Fossils show quick rebound of life after
ancient mass extinction
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[February 16, 2017]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Fossils including
sharks, sea reptiles and squid-like creatures dug up in Idaho reveal a
marine ecosystem thriving relatively soon after Earth's worst mass
extinction, contradicting the long-held notion life was slow to recover
from the calamity.
Scientists on Wednesday described the surprising fossil discovery
showing creatures flourishing in the aftermath of the worldwide die-off
at the end of the Permian Period about 252 million years ago that erased
roughly 90 percent of species.
Even the asteroid-induced mass extinction 66 million years ago that
doomed the dinosaurs did not push life to the brink of annihilation like
the Permian one.
The fossils of about 30 different species unearthed in Bear Lake County
near the Idaho city of Paris showed a quick and dynamic rebound in a
marine ecosystem, illustrating the remarkable resiliency of life.
"Our discovery was totally unexpected," said paleontologist Arnaud
Brayard of the University of Burgundy-Franche-Comté in France, with a
highly diversified and complex assemblage of animals.
The ecosystem from this pivotal time included predators such as sharks
up to about 7 feet long (2 meters), marine reptiles and bony fish,
squid-like creatures including some with long conical shells and others
with coiled shells, a scavenging crustacean with large eyes and
strangely thin claws, starfish relatives, sponges and other animals.
The Permian die-off occurred 251.9 million years ago. The Idaho
ecosystem flourished 1.3 million years later, "quite rapid on a
geological scale," according to Brayard.
The mass extinction's cause is a matter of debate.
But many scientists attribute it to colossal volcanic eruptions in
northern Siberia that unleashed large amounts of greenhouse and toxic
gases, triggering severe global warming and big fluctuations in oceanic
chemistry including acidification and oxygen deficiency.
The Idaho ecosystem, in the earliest stages of the Triassic Period that
later produced the first dinosaurs, included some unexpected creatures.
There was a type of sponge previously believed to have gone extinct 200
million years earlier, and a squid-like group previously thought not to
have originated until 50 million years later.
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An artist's depiction of the diversified and complex Early Triassic
marine ecosystem of southeastern Idaho, U.S., revealed soon after
the Earth's worst mass exinction, contradicting long-held notion
life was slow to recover from calamity. Illustration courtesy of
Jorge Gonzalez/Handout via REUTERS
The researchers found bones from what could be the earliest-known
ichthyosaur, a dolphin-like marine reptile group that prospered for
160 million years, or a direct ancestor.
"The Early Triassic is a complex and highly disturbed epoch, but
certainly not a devastated one as commonly assumed, and this epoch
has not yet yielded up all its secrets," Brayard said.
The research was published in the journal Science Advances.
(This version of the story has been refiled to add dropped word
"million" in second paragraph: 252 million years ago instead of 252
years)
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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