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juliane_g

Weird Forests Once Sprouted in Antarctica - 1 views

  • Some 250 million years ago, during the late Permian and early Triassic, the world was a greenhouse, much hotter than it is today.
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    Information on climate during the permian and triassic periods. 
emmab25

Cretaceous: Extinction of the Dinosaurs - 0 views

  • About 65 million years ago the second greatest mass extinction in Earth history occurred, resulting in the loss of the dinosaurs as well as nearly 50% of all the world’s species. Though not nearly as severe as the end-Permian mass extinction, the end-Cretaceous extinction is the most famous mass extinction in Earth history
  • Terrestrial plants also suffered a major extinction at this time; in some regions up to 60% of latest Cretaceous plant species were absent in the subsequent Paleocene.
  • The causes of the end-Cretaceous extinction are still being debated by paleontologists. Researchers agree that a major factor was an asteroid about 10 kilometers in diameter that struck what is now the Yucatán peninsula in Mexico. The effects of the impact were catastrophic, probably including global forest fires, possibly a period of cold weather due to sunlight-blocking dust and smoke, and a subsequent period of hot climate caused by the high levels of CO2 released into the atmosphere by the impact.
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  • Some paleontologists argue that dinosaurs were already in decline before the asteroid impact, so that its environmental effects merely hastened their extinction.
aleksandera

Tectonics of the Triassic Period - 2 views

  • The climate of the Triassic era was influenced by Pangaea, its centralized position stradling the equator, and the geologic activity associated with its breakup. Generally speaking, the continents were of high elevation compared to sea level, and the sea level did not change drastically during the period. Due to the low sea level, flooding of the continents to form shallow seas did not occur. Much of the inland area was isolated from the cooling and moist effects of the ocean. The result was a globally arid and dry climate, though regions near the coast most likely experienced seasonal monsoons. There were no polar ice caps, and the temperature gradient in the north-south direction is assumed to have been more gradual than present day. The sea level rose as the rift grew between North Africa and southern Europe, resulting in the flooding of Central and South Europe; the climates of terrestrial Europe were hot and dry, as in the Permian. Overall, it appears that the climate included both arid dune environments and moist river and lake habitats with gymnosperm forests.
    • aleksandera
       
      This paragraph clearly explains the climate in the Triassic period and how it effected the animals in this period
  • rming on the Americas, North Africa was being split from Europe by the spreading rift. This division of the continents advanced further westward, eventually splitting eastern North America from North Africa.
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  • At the beginning of the Triassic period, the land masses of the world were still bound together into the vast supercontinent known as Pangaea. Pangaea began to break apart in the mid-Triassic, forming Gondwana
  • While Pangaea was breaking apart, mountains were forming on the west coast of North America by subduction of the ocean plates beneath the continental plates. Throughout the Middle to Late Triassic, mountain forming continued along the coast extending from Alaska to Chile.
  • The movement of the two resulting supercontinents was caused by sea floor spreading at the midocean ridge lying at the bottom of the Tethys Sea
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    Triassic Period - Landforms 
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    This explains the climate with a lot of detail. I find it similar to my Cretaceous period, when the Pangea completed it's breakup into present day continents (more or less).
guglielmom

Triassic Dinosaurs - ZoomDinosaurs.com - 1 views

  • There were no dinosaurs at the beginning of the Triassic, but there were many amphibians and some reptiles and dicynodonts (like Lystrosaurus). During the early Triassic, corals appeared and ammonites recovered from the Permian extinction. Seed plants dominated the land; in the Northern hemisphere, conifers flourish. Glossopteris was the dominant southern hemisphere tree during the Early Triassic period.
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    This site is very useful because it tells the landform of the triassic
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