(NEWSER) – Roughly 252 million years ago, an
extreme animal die-off occurred: 70% of land animals and 96% of marine life
were obliterated, in what's known as the Permian mass extinction. What
scientists still don't exactly know is why (an asteroid? volcanic eruptions?),
but they now know how long it took. And the answer is ... really, really fast.
MIT researchers say the extinction period's duration clocked in at 60,000
years, plus or minus 48,000 years. As Phys.org puts
it, that's "practically instantaneous, from a geological
perspective." To get your geological periods and catastrophic disasters
straight: The die-off signified the end of the Permian period and launched the
start of the Triassic; the mass die-off of the dinosaurs happened much later,
66 million years ago at the Cretaceous period's close, when LiveScience reports
85% of life was wiped out.
The
researchers came to their conclusion by using cutting-edge dating techniques on
tiny minerals known as zircons found in rocks in Meishan, China, that date to
the period. But the rocks also held carbon dioxide data; from there, the
researchers determined that a surge of the gas occurred 10,000 to 20,000 years
before the die-off: Ocean acidification may have have occurred, and sea temps
could have jumped as much as 50 degrees. But what was the source of the
increased carbon dioxide that marked the beginning of the end? MIT researchers
are now dating rocks from the Siberian Traps to determine if volcanic eruptions
there could have been the culprit.
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http://www.newser.com/story/182085/erasing-almost-all-life-on-earth-took-just-60k-years.html?utm_source=part&utm_medium=inbox&utm_campaign=newser
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