cover of episode Did trees kill the world?

Did trees kill the world?

Publish Date: 2024/5/22
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at the far end of town, where the back roads wind past the little diners and campgrounds closed for the season. Into the woods we go. I feel like it's just starting to be spring. I can feel it. Just when you think you've missed it, turn left into an unmarked driveway, past the fences and the no trespassing signs. Another chain link fence.

And a much more secure padlock. And you'll finally arrive at a huge, empty gravel lot. It's definitely nothing living inside that area. An old quarry, long out of use. A lot of gravel. Some birds, too. But look carefully at the dusty ground. You might just see the rocks that transported Chuck into the past. I'm just thinking about time.

like geologists think about time in millions of years, hundreds of millions of years, by looking in the sedimentary rocks. All this stuff is big scale. It's, you know, only astronomers think in a much bigger scale. I love this. They're not the oldest rocks in the world at all, but they are mighty old, mighty old. We're walking across this quarry floor and

my eye just unconsciously picked up on an odd pattern in the quarry floor. It looked like a shallow little gutter that kind of meandered back and forth a little bit while it went out mostly in one direction. And it's like, what is that? And we started looking around and followed him, and three of these all met at one place, along with eight more of these gutter things

That had gotten wider as we walked towards where they met. And it didn't take too long before we realized, all of us individually realized, wow, that is where a tree stood 385 million years ago. Holy shit. Unbelievable. So this was one tree.

Are we saying that this is literally two tree, like the star formations are like the basis of these two trees? Yeah. The impressions of the roots. Well preserved. Like the footprints almost. Yeah, it would be like footprints, but the impressions of the roots where they were in the ground. Do you know how big that tree was?

Do you know what I mean? Yeah. No, I mean, literally, I think it looks like the trees that we can see on the other side of the fence. Tree-sized. Tree-sized. We could stand where a tree stood 385 million years ago and see by the impressions of the roots where all the other trees in this forest stood. It looks so magical. It's like, yeah, it feels hard to wrap your head around, especially when it's

I don't know, when you're looking at what it is now. I mean, so many individual lives have lived on this planet. Everything died, left behind something, but most of everything decays, is broken down, dissolved. It's all about Earth, life, and a lot of time. Such an awesome, awesome, awesome thing to imagine a forest from that long ago.

Way back, way, way back, when these trees stood tall, forests like this one exploded across the planet, radically transforming the earth beneath their roots, the air rippling through their leaves. You can see the aftermath of this explosion in the world all around us, but nowhere more clearly than these ghostly footprints etched into the dusty ground.

I'm Meredith Hocknott, and this is Unexplainable. So this is the paleontology collection at the New York State Museum. We are walking through a room that looks kind of like the warehouse at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark. The fossil collection has lots of stuff sitting in the aisles and on tables. Carts are full. Lisa Amati cares for hundreds of thousands of fossils here in her job as the state paleontologist.

Lisa and geologists like Chuck Verstraten piece together fragments of an ancient past that they can't ever study directly. Whenever I'm working with the fossils, I'm picturing where they lived. I'm picturing how they lived. And it's like not just thinking about the rock and its character, not just thinking about

the fossils and what they tell me. It's a mystery novel. It's an adventure novel. It's a puzzle. It's everything all in one. We don't have the answers, which is what makes it fun. Our story starts in a time before trees, about 420 million years ago, at the beginning of the Devonian period. Earth's continents were bunched up in the southern hemisphere, and the land they carried would have been unrecognizable.

There really wasn't much of anything on land at all. In fact, nothing lived on land except for some tiny plants and the ancestors of things like insects. There were very few signs of life. All of them weird. This thing's 12 feet tall. So what could it possibly be? It can't be a plant. It can't be an animal. Turns out it's a fungus. Whoa, this is a fungus. Oh, and we call it fungzilla.

This was a landscape of barren rock and gravel buffeted by winds and rains. The loneliest alien planet. But underwater was a different world. It was so much life in the oceans. The Devonian is known as the Age of Fishes because there were so many kinds of fish. All of the major groups of fish were alive during the Devonian period.

There were jawless fish that looked like dune worms crossed with horseshoe crabs. There were placoderms, these fish plated in armor with huge Siberian tiger fangs. Sharks spread through the oceans at this time, as well as lobed fin fishes with bony little limbs. And the abundance of life in the ocean was just beginning to make its way onto the land.

