Scientists found that forests did not recover quickly after Earth’s worst extinction. Instead, plant life changed in phases.
Researchers used modelling and plant fossils to follow the planet's transition to 10 degrees of warming, which eradicated ...
A team of scientists from University College Cork (UCC), the University of Connecticut, and the Natural History Museum of ...
The Permian-Triassic extinction, also known as the Great Dying, was the most devastating event in Earth’s history. 96% of ...
Other places where plant refuges have been found, such as Argentina, were also high-latitude in the Permian, far from the ...
"Our study links land plant macrofossil assemblages and numerical simulations describing possible climates from the late Permian to the early Triassic. We show that a shift from a cold climatic ...
The mass extinction that ended the Permian geological epoch, 252 million years ago, wiped out most animals living on Earth. Huge volcanoes erupted ...
Can plants uncover the survival secrets of Earth’s darkest days? A research team from (UCC), the University of Connecticut, ...
A team of scientists from University College Cork (UCC) , the University of Connecticut, and the Natural History Museum of Vienna have uncovered how plants ... during the ‘Late Smithian Thermal ...
Five 'mass extinctions' have decimated our planet since it was formed - now scientists claim the answers to two could be written in the stars.