The Asian Age

Mass extinction event triggered dino expansion

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London, April 17: A mass extinction event 232 million years ago may have triggered an expansion of dinosaurs, according to a study that sheds light on the origin of the giant prehistori­c animals.

It is commonly understood that the dinosaurs disappeare­d with a bang — wiped out by a great meteorite impact on the Earth 66 million years ago. However, their origins have been less understood.

In a study, published in the journal Nature Communicat­ions, scientists from MUSE — Museum of Science, Universiti­es of Ferrara and Padova in Italy and the University of Bristol in the UK showed that the key expansion of dinosaurs was also triggered by a crisis — the mass extinction, called the Carnian Pluvial Episode.

Dinosaurs had originated much earlier, at the beginning of the Triassic Period, some 245 million years ago, but they remained very rare until the shock events in the Carnian 13 million years later.

The study shows when dinosaurs took over by using detailed evidence from rock sequences in the Dolomites, in north Italy — here the dinosaurs are detected from their footprints.

“First there were no dinosaur tracks, and then there were many,” researcher­s said.

This marks the moment of their explosion, and the rock succession­s in the Dolomites are well dated. Comparison with rock succession­s in Argentina and Brazil, here the first extensive skeletons of dinosaurs occur, show the explosion happened at the same time there as well.

“We were excited to see that the footprints and skeletons told the same story. We had been studying the footprints in the Dolomites for some time, and it’s amazing how clear cut the change from ‘ no dinosaurs’ to ‘ all dinosaurs’ was,” said Massimo Bernardi, Curator at MUSE and Research associate at Bristol.

The point of explosion of dinosaurs matches the end of the Carnian Pluvial Episode, a time when climates shuttled from dry to humid and back to dry again.

It was long suspected that this event had caused upheavals in life, but the details were not clear. There were massive eruptions in western Canada, represente­d today by the great Wrangellia basalts, which drove bursts of global warming and acid rain.

“We had detected evidence for the climate change in the Dolomites. There were four pulses of warming and climate perturbati­on, all within a million years or so. This must have led to repeated extinction­s,” said Piero Gianolla, from the University of Ferrara.

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