[meteorite-list] What killed off the Mammoth?

Sterling K. Webb sterling_k_webb at sbcglobal.net
Sat Jun 16 14:23:18 EDT 2012


EP, List,

<Quote>
It was assumed that Wrangell Island mammoths ranged
from 180-230 cm in shoulder height and were for a time
considered "dwarf mammoths". However this classification
has been re-evaluated and since the Second International
Mammoth Conference in 1999, these mammoths are no
longer considered to be true "dwarf mammoths"
<Unquote>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dwarf_elephant

Eight fee high at the shoulder is a little high for a "dwarf"
or for a large dog. I don't want to meet a Weimaraner
that's eight feet high, ya know?

So, instead of being the World's Tallest Midget, they've
decided it's the World's Smallest Giant. The California
Channel Island mammoths were 4-5 feet at the shoulder
and the Mediterranean Dwarf mammoths even smaller.



Sterling K. Webb
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "E.P. Grondine" <epgrondine at yahoo.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Saturday, June 16, 2012 9:38 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] What killed off the Mammoth?


> Hi Paul -
>
> The answer is the same thing that killed off many megafuana 
> intercontinentally, instantaneously, and simlutaneously: global 
> climate collapse, i.l., "nucelar winter".
>
> Now they are two causes of global dust loading, one of which is 
> volcanic eruption, the other impact. Since we have no evidence of 
> volcanic eruption, we are left with impact.
>
> PS- Sterling, Wrangle Island mammoth were already the size of large 
> dogs, so small as to constitute a different species, using the old 
> definition based on ability to interbreed.
>
> EP
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