Sandstone rock from Triassic age.
The Triassic is a geologic period that extends from about 251 to 199
Ma (million years ago). As the first period of the Mesozoic Era,
the Triassic follows the Permian and is followed by the Jurassic. Both the start and end of the Triassic are marked by major extinction events. The extinction event that closed the Triassic period has recently been more
accurately dated, but as with most older geologic periods, the rock beds that define the start and end are well identified, but
the exact dates of the start and end of the period are uncertain by a few million years.
During the Triassic, both marine and continental life show an adaptive radiation
beginning from the starkly impoverished biosphere that followed the Permian-Triassic extinction. Corals of the hexacorallia group made their first appearance. The first flowering plants (Angiosperms) may have evolved during the Triassic, as did the first flying vertebrates, the
pterosaurs.
Dating and subdivisions
The Triassic was named in 1834 by Friedrich Von Alberti from the three
distinct layers (Latin trias meaning triad) —red beds, capped by chalk, followed by black
shales— that are found throughout Germany and northwest
Europe, called the 'Trias'.
The Triassic is usually separated into Early, Middle, and Late Triassic Epochs, and the corresponding rocks are referred to as Lower, Middle, or Upper Triassic. The
faunal stages from the youngest to oldest are:
Paleogeography
During the Triassic, almost all the Earth's land mass was concentrated into a single supercontinent centered more or less on the equator, called Pangaea
("all the land"). This took the form of a giant "Pac-Man" with an east-facing "mouth"
constituting the Tethys sea, a vast gulf that opened farther westward in the mid-Triassic,
at the expense of the shrinking Paleo-Tethys Ocean, an ocean that existed during the
Paleozoic. The remainder was the world-ocean known as Panthalassa ("all the sea"). All the deep-ocean sediments laid down during the Triassic have disappeared
through subduction of oceanic plates; thus, very little is known of the Triassic open
ocean.
The supercontinent Pangaea was rifting during the Triassic—especially late in the period—but had not yet separated. The first
nonmarine sediments in the rift that marks the initial break-up of Pangea—which separated
New Jersey from Morocco—are of Late Triassic age; in the
U.S., these thick sediments comprise the Newark Group.[1] Because of the limited shoreline of one super-continental mass, Triassic marine
deposits are globally relatively rare, despite their prominence in Western Europe, where
the Triassic was first studied. In North America, for example, marine deposits are limited
to a few exposures in the west. Thus Triassic stratigraphy is mostly based on organisms
living in lagoons and hypersaline environments, such as Estheria crustaceans.
Climate
The Triassic climate was generally hot and dry, forming typical red bed sandstones and evaporites. There is no evidence of glaciation at or near either pole; in fact, the polar regions were apparently moist and temperate, a climate suitable for reptile-like creatures. Pangaea's large size limited the moderating effect
of the global ocean; its continental climate was highly seasonal, with very hot
summers and cold winters.[2] It probably had strong,
cross-equatorial monsoons.[3]
Life
Three categories of organisms can be distinguished in the Triassic record: holdovers from the Permian-Triassic extinction, new groups which flourished briefly, and other new groups
which went on to dominate the Mesozoic world. The climate was also very dry and hot and many
dinosaurs had to adapt to the climate.
In marine environments, new modern types of corals appeared in
the Early Triassic, forming small patches of reefs of modest extent compared to the great reef
systems of Devonian times or modern reefs. The shelled cephalopods called Ammonites recovered, diversifying from a single line
that survived the Permian extinction. The fish fauna was remarkably uniform, reflecting the fact that very few families survived
the Permian extinction. There were also many types of marine reptiles. These included the Sauropterygia, which featured pachypleurosaurs and
nothosaurs (both common during the Middle Triassic, especially in the Tethys region), placodonts, and the first plesiosaurs; the first of the lizardlike Thalattosauria (Askeptosaurs); and the highly successful ichthyosaurs, which appeared
in Early Triassic seas and soon diversified, some eventually developing to huge size during the late Triassic.
On land, the holdover plants included the lycophytes, the dominant cycads, ginkgophyta (represented in modern times by Ginkgo biloba) and glossopterids. The Spermatophytes, or seed plants came to dominate the terrestrial flora: in the northern hemisphere,
conifers flourished. Glossopteris (a
seed fern) was the dominant southern hemisphere tree during the Early Triassic
period.
Temnospondyl amphibians were among those groups that
survived the P-T extinction, some lineages (e.g. Trematosaurs) flourishing briefly in the Early Triassic, while others (e.g.
Capitosaurs) remained successful throughout the whole period, or only came to prominence in the
Late Triassic (e.g. Plagiosaurs, Metoposaurs). As for other
amphibians, the first Lissamphibia are known from the Early Triassic, but the group as a
whole did not become common until the Jurassic, when the temnospondyls had become very
rare.
Archosauromorph reptiles — especially archosaurs
— progressively replaced the synapsids that had dominated the Permian. Although
Cynognathus was a characteristic top predator in earlier Triassic (Olenekian and Anisian) Gondwana, and both
Kannemeyeriid dicynodonts and gomphodont cynodonts remained important herbivores during much of the period. By the end of the Triassic, synapsids played only bit parts. During the
Carnian (early part of the Late Triassic), some advanced cynodont gave rise to the first
mammals. At the same time the Ornithodira, which until then had been small and
insignificant, evolved into pterosaurs and a variety of dinosaurs. The Crurotarsi were the other important archosaur
clade, and during the Late Triassic these also reached the height of their diversity, with various
groups including the Phytosaurs, Aetosaurs, several distinct
lineages of Rauisuchia, and the first crocodylians (the
Sphenosuchia). Meanwhile the stocky herbivorous rhynchosaurs and the small to medium-sized insectivorous or piscivorous Prolacertiformes were important basal archosauromorph
groups throughout most of the Triassic.
