I would have thought that the very idea that the planet is currently undergoing a mass extinction event that rivals in magnitude some of the major mass extinctions in prehistory is such a commonplace that it hardly bears repeating. But apparently, there is at least one person who likes to post here (Neverfly) who would deny that proposition. So rather than hijack that other thread, I created this one.
That the planet is currently undergoing a mass extinction event that rivals in magnitude some of the major mass extinctions in prehistory is the mainstream view. Cf. Harvard biologist E. O. Wilson's "Only Humans Can Halt the Worst Wave of Extinction Since the Dinosaurs Died":
The world's fauna and flora are paying the price of humanity's population growth. The levy may be acceptable to those who put immediate human concerns above all else. But it should be borne in mind that we are destroying part of the Creation, thereby depriving all future generations of what we ourselves were bequeathed. The ongoing loss in biodiversity is the greatest since the end of the Mesozoic era 65 million years ago. At that time, by current scientific consensus, the impact of one or more giant meteorites darkened the atmosphere, altered much of earth's climate and extinguished the dinosaurs. Thus began the next stage of evolution, the Cenozoic era or Age of Mammals. The extinction spasm we are now inflicting can be moderated if we choose. If not, the next century will see the closing of the Cenozoic era and the start of a new one characterized by biological impoverishment. It might appropriately be called the Eremozoic era, the Age of Loneliness. (my emphasis)
Be it resolved: The ongoing loss in biodiversity is the greatest since the end of the Mesozoic era 65 million years ago.


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