"Recent evidence for a rapid bounce-back is evaluated in a new review
article by Dr Zhong-Qiang Chen, from the China University of Geosciences
in Wuhan, and Professor Michael Benton from the University of Bristol.
They find that recovery from the crisis lasted some 10 million years, as
explained May 27 in Nature Geoscience.
There were apparently two
reasons for the delay, the sheer intensity of the crisis, and
continuing grim conditions on Earth after the first wave of extinction.
The
end-Permian crisis, by far the most dramatic biological crisis to
affect life on Earth, was triggered by a number of physical
environmental shocks -- global warming, acid rain, ocean
acidification and ocean anoxia. These were enough to kill off 90 per
cent of living things on land and in the sea.
Dr Chen said:
"It is hard to imagine how so much of life could have been killed, but
there is no doubt from some of the fantastic rock sections in China and
elsewhere round the world that this was the biggest crisis ever faced by
life."
More @ [link to www.sciencedaily.com]
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