Dinosaur extinction didn't clear the way for us
by KrauzeOnce upon a time, the world was ruled by the dinosaurs, with mammals being confined to cracks and crevices. But the fortuitous impact of an asteroid caused the dinosaurs to go extinct, paving the way for the advance of mammals and, ultimately, us. That, plus some philosophical bon mots about the randomness of evolution, has been the traditional story of mammalian evolution. But this view has been challenged in the last couple of years, and now, a new study joins the chorus.
In a study published in the scientific journal of Nature, a group of researchers built a family tree of nearly every living mammal, which showed that the extinction of the dinosaurs had no effect on the diversity of mammals: The main groups of mammals arose millions of years before the dinosaurs went extinct, and they did not become dominant until millions of years after they disappeared. From the Nature press release:
The wipe-out of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period some 65 million years ago opened up room and resources for others. But it did not specifically clear a path for the diversity of animals that would evolve into today's mammals, including humans, says evolutionary biologist Olaf Bininda-Emonds of the Technical University of Munich, Germany: "After the dinosaurs went extinct, they still didn't diversify."
It's possible that had that asteroid not hit Earth, mammals would still have diversified, giving rise to bats, cows, and intelligent primates. If so, then it looks like evolution isn't that random after all.

























March 30th, 2007 at 7:03 am
I suppose the answer you would get is that the presence of dinosaurs would have inhibited the process but I'm not sure that holds water.
Comment by Bradford — March 30, 2007 @ 7:03 am
March 30th, 2007 at 7:14 am
Or we might have had intelligent warm-blooded dinausaurs driving around in cars, working at universities, building churches, etc. No way of knowing I suppose. But clearly evolution isn't totally random. Convergent evolution of marsupials and mammals being a case in point.
Comment by Raevmo — March 30, 2007 @ 7:14 am
March 30th, 2007 at 7:19 am
More evidence that speaks to the plausibilty of front-loading. In fact, it looks to me like the FLE perspective allowed Krauze to anticipate this.
Comment by MikeGene — March 30, 2007 @ 7:19 am
March 30th, 2007 at 10:54 am
I don't see how you get from "the asteroid impact that killed the dinosaurs is not as critical a factor as once thought in the diversification of mammals" to "evolution isn't random". Clearly one part of evolution (mutation) is random regardless of what objects do or don't hit the Earth. The other part of evolution (selection) has always been viewed as a nonrandom effect.
Comment by K Klein — March 30, 2007 @ 10:54 am
March 30th, 2007 at 12:41 pm
Hi Klein,
I never said that there was no random element to evolution whatsoever. I said that evolution wasn't as random as thought. If you haven't already, I suggest that you read Stephen Gould's Wonderful Life. In the final chapter of the book, he makes an argument for the randomness of evolution, pointing to important events in the history of life that just as easily could have had different outcomes. The event most often mentioned is the extinction of the dinosaurs, which is sometimes brandished as the disproof of any notion of teleology in evolution. It is this argument I am criticizing, not some painfully obvious statement that mutations are random.
Comment by Krauze — March 30, 2007 @ 12:41 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 1:09 pm
Actually, the study said that mammals *did* diversify after the K-T event, it's just that most of those mammals were not part of the lineages leading to modern mammals. What everyone, including the press, seems to miss is that even a null model, with random speciation and extinction, will have this same feature, where "modern" lineages (they mean crown clades, groups defined by a group of living organisms and their common ancestor) become rarer and rarer as you go back in time.
Comment by nickmatzke — March 30, 2007 @ 1:09 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 1:19 pm
Hi Nick,
Those lineages were extinct. As I clearly said in my post, the study is about living mammal species.
Comment by Krauze — March 30, 2007 @ 1:19 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 1:30 pm
K Klein,
you should read Simon Conway Morris's "Life's Solution" to get a better idea what's being talked about.
Comment by Doug — March 30, 2007 @ 1:30 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 2:18 pm
I don't think "random" is quite the right word to express your idea. "Contingent" seems a better choice, and is in fact what Gould was talking about in Wonderful Life.
I think it's fair to say that life today is maybe not as contingent on the effects of the KT extinction as we once thought, but that says nothing about the millions of other contingencies (some random, some not) that led us to this point.
Comment by K Klein — March 30, 2007 @ 2:18 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 2:58 pm
K Klein wrote:
What do you mean by 'contingent'? Presumably everything happened in accordance with the laws of nature. True, at the quantum level these laws are indeterministic. And we can always frame counterfactual propositions in the form, "If X had happened, Y would not have happened".