Among other reptiles, the earliest turtles, like Proganochelys and Proterochersis, appeared during the
Norian (middle of the Late Triassic). The Lepidosauromorpha—specifically the Sphenodontia—are first known
in the fossil record a little earlier (during the Carnian). The Procolophonidae were an
important group of small lizard-like herbivores.
Lagerstätten
The Monte San Giorgio lagerstätte, now in the
Lake Lugano region of northern Italy and Switzerland, was in Triassic times a lagoon behind reefs with an anoxic
bottom layer, so there were no scavengers and little turbulence to disturb fossilization, a situation that can be compared to the
better-known Jurassic Solnhofen limestone lagerstätte. The remains of fish and
various marine reptiles (including the common pachypleurosaur Neusticosaurus, and the bizarre long-necked archosauromorph Tanystropheus), along with some terrestrial forms like Ticinosuchus and Macrocnemus, have been recovered from this
locality. All these fossils date from the Anisian/Ladinian
transition (about 237 million years ago).
Late Triassic extinction event
-
The Triassic period ended with a mass extinction, which was particularly severe in the oceans; the conodonts disappeared, and all the marine reptiles except ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs. Invertebrates like
brachiopods, gastropods, and molluscs were severely affected. In the oceans, 22% of marine families and possibly about half of marine genera
went missing, according to University of Chicago paleontologist Jack Sepkoski.
Though the end-Triassic extinction event was not equally devastating everywhere in terrestrial ecosystems, several important
clades of Crurotarsi (large archosaurian reptiles previously grouped together as the
thecodonts) disappeared, as did most of the large labyrinthodont amphibians, groups of small
reptiles, and some synapsids (except for the proto-mammals). Some of the early, primitive dinosaurs also went extinct, but other
more adaptive dinosaurs survived to evolve in the Jurassic. Surviving plants that went on to dominate the Mesozoic world included
modern conifers and cycadeoids.
It is not certain what caused this Late Triassic extinction, which was accompanied by huge volcanic eruptions about 208-213 million years ago, the largest recorded volcanic event since the planet cooled
and stabilized, as the supercontinent Pangaea began to break apart. Other possible causes for the extinction events include
global cooling or even a bolide impact, for which an impact crater surrounding
Manicouagan Reservoir in Quebec, Canada, has been singled out. At the Manicouagan impact crater, however, recent research has shown that the
impact melt within the crater has an age of 214±1 Ma. The date of the Triassic-Jurassic boundary has also been more accurately
fixed recently, at 202±1 Ma. Both dates are gaining accuracy by using more accurate forms of radiometric dating, in particular
the decay of uranium to lead in zircons formed at the impact. So the evidence suggests the Manicouagan impact preceded the end of
the Triassic by approximately 12±2 Ma. Therefore it could not be the immediate cause of the observed mass extinction. [4]
The number of Late Triassic extinctions is disputed. Some studies suggest that there are at least two periods of extinction
towards the end of the Triassic, between 12 and 17 million years apart. But arguing against this is a recent study of North
American faunas. In the Petrified Forest of northeast Arizona there is a
unique sequence of latest Carnian-early Norian terrestrial sediments. An analysis in 2002
found no significant change in the paleoenvironment.[5]
Phytosaurs, the most common fossils there, experienced a change-over only at the genus level,
and the number of species remained the same. Some Aetosaurs, the next most common tetrapods,
and early dinosaurs, passed through unchanged. However, both Phytosaurs and Aetosaurs were among the groups of archosaur reptiles
completely wiped out by the end-Triassic extinction event.
It seems likely then that there was some sort of end-Carnian extinction, when several herbivorous archosauromorph groups died
out, while the large herbivorous therapsids— the Kannemeyeriid dicynodonts and the Traversodont cynodonts— were
much reduced in the northern half of Pangaea (Laurasia).
These extinctions within the Triassic and at its end allowed the dinosaurs to expand into many niches that had become
unoccupied. Dinosaurs became increasingly dominant, abundant and diverse, and remained that way for the next 150 million years.
The true "Age of Dinosaurs" is the Jurassic and Cretaceous, rather than the Triassic.
See also
Notes
- ^ http://rainbow.ldeo.columbia.edu/courses/v1001/10.html
- ^ Stanley, 452-3.
- ^ Stanley, 452-3.
- ^ Hodych & Dunning, 1992.
- ^ http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2002AM/finalprogram/abstract_42936.htm
References
- Emiliani, Cesare, 1992, Planet Earth : Cosmology, Geology and the Evolution
of Life and Environment
- Ogg, Jim; June, 2004, Overview of Global Boundary Stratotype Sections and Points (GSSP's) [1] Accessed April 30, 2006
- Stanley, Steven M. Earth System History. New York: W.H. Freeman and Company, 1999. ISBN 0-7167-2882-6
- van Andel, Tjeerd, (1985) 1994, New Views on an Old Planet : A History of Global Change, Cambridge University
Press
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