Ocean tides as evolutionary triggers
New calculations suggest that, around 400 million years ago, many
coastlines experienced two-week tidal cycles that varied in height by
four metres or more. Such a huge range could have stranded fish in tidal
pools for a couple of weeks. Only the ones with fins strong enough to
muscle themselves out would have been able to journey back into the
ocean and survive. Fossil evidence for the earliest known land
vertebrates comes from places that had such wide tidal ranges...
Hundreds of millions of years ago, the Moon was much closer to Earth
than it is now. Steven Balbus, an astrophysicist at the University of
Oxford, UK, has explored how the Moon’s proximity to Earth might have
affected its gravitational pull and influenced life on the planet. In
2014, he suggested that Earth’s tidal ranges would have been greater
around the time the first four-limbed vertebrates, or tetrapods, appeared on land...
More information at
Nature.
This is an interesting idea, certainly food for thought.
ReplyDeleteBut... I have to say
Hail STAN!