Stanford scientists found that dramatic climate changes after the Great Dying enabled a few marine species to spread globally ...
Scientists don't call it the "Great Dying" for nothing. About 252 million years ago, upward of 80% of all marine species ...
After Earth's worst mass extinction, surviving ocean animals spread worldwide. Stanford's model shows why this happened.
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Live Science on MSNThe 'Great Dying' — the worst mass extinction in our planet’s history — didn’t reach this isolated spot in ChinaThe end-Permian mass extinction, also known as the "Great Dying ... This caused global warming and ocean acidification, ...
Fossils in China suggest some plants survived the End-Permian extinction, indicating land ecosystems fared differently from ...
Castello Aragonese offers a natural analogue for an unnatural process: The acidification that has taken place off its shore is occurring more gradually across the world's oceans, as they absorb ...
Ocean acidification, a consequence of climate change caused by the ocean’s absorption of carbon dioxide (CO 2), is threatening the environment. Because of its global scale, addressing ocean ...
The OA-ICC is an IAEA Peaceful Uses Initiative project launched at the UN Rio+20 conference in 2012 following increasing concern from IAEA Member States about ocean acidification. The Centre responds ...
Toward the end of the Permian period, the planet was reeling ... oxygen depletion, and ocean acidification that killed most marine organisms 252 million years ago. But the extinction alone doesn ...
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