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THE PERMIANTRIASSIC EXTINCTION

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At the end of the Permian period and the start of the Triassic ... Radiolaria (plankton) 99%[35] Anthozoa (sea anemones, corals, etc.) 96% Gastropods (snails) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THE PERMIANTRIASSIC EXTINCTION


1
THE PERMIAN-TRIASSIC EXTINCTION
Samantha Mathwig Konny Kwong
2
  • 250 million years ago
  • At the end of the Permian period and the start of
    the Triassic
  • Seen as the most catastrophic mass-distinction
    out of all 5 known
  • Nick-named the Great Dying of animals and plants

THE PERMIAN-TRIASSIC EXTINCTION
3
  • 90-96 of Earths marine life was killed
  • Can see through studying sedimentary zones in
    China that 280 out of 329 marine invertebrate
    genera disappeared during period
  • 70 of Earths land life was killed
  • At time included reptiles, amphibians, insects,
    and plants
  • 8 out of 9 insect orders became extinct

THE PERMIAN-TRIASSIC EXTINCTION (cont.)
So how do we know this?
4
Fossil Evidence of Extinction
Fossil records show that.
-Trilobites, that managed to survive for 300
million years, were killed off during the P-T
-Rugose corals, another popular form of life,
also died off
-sessile filter feeders did not become extinct,
however there were significant fewer amounts
found during and after the P-T extinction
5
Fossil Evidence of Extinction (cont.)
  • In general, species with shells of calcium
    carbonate were killed, while creatures with
    chitin (thin) shells or no shells were more
    likely to survive
  • Thin shells allowed them to control their
    calcification better

6
  • So, what could have caused such a massive
    extinction?

Theory 1 Impact Theory 2 Volcanic
Activity Theory 3 Pangaea
7
Theory 1 Impact
8
What is the Permian-Triassic Boundary?
Theory 1 Impact (cont.)
  • Difference in rock layers help draw boundary
    between the Permian Period and the Triassic
    Period (which also marks the boundary between the
    Paleozoic Era and the Mesozoic Era)
  • The extinction forms the boundary between the two
    geological time periods.

9
Detection of fullerenes within the P-Tr boundary
level
Theory 1 Impact (cont.)
  • Carbon allotropes, composed entirely of carbon
  • these molecules have the ability to trap noble
    inert gases such as He, Ne, and Ar
  • studying a rocks composition of the above gases
    can tell its origin
  • specifically, they examined the rocks 3He/4He,
    20Ne/22Ne and 3He/36Ar ratios
  • Solar signature contrasts with planetary
    signature
  •  
  • Space
    Earth
  • 3He/4He ratio 3.131024 3 He/4He
    ratio 1.431024
  • 20Ne/22Ne ratio 12.5
    20Ne/22Ne ratio 8.0

10
Theory 1 Impact (cont.)
  • No fullerenes were found in sediments above and
    below the Permian-Triassic Boundary.
  • consistent with results on other known
    impact-related boundaries like the
    Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary

The Allende meteorite showing many fullerenes
11
Where were they found?
  • Meishan, China
  • Sasayama, Japan

12
Other event markers
Theory 1 Impact (cont.)
  • Shocked quartz- found just above the Gondwana
    (southern supercontinent resulting from breakup
    of Pangaea) coal layer that ended the Permian
    Era.

-Normal quartz is orderly and crystalline.
-Notice scratches indicating deformation.
-Produced under intense pressures. -First
discovered after underground nuclear bomb testing
13
Theory 1 Impact (cont.)
In fact
  • Both the Ir spike layer and the
  • shocked quartz layer contain anomalous 13C
    (approximately -40)
  • Negative shift release of
  • 13C-depleted carbon into the atmosphere
  • Suggests a severe
  • disruption to the normal plant biomass
    (approximately
  • -27)
  • Iridium spike during late Permian-
    coincides with last occurrence of the
    Glossopteris flora

