Permian Pompeii?
– – Roughly 298 million years ago, a volcano erupted in the Inner Mongolian district near the modern-day city of Wuda, China raining down volcanic ash with such intensity that a forest was quickly buried and essentially preserved in remarkable detail down to branch and leaf structure. American and Chinese scientists have recently excavated this lost forest, ironically through coal mining activities in the region.
The preserved forest of about 11,000 square feet gives researchers the unique opportunity to examine an ecosystem essentially frozen in time by a natural disaster dating back to when the earth had only one giant landmass known as Pangaea. Scientists have worked with artist Ren Yugao to capture how the sites may have looked at the time…
Explore posts in the same categories: cool things, historical perspectives, research, scienceTags: Chinese fossil forest
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February 23, 2012 at 10:38 pm
Knowing Roger Corman, he’ll probably use every headline he can find, on what’s un-earthed, and turn it into the first Syfy Channel original movie for March 2012.
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February 23, 2012 at 10:39 pm
Maybe with some kind of neo-logismic title like “MONGOLIZARD.”
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February 24, 2012 at 1:12 am
I’m ready…gimme popcorn!
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