In a different thread I said that both chance and free acts wear the clothing of contingency. This is especially clear with respect to how to understand life's origin. That origin appears contingent but ambiguously so: was it chance, or was it a free act of an intelligent designer? Either way it's contingent..
My point being that just because some event is contingent no more favors the hypothesis that it occured by chance than the hypothesis that it occurred by the free will of a rational agent.
Comment by stunney — March 30, 2007 @ 2:58 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 3:36 pm
K Klein:
Actually, I think it's clear that mammals were/are so much smarter than dinosaurs that they'd have inherited the earth anyway. Especially since the raptors (smartest of the genre) were busy evolving into birds. From the hundreds of dinosaur species we know about, it doesn't look like any of them would have been a match for tool-using, pack-hunting primates.
At any rate, I never bought the idea that dinosaurs had to die off before mammals could come along. The small mammals that existed alongside dinosaurs were not competing for the same resources or filling the same niches. And they did manage to survive the K-T event.
Comment by Joy — March 30, 2007 @ 3:36 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 4:22 pm
But they could only fill the niches previously occupied by the sauropods because the latter disappeared, or at least their disappearance sped up that process. I don't see a compelling reason why raptors couldn't have evolved tool use and wouldn't have become as clever as chimps or us. But I'm not saying it's likely that that they would have either. Who knows? Some birds like New Caledonian jackdaws or crows are very clever at tool construction and use. Give em a few more million years.
Comment by Raevmo — March 30, 2007 @ 4:22 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 5:36 pm
Raevmo:
At what point should they have evolved opposable thumbs so they could actually do fine manipulation enough to invent real tools?
Comment by Joy — March 30, 2007 @ 5:36 pm
March 30th, 2007 at 7:38 pm
After 1.78 million years. I'll buy you a drink if I'm wrong.
Comment by Raevmo — March 30, 2007 @ 7:38 pm
March 31st, 2007 at 9:35 am
stunney:
I generally agree, although I think the level of contingency in the evolution of life tends to call into question the rationality of the "rational agent".
Comment by K Klein — March 31, 2007 @ 9:35 am
March 31st, 2007 at 11:01 am
The "K/T event", has, I think, been oversold, at least from the asteroid angle. Paleoecological evidence has been gathering for years suggesting a different (and far more interesting, in my opinion) reason for the extinctions at the end of the Cretaceous. Large-scale sea level regression and sharply increased vulcanism in that period may have been responsible for a catastrophic decrease in primary production. Before that, the luxuriant plant production supported increasingly complex food webs, with correspondingly increased diversity of herbivores and carnivores. The relatively quick decline of primary production collapsed those elaborate food webs, resulting in the dramatic increase in extinctions.
Two good papers discuss this:
Spicer R (1989). Plants at the Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. Lond. B 325 : 291-305
Briggs J (1991). A Cretaceous-Tertiary mass extinction? Bioscience 41(9): 619-624
Comment by KC — March 31, 2007 @ 11:01 am
March 31st, 2007 at 12:39 pm
KC:
It would appear we are now experiencing another food web collapse.
Comment by Joy — March 31, 2007 @ 12:39 pm
March 31st, 2007 at 4:17 pm
K Klein wrote:
I don't know what you mean by this statement, since I assume you also believe that there is, in principle, a scientific explanation for everything that happened in the evolution of life. Scientific explanations exhibit rationality in the quite profound sense of conforming to mathematics.
I'd like to know on what basis you think evolution "calls into question the rationality of the 'rational agent'." But first, I would like you to consider the following passages as I think they bear a significant relation to the issues of contingency and rationality we are discussing. I've highlighted a few points which I deem particularly important:
link
Link.
That all seems very rational to me. I'm wondering why it doesn't seem very rational to you.
Comment by stunney — March 31, 2007 @ 4:17 pm
March 31st, 2007 at 6:46 pm
stunney: what is your evidence the universe could have been different than it is? What is the sampling space of universes?
Utter speculation without any scientific content. But funny anyway, keep up the good work. Time to sleep.
Comment by Raevmo — March 31, 2007 @ 6:46 pm
March 31st, 2007 at 8:26 pm
raevmo wrote:
Lots of virtual universes have been modelled on computers. Most of them are incompatible with life. That's why atheists are rationally compelled to posit a multiverse.
See previous reply.
Completely, demonstrably false. See previous.
You bet! And btw, is that the best you can do?:mrgreen:
Comment by stunney — March 31, 2007 @ 8:26 pm