14
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity
15
Siberian Traps
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity
  • Largest chain of volcanic eruptions in Earth
    history
  • Result of an immense mantle plume giant pulse of
    heat that rises towards the surface from the
    core/mantle boundary
  • believed to be part of a cooling mechanism for
    the core, but not fully understood

16
  • The Siberian flood basalts extend from the Ural
    Mountains to Lake Baikal
  • Covered area 2/3 the size of the United States
  • Ranging in thickness from 100m to 3,000m
    extending up to 6,500m thick
  • At least 23, 106 km3 of initial volume remain
    today

17
Coincidence?
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity (cont.)
  • Laser-heating 40Ar/39Ar data show bulk of these
    basalts was erupted over short time interval of
    900,000 800,000 years
  • Siberian 249 1 million years ago
  • Permian/Triassic Extinction 248.2 4.8 million
    years ago

18
Effects
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity (cont.)
  • DIRECT climatic cooling from sulphuric acid
    aerosols, greenhouse warming from CO2 and SO2
    gases and acid rain.
  • Basaltic magmas are rich in dissolved
    sulphur, and sulphuric acid aerosols are injected
    into the stratosphere by convective plumes

INDIRECT changes in ocean chemistry,
circulation, and oxygenation.
19
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity (cont.)
In Perspective
  • The largest eruption in historic memory Iceland
    (1783-84).
  • 12 cubic km of lava onto the island
  • The poisonous gases given out killed most of the
    islands crops and foliage and lowering global
    temps by about 1 degree Celsius.
  • Siberian Traps erupted about 3 million cubic km!

Rows of lava cones from Laki lava flow
20
Theory 2 Volcanic Activity (cont.)
Combination of impact and volcanism?
Perhaps impact-generated seismic waves triggered
a mantle plume and thus flood basalt volcanism
around impact site
21
Theory 3 Pangaea
22
Theory 3 Pangaea (cont.)
  • Continents had recently assembled together into a
    single land mass known as Pangaea
  • this would have created a decrease in range of
    shallow aquatic environments
  • Exposed the once-protected and isolated creatures
    who lived on the continental shelves to new
    predators
  • Most likely most smaller ecosystems would not be
    able to survive such change

23
Theory 3 Pangaea (cont.)
  • Also this supercontinent may have disrupted
    the circulation of the seawater, making the
    oceans stagnant
  • this would have lead to a depletion of oxygen in
    the water as well as high concentrations of
    dissolved carbon dioxide collected in the bottom
    of the ocean
  • This would have created drastic and
    potentially-harmful changes in the ocean for all
    marine life
  • But how does this affect land life?

24
Theory 3 Pangaea (cont.)
  • Had sea-level been affected, the anoxic
    (oxygen-lacking) water would spill onto the
    continental shelves, having a drastic impact on
    land life
  • But what could have affected sea-level?

25
Recovery
  • Very slow recovery period after such huge
    extinction
  • For millions of years, there were no reefs and no
    coal beds
  • Early Triassic rocks give evidence of completely
    undisturbed marine sediments
  • Eventually, the first dinosaurs began to arise
  • Other mammals and amphibians followed

26
Works Cited
  • http//www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2003/pdf/1490
    .pdf
  • http//srs.dl.ac.uk/Annual_Reports/AnRep02_03/lac.
    htm
  • http//www.ch.ic.ac.uk/local/projects/unwin/Fuller
    enes.html
  • http//www.geolsoc.org.uk/gsl/education/flood_basa
    lts_1
  • http//www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1089/1
    53110703321632435
  • http//www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1089/1
    53110703321632426
  • http//www.liebertonline.com/doi/pdfplus/10.1089/1
    53110703321632480
  • http//astrobiology.nasa.gov/?qpermianextinction
    lall
  • http//www.dinoextinct.com/page12.htm
  • http//www.economicexpert.com/a/Permianextinction
    .htm
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