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Volcanic eruptions helped dinosaurs dominate Earth

- SAM JONES Sam Jones is a journalist with NYT©2021

The relationsh­ip between dinosaurs and volcanoes has historical­ly not always appeared so amiable. For decades, scientists argued over whether volcanoes or an asteroid caused dinosaurs’ abrupt extinction some 65 mn years ago. It wasn’t until 2010 that an internatio­nal panel of experts formally declared that it was the space rock, and not giant eruptions, that was the primary cause of dino demise.

And now a team of researcher­s is presenting the most compelling evidence yet that massive volcanic events likely helped the dinosaurs take over the planet, at least in another era. Their results were published Monday in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences. The Triassic Period, which began roughly 250 mn years ago, was a time of massive ecological change following the largest mass extinction event on record. While dinosaurs had emerged in this time period, they were different: skinnier, more reptilian-looking, less of the toothy box office hits we flock to movie theatres to see. But it was during this time period that dinosaurs diversifie­d until they became wondrous beasts like Tyrannosau­rus rex or the Triceratop­s that dominated ecosystems all over planet Earth through the end of the Cretaceous period.

To understand what drove this dinosaur transforma­tion, scientists looked at a phase spanning two mn years during the Triassic Period known as the Carnian Pluvial Episode, or CPE. During that episode, from 234 mn to 232 mn years ago, the planet experience­d an increase in global temperatur­e, humidity and rainfall — a climate often referred to as a “mega-monsoon.”

The researcher­s analysed sediment and plant fossil evidence from a lake in Northern China and were able to match four intense phases of volcanic activity with the changes of the Carnian Pluvial Episode.

Previously, researcher­s had hypothesis­ed that global carbon cycle changes during the episode were the result of major volcanic eruptions from what is now a mass of igneous rock found throughout western North America. The new study links the timing of the episode with four distinct peaks in mercury — a well-establishe­d indicator of volcanic activity — to carbon cycle shifts as well as rainfall, which led to local changes in the vegetation on land and in the lake. “We’re often able to link volcanism to global warming, but our study is unusual in that we’ve also linked it to periods of intense rainfall,” said Jason Hilton, a paleobotan­ist at the University of Birmingham in England and a study co-author. “With each pulse of volcanism, we see an increase in plants adapted to wet and aquatic settings.” Jing Lu, a researcher at the China University of Mining and Technology and also a co-author of the study, added that these eruptions “were powerful enough to drive evolutiona­ry processes during the Triassic.”

During the episode, plant species that couldn’t adapt to the more humid environmen­t went extinct, as did a number of animal species, from large reptilian herbivores on land to small gastropods in the water. “These changes freed up ecological space for other groups of organisms, like dinosaurs, to thrive,” Dr. Hilton said. In addition to dinosaur diversific­ation, researcher­s believe the Carnian Pluvial Episode laid the foundation for today’s ecosystems.

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