Litcius/Paper detail

The terrestrial end-Permian mass extinction in the paleotropics postdates the marine extinction

Qiong Wu, Hua Zhang, Jahandar Ramezani, Feifei Zhang, Douglas H. Erwin, Zhuo Feng, Longyi Shao, Yao-feng Cai, Shuhan Zhang, Yi‐Gang Xu, Shu‐zhong Shen

2024Science Advances33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The end-Permian mass extinction was the most severe ecological event during the Phanerozoic and has long been presumed contemporaneous across terrestrial and marine realms with global environmental deterioration triggered by the Siberian Traps Large Igneous Province. We present high-precision zircon U-Pb geochronology by the chemical abrasion-isotope dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry technique on tuffs from terrestrial to transitional coastal settings in Southwest China, which reveals a protracted collapse of the Cathaysian rainforest beginning after the onset of the end-Permian marine extinction. Integrated with high-resolution geochronology from coeval successions, our results suggest that the terrestrial extinction occurred diachronously with latitude, beginning at high latitudes during the late Changhsingian and progressing to the tropics by the early Induan, spanning a duration of nearly 1 million years. This latitudinal age gradient may have been related to variations in surface warming with more degraded environmental conditions at higher latitudes contributing to higher extinction rates.

Topics & Concepts

Extinction eventPermian–Triassic extinction eventGeologyExtinction (optical mineralogy)PaleontologyPhanerozoicPermianGeochronologyEarth scienceCenozoicStructural basinPopulationDemographySociologyBiological dispersalGeological and Geochemical AnalysisPaleontology and Stratigraphy of FossilsGeochemistry and Geologic Mapping