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Correlating the continental end-Permian biome collapse (Lopingian) across eastern Australia
Swedish Museum of Natural History, Department of Paleobiology.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-5416-2289
2022 (English)In: Permophiles, ISSN 1684-5927, Vol. 72, p. 60-61Article in journal, News item (Other academic) Published
Abstract [en]

The end-Permian extinction event (EPE; 252 million years ago) was the most extreme mass extinction in Earth’s history (Stanley, 2016) and has been linked to rapid, planet-scale warming (Frank et al., 2021). The Australian stratigraphic record offers a globally unique opportunity to explore the severity and pace of terrestrial carbon sinks in response to this hyperthermal event across a broad latitudinal range. The Bowen, Sydney and Tasmania basins of eastern Australia collectively represent a ~2500 km north-south transect (Fig. 1) of contemporaneous continental depositional environments and floras during the Late Permian and Early Triassic (palaeolatitudes:~45–75°S). From the Sydney Basin, our team has built a robust chronostratigraphic framework (Fig.2), with which we have reconstructed the timeline of continental environmental and floral changes in the region (Fielding etal., 2019, 2021; Mays et al., 2020, 2021b; Vajda et al., 2020; McLoughlin et al., 2021). More recently, we have successfully applied our chronostratigraphic scheme to the Bowen Basin to constrain the ages of the climatic and floristic changes (Frank et al., 2021). The poorly studied Tasmania Basin is the highest palaeolatitude Permian–Triassic basin of Australia, and can provide chronostratigraphic and biogeographic links between Antarctica and the other basins of eastern Australia.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Nanjing, 2022. Vol. 72, p. 60-61
Keywords [en]
end-Permian extinction, Triassic palynology, flora, palaeoclimate
National Category
Other Earth and Related Environmental Sciences
Research subject
The changing Earth
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:nrm:diva-4886OAI: oai:DiVA.org:nrm-4886DiVA, id: diva2:1714922
Funder
Swedish Research Council, 2018-04527Available from: 2022-11-30 Created: 2022-11-30Bibliographically approved

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https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Daniel-Calvo-Gonzalez/publication/362846805_Correlation_between_the_Cisuralian_successions_of_the_Robledo_Mountains_New_Mexico_and_the_Carnic_Alps_Austria_integrating_conodont_and_foraminifer_biostratigraphy/links/63039442aa4b1206facd3d7a/Correlation-between-the-Cisuralian-successions-of-the-Robledo-Mountains-New-Mexico-and-the-Carnic-Alps-Austria-integrating-conodont-and-foraminifer-biostratigraphy.pdf#page=61

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CiteExportLink to record
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Citation style
  • apa
  • ieee
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  • de-DE
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  • Other locale
More languages
Output format
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