such an eruption was a good alternative candidate for the extinction of the dinosaurs, and in any case, made a significant contribution. See Deccan Traps.
It's not as popular a theory any more. Gerta Keller is the name you want to look up when it comes to this, by the way. I heard her give a talk a few years back. Very, very detailed, but fairly controversial, even for K/Pg talks.
And I should emphasize one point: dinosaurs DID NOT go extinct. In fact, my wife ate one for supper. This is neither trivial nor facetious: we cannot talk about THE extinction of THE dinosaurs because they're still with us.
If you want my $0.02, the K/Pg event, like any mass extinction (turn-over or die-off type) was the result of a number of things happening in a relatively short period of time. I mean, we know that a bolide hit Chixilub. We know that numerous others hit the plant around that time. We know that the Deccan Traps went off. Asking which one "caused" the mass extinction is like asking which bullet killed Scarface--it doesn't really matter, and it's a completely fictitious way to look at the situation.
Dymanic, I have to ask: Was there a point to your second post other than to complain about how geology gets done? As someone who's involved in a professional disagreement or two myself I can attest to the fact that the science isn't always as central to the arguments as it should be; that said, what separates science from a schoolyard is that science has rules. Both sides are required to present evidence, for example. So while it can sometimes get personal (and if you're extrapolating from Gould and Dawkins you're missing a few golden opportunities to make your case, particularly in geology--we've always been a rough-and-tumble lot), there's a limit.
Second, if anyone gets their understanding of any science only from the celebrities (particularly celebrities that aren't in the field--Dawkins is a biologist, not a paleontologist, and the two fields are separate for reasons, some good, some not so much) I strongly believe they should re-assess how well they really understand that field. The best science isn't done by the celebrities. It's done by people like H. Milne Edwards, or Eric Scott, or Dibblee--people who's names aren't household words for the general public, but they certainly are for the professionals (I defy anyone to do Southern California geology without using a Dibblee map, for example).
So yeah, sometimes egos get in the way. Sometimes it gets rather ugly--and it gets a LOT uglier than a few heated words exchanged, believe me. But the beauty of science is that it can work despite all of that.