Posted on 04/10/2007 12:31:20 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
I think he's saying that since one class of life was all over the place and absorbing one set of the light spectrum, instead of competing another grew to absorb a different set of the spectrum.
Isn't there a reverse of this, a "green window" effect?
Apparently it was also Defenseless.
That was back in the days of Bud Grant and Burnsy. Then Denny came along and ruined it all.
Plants compete for light by growing taller and getting out of shade cast by other plants. Being short, but using a different spectrum of light doesn't help a plant; it's still in the dark.
However, when both types of plants are located in the same area, and lets say that this area it does make sense for one type of plant to absorb a different section of the spectrum. Growing taller isn’t the only way that plants compete with each other for light, it’s merely the most readily apparent.
Okaaaaayyyy.
No. But the green wasn't available because it was being sucked up by the retinal. A soup of purple (brown algae?) bacteria, would act like a band reject filter for greens, with lots of red and blue available.
You were assuming big plants, not the single cell stuff that drives new divisions.
Steep oxygen decline halted first land colonization by Earth’s sea creatures
EurekAlert | Monday, October 23, 2006 | University of Washington
Posted on 10/25/2006 1:21:07 AM EDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1725406/posts
Earth's Oxygen EnigmaScientists have long believed that blue-green algae arose 3.5 billion years ago, pumping out oxygen and causing the oceans to fill with rust. Over the next billion years the algae transformed Earth's atmosphere, allowing oxygen-breathing life to evolve. Carrine Blank of Washington University in St. Louis... compared genetic sequences from 53 different groups of bacteria -- including blue-green algae, also known as cyanobacteria -- to construct a detailed family tree. The results confounded her expectations. "Cyanobacteria arose fairly late, about 2.2 or 2.3 billion years ago. That explains why we see this very sudden increase in oxygen, around 2.2 to 2 billion years ago, which has always been a big mystery," she says. The finding implies that something else caused the ocean rusting.
by Kathy A. Svitil
February 11, 2003
Carrine Blank of Washington University in St. Louis
Apparently it was also Defenseless.
Ah, yes.
But don't forget the great receiving corps (for absorbing photons...)
...and the mass extinctions would be every time Earth made the playoffs.
(Oh, well, there's always the Twins.)
Cheers!
I think the idea here is that the microbes were everywhere, coating most things, and blocked only green light from going through. I don't think they have any real evidence for this, but it seems plausible to me. Interesting idea.
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