealization so it has me worried.