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Roughly 252 million years ago, Earth experienced its deadliest known extinction. Known as the Permian–Triassic Mass ...
Long before T. rex, the Earth was dominated by super-carnivores stranger and more terrifying than anything dreamed up by ...
A study of fossils from the Permian-Triassic extinction event 252 million years ago shows that forests in many parts of the ...
Therapsids, the ancient relatives of mammals, once roamed Earth in great numbers during the middle to late Permian period. These land-dwelling creatures would later evolve into mammals, but their ...
The collapse of tropical forests during Earth's most catastrophic extinction event was the primary cause of the prolonged ...
As climate change threatens tropical forests, a new study shows how the loss of those forests can be devastating to life on ...
Fossils from Earth’s biggest extinction reveal forest collapse triggered runaway warming - offering a warning for today’s ...
The molten rock was hot enough to melt the surrounding rocks and release massive amounts of carbon dioxide into Earth's ...
Around 252 million years ago, Earth went through its most devastating extinction event, the Permian–Triassic Mass Extinction ...
The collapse of tropical forests during Earth’s most catastrophic extinction event was the primary cause of the prolonged global warming which followed, according to new research.
An ancient climate tipping point is revealed in new fossils dating back to Earth’s most severe extinction event, called the ...
Fusulines thrived in cold seas but vanished twice when warming from volcanoes rapidly spiked ocean carbon levels.