Jdailey1991
Sage
Back home, the Mesozoic era ended with a comet slamming on Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula.
In this scenario, what killed off the dinosaurs wasn't a space bomb, but two series of volcanic eruptions, one from Siberia and one from Antarctica. Each one released enough lava to fill in all 50 United States a mile deep.
With that in mind, what would 65 million years of environmental change accomplish? How different would the topographies of Siberia and Antarctica be today?
In this scenario, what killed off the dinosaurs wasn't a space bomb, but two series of volcanic eruptions, one from Siberia and one from Antarctica. Each one released enough lava to fill in all 50 United States a mile deep.
With that in mind, what would 65 million years of environmental change accomplish? How different would the topographies of Siberia and Antarctica be today?