Plants started to evolve from algae to be able to survive in a wet environment but out of the water. At the beginning of the Devonian, your tallest plants were only about the reach between your thumb, the end of your thumb and the end of your index finger, you know, four, five, maybe six inches. And once plants on land got a foothold, they started evolving faster and faster. By 35 million years later, if we're talking about the Cairo quarry,

Everything had evolved through stages of simple little plants to things that began to become more complex, began to grow into shrubbery-sized plants. And then by the middle of the Devonian, you had trees. You had trees. Big portions of New York were underwater, and the Appalachian Mountains were just forming, and they were huge, really tall mountains. Andes-scale mountains, perhaps, out there in New England

And in the tropical floodplains between the mountains and the sea, the Cairo Quarry Forest flourished with the strangest trees. Broccoli-headed palm-like trees, draping evergreen ancestors, club moss gone giant. It's like a furry telephone pole. And also smaller plants. Little things like liverworts. Liverworts are just cool. If you don't know what one is, you should look one up. Teensy little leaflet-like things.

The land now had these rich habitats full of resources and shelter, like an empty house ready to be a home. And so the first lobefin fishes evolved little finny legs and crawled up from the water into the forests. These were our ancestors, the first vertebrates on land, the beginning of all the amphibians, all the birds, the dinosaurs, and us.

And that's about where we are here in New York. We had everything, vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants on land at this time. So this is one of the first full forests on the planet Earth. Unbelievable. Totally. Crazy. What do you think is so, I don't want to say the word enchanting. I'm not sure if that's right, but just like...

enthralling about the Cairo site? Why do you think it, like, sparked so many people's imaginations? It's the oldest perspective. It's the oldest sense we have of first forests, where you can actually look out across the forest floor and see where all these trees stood. But this is a big perspective. It's really the Devonian period.

When life first really colonized the land to a large scale, it was that Devonian period. The tropical floodplains of upstate New York were a perfect place for these forests to take root. Monsoons rolled off the towering Appalachian Mountains, drowning the marshes and swamplands under epic floods. It was wet, but also it was warm, ideal for plants starting to figure out how to live on land.

And then, explosion. And it's actually literally called the Devonian plant explosion. Life had found a new home on the land and there was no stopping it. Plants raced across this barren, rocky world, an explosion of biodiversity transforming the world from gray and blue to green and blue into a planet we'd more or less recognize today.

And in doing so, they might have caused one of the biggest mass extinctions in the history of the world. This episode is brought to you by Shopify. Whether you're selling a little or a lot.

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Hey, unexplainable listeners. Sue Bird here. And I'm Megan Rapinoe. Women's sports are reaching new heights these days, and there's so much to talk about and so much to explain. You mean, like, why do female athletes make less money on average than male athletes?

Great question. So, Sue and I are launching a podcast where we're going to deep dive into all things sports, and then some. We're calling it A Touch More. Because women's sports is everything. Pop culture, economics, politics, you name it. And there's no better folks than us to talk about what happens on the court or on the field.

and everywhere else, too. And we're going to share a little bit about our lives together as well. Not just the cool stuff like MetGalas and All-Star Games, but our day-to-day lives as well. You say that like our day-to-day lives aren't glamorous. True. Whether it's breaking down the biggest games or discussing the latest headlines, we'll be bringing a touch more insight into the world of sports and beyond. Follow A Touch More wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes drop every Wednesday.

Hi, everyone. This is Kara Swisher, host of On with Kara Swisher from New York Magazine and Vox Media. We've had some great guests on the pod this summer, and we are not slowing down. Last month, we had MSNBC's Rachel Maddow on, then two separate expert panels to talk about everything going on in the presidential race, and there's a lot going on, and Ron Klain, President Biden's former chief of staff. And it keeps on getting better. This week, we have the one and only former Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi. As we get closer to the end of the year, we'll be talking about the

After the drama of the last two weeks and President Biden's decision to step out of the race, a lot of people think the speaker has some explaining to do. And I definitely went there with her, although she's a tough nut, as you'll find. The full episode is out now, and you can listen wherever you get your podcasts. The story of life exploding on the land is also the story of life dying in the oceans.

By the end of the Devonian, once teeming seas were now a graveyard. The carnage of one of the biggest mass extinctions in the history of the planet. An extinction as violent as the one that killed the dinosaurs. Nearly three quarters of the species on Earth died in this slowly unfolding catastrophe. And the oceans suffered worst of all.

Corpses littered the seafloor. The age of fishes was over. It takes a certain degree of imagination to see that things were different in the past. And the deeper back you go into Earth history, the more bizarre they are and the more foreign they are to what we're familiar with. Geologist Thomas Algeo studies ancient apocalypses. I've effectively delved into all of the mass extinction events in Earth history.

Our planet has nurtured life for billions of years. It's been a remarkably stable place to live and thrive. And in that long history, there have only been five times when the world was flung into such chaos that a majority of the species on Earth were wiped out before they had a chance to adapt.

And for that to happen, there has to be some kind of trigger, some kind of external trigger that upsets the system. And Thomas thinks that this mass extinction in the oceans was triggered by the trees. The Devonian plant explosion changed the face of our planet. But it also changed how the planet worked, how the air, the soil, and the water all interacted.

