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Winter Mini-Core Class | Dinosaurs, Extinction and Climate

Tuesday, January 30, 2018 6:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Off-campus
Winter Mini-Core Class | Dinosaurs, Extinction and Climate
Event Type: 
Lecture
Open To: 
Alumni
Columbia College
Topic: 
Natural Sciences
Location: 
Off Campus

Event Contact

Columbia College Alumni Association

Dinosaurs included the largest known animals, dominating the land in diverse and wondrous forms for 136 million years. All but their direct descendants, birds, were wiped out by catastrophic climate change caused by a giant meteor impact 66 million years ago, in one of five great mass extinctions.

While climate has been changing since the Earth’s origin, our burning of fossil fuels is causing what many view as a climate catastrophe, possibly triggering the next mass extinction. Processes and events such as dinosaur evolution and extinction and past climate change provide not only context for the present but also lessons for our future.

Join Professor Paul Olsen, Storke Memorial Professor of Earth Sciences in a timely discussion on climate and its past and future impact on planet earth and its beings.

January 30th
Session 1: Birds are Dinosaurs

February 13th
Session 2: Mass Extinction

February 27th
Session 3: Climate: Past, Present and Future

Refreshments will be served.

Class Fee, which includes entry to all three sessions:
$160 for Alumni and guest
$100 for Young Alumni in class years 2008-2017, and guest

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