North America’s giant Ice Age mammals vanished mysteriously 13,000 years ago. While human hunters were long considered the culprits, the La Brea Tar Pits in Los Angeles are telling a different story. New evidence suggests a devastating combination of rapid climate change and widespread, human-caused wildfires that reshaped the continent and sealed the fate of the megafauna.
How Fire, Not Spears, Wiped Out America’s Giants
Researchers at the La Brea Tar Pits discovered that a combination of climate change and massive, human-sparked wildfires—not just hunting—led to the extinction of North America’s megafauna.
Related Posts
The Viewpoint: Can we really resurrect extinct animals, or are we just creating hi-tech lookalikes?
The ambitious effort to resurrect extinct species, such as the woolly mammoth, raises a key question: Are we truly reversing extinction, or just creating high-tech lookalikes?
These 3 simple actions can save you money and help make the most of your rooftop solar
Octavian Lazar/Shutterstock Dani Alexander, UNSW Sydney; Baran Yildiz, UNSW Sydney; Michelle Vaqueiro-Contreras, UNSW Sydney, and Mike Roberts, UNSW…
A new way to name bacteria: 300-year-old system revised thanks to scientific advances
Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms without nuclei and are commonly known as bacteria. Ichigomaru/Shutterstock Stephanus Nicolaas Venter, University of…
The Story of Azurite
Azurite, a naturally occurring copper carbonate mineral, has been a blue pigment for thousands of years, particularly in…