These first forests did what forests still do today. They pulled carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and released oxygen. But this scale of photosynthesis was something totally new. Trees basically remade the atmosphere, dropping carbon dioxide levels by maybe as much as 90% and doubling the oxygen.

And that is a big increase. That brings us up close to modern oxygen levels. This giant swing is one of just a few times living beings have disrupted the atmosphere so dramatically. These first forests upended the climate and plunged the Earth into an ice age that enveloped the world for tens of millions of years.

But an ice age alone doesn't necessarily lead to mass extinction. There was a second punch coming for the age of fishes, a wave of death spreading out from the land. The roots of these first forests dug deep into the earth, breaking up rock and releasing minerals. The trees then died, decomposed, and formed new layers of carbon-rich soil.

As the forests grew, so did the soil, which made it easier for younger plants to take root and help those forests grow, which then led to even more soil. And there's a positive feedback there. But eventually, the nutrients are going to leak out into the groundwater system. They'll get flushed out of the soil, into the groundwater. The groundwater runs into a local river basin somewhere. The river carries the nutrients down to the oceans.

Soils don't just help plants grow on land. They also help plants grow in the water. And so as these trees flourished, they helped fertilize huge blooms of algae with devastating consequences for the seas. As those massive algal blooms died and decayed, it robbed the waters of dissolved oxygen.

Without dissolved oxygen in the water, marine life couldn't breathe. Huge dead zones spread across the world's oceans, enveloping vibrant coral reef communities in a vacuous cloud of death, suffocating the age of fishes. And that's effectively what I think happened during the late Devonian.

For the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs, there is clear, direct evidence. A giant impact crater in the Gulf of Mexico and a layer of extraterrestrial dust flung across the globe. It's very testable. But the Devonian plants are different because you're looking, the evidence is indirect.

You see big changes in climate and environmental conditions, but you can't simply say those are due to the influence of land plants. They could be due to other triggers. So did trees pull the trigger on this mass extinction? Or did they set the world up? Did they put it in front of the gun and set the stage for some other trigger, like a volcanic eruption? Thomas is determined to find out.

Well, what's really needed is a better record of the evolution of land plants themselves. But if you find a fossil in one place, it doesn't necessarily tell you anything about what's going on in another place. So for some kind of global pattern, you literally have to go out and analyze the changes in dozens or maybe hundreds of different locations in order to be confident you're looking at a global signal. There are countless fossil forests around the world, like the one here in Cairo.

that could shed more light on the Devonian plant explosion. They're buried under earth and rock, still waiting to be discovered. So there was a time before forests, and then the world was never the same again. It's an insane story. As I walk across the quarry floor, the distance to the past seems permeable. Unbelievable.

I can retrace the steps of my amphibian ancestors. Imagine them scampering from tree to tree. This forest was their first home on land. The beginning of life as we know it. The reason I'm even here, millions of years later. And that light?

The carved lines of ancient roots seem like etchings in a stone shrine, a monument commemorating these trees, these heroes that filled this fresh spring air I'm breathing with oxygen. There's also a darkness here around the edges, a somber memorial to a mass extinction that killed the majority of life on Earth, a tombstone to the age of fishes, marking a violent revolution that overturned the planet.

Wow. Such a double-edged sword. Yeah. To think about, like, life, finding new homes to be as explosive, as violent as an asteroid. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely. Wow. But the past feels closest when I think about the present. We are now the life transforming Earth's climate and ecosystems.

We're releasing carbon into the air that these first trees and their descendants buried in the ground so long ago. We are on the brink of the sixth mass extinction in the history of the planet, maybe the second one ever caused by living beings. And I can't help but wonder, how will we be remembered? All right. It's hard to leave. This is such a magical place. Come take a selfie with me. Absolutely.

This episode was reported, produced, and scored by me, Meredith Hodnot. It was edited by Jorge Just with help from Brian Resnick. Christian Ayala did the mix, and we collaborated together on the sound design. Melissa Hirsch checked the facts. Mandy Nguyen is lost in a good way. Bird Pinkerton is on the hunt. And our host, Noam Hassenfeld, got stuck in a black hole. Or maybe he was there all along.

Special thanks to Bill Stein, Chris Berry, Lucas Pollack, Sarita Morris, and the Town of Cairo. And a huge thank you to Abril Barajas for making this adventure so magical. And also, thank you, Milo Chestnut, for sharing your wonder and curiosity. I love you guys. I couldn't have made this story without you. This podcast and all of Vox is free.

You can support Vox's journalism by signing up for our membership program today. Just go to vox.com slash members to sign up. You can also support the show by leaving us a review. They make a huge difference. And if you have thoughts about the show, please email us. We love to hear from you. We're at unexplainable at vox.com. Bird will probably respond.

Unexplainable is part of the Vox Media Podcast Network. We're off next week, but we will be back in June.

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