Plants in the Triassic included lycophotes, cycads, and ginkgophyta. The dominant trees in the northern hemisphere were conifers, while in the Southern Hemisphere the dominant trees were Glossopteris (a type of seed fern).
the dominant plants in the Triassic period was seedplants, Glossopteris(southern hemisphere), in the northern hemisphere, conifers Want more info about the triassic period?www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/dino_Triassic.htm
yes there were plants during this time period. there were trees
Icthyosaurs and plesiosaurs are both known from Triassic strata. Crinoids were common then, but their history spans more than just the Triassic. Coelophysis appeared in the middle of the Triassic. Phytosaurs and aetosaurs did not survive past the end of the Triassic. Lystrosaurus was a Triassic dicynodont, about the size of a sheep, which has been found on every continent (including Antarctica). Podocarps and other gymnosperms (plants) survived beyond the Triassic period.
During the Triassic period, reptiles had diverse diets depending on their species. Some were herbivorous, feeding on plants and vegetation, while others were carnivorous, preying on smaller animals and fish. The earliest dinosaurs, appearing in the late Triassic, were also beginning to adapt to various diets, with some being omnivorous. Overall, the ecosystem supported a range of food sources, including ferns, cycads, and other early plants, as well as marine life in aquatic environments.
Gymnosperms, such as cycads and ginkgoes, were common during the Triassic period and had seeds lacking a protective outer coat. They were some of the first seed plants to evolve, and their seeds were exposed on the surface of cones or other structures.
During the Triassic period, which lasted from about 252 to 201 million years ago, a diverse array of species existed, including early dinosaurs, marine reptiles, and various plants. However, specific estimates of the number of species are challenging due to the incomplete fossil record. It is believed that the Triassic saw the emergence of many new species following the mass extinction at the end of the Permian, but exact numbers remain uncertain. Overall, the period marked a significant diversification of life forms, setting the stage for the dominance of dinosaurs in the subsequent Jurassic period.
it was mostly covered with trees and grass.
No. Primitive algae existed but true plants did not. There was no life on land in the Cambrian.
plants and animals but of course rare kinds.
The megalodon shark existed alongside many other plants and animals in the Oligocene Epoch. An example is the hyaenodon horridus.
The Permian Period,248 million years ago, was the largest extinction period on Earth. Ninety to ninety-five percent of marine species were eliminated, including fusulinid foraminifera, trilobites, rugose and tabulate corals, blastoids, acanthodians, placoderms, and pelycosaurs. Numbers of sharks and bony fish were drastically reduced during this period.
The common subject for art during the ancient period were plants and animals because concrete figures did not exist them.