Title of article
The global vegetation pattern across the Cretaceous–Paleogene mass extinction interval: A template for other extinction events
Author/Authors
Vajda، نويسنده , , Vivi and Bercovici، نويسنده , , Antoine، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
21
From page
29
To page
49
Abstract
Changes in pollen and spore assemblages across the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) boundary elucidate the vegetation response to a global environmental crisis triggered by an asteroid impact in Mexico 66 Ma. The Cretaceous–Paleogene boundary clay, associated with the Chicxulub asteroid impact event, constitutes a unique, global marker bed enabling comparison of the world-wide palynological signal spanning the mass extinction event. The data from both hemispheres are consistent, revealing diverse latest Cretaceous assemblages of pollen and spores that were affected by a major diversity loss as a consequence of the K–Pg event. Here we combine new results with past studies to provide an integrated global perspective of the terrestrial vegetation record across the K–Pg boundary. We further apply the K–Pg event as a template to asses the causal mechanism behind other major events in Earths history. The end-Permian, end-Triassic, and the K–Pg mass-extinctions were responses to different causal processes that resulted in essentially similar succession of decline and recovery phases, although expressed at different temporal scales. The events share a characteristic pattern of a bloom of opportunistic “crisis” tax followed by a pulse in pioneer communities, and finally a recovery in diversity including evolution of new taxa.
on their similar extinction and recovery patterns and the fact that the Last and First Appearance Datums associated with the extinctions are separated in time, we recommend using the K–Pg event as a model and to use relative abundance data for the stratigraphic definition of mass-extinction events and the placement of associated chronostratigraphic boundaries.
Keywords
Biostratigraphy , Palynology , asteroid , CAMP , Siberian Traps , End-Triassic , end-Permian , P–T boundary , Tr–J boundary
Journal title
Global and Planetary Change
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Global and Planetary Change
Record number
2369314
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