Saturday, May 15, 2021

Permian Period Part 1

 The Permian Period is the last period of the Paleozoic Era, and it spans the 47 million years from 298.9 million years ago to 251.9 million years ago.

The Permian witnessed the diversification of two groups, the mammals (and all creatures more closely related to mammals than to reptiles and birds) and the reptiles. But I'm going to look at the conditions existing on the Earth at the time before I consider the animals that populated it.

At the time, the world was dominated by the supercontinent Pangaea, which formed when Euramerica and what was left of Gondwana collided during the Carboniferous. There was a smaller continent that lay to the northeast of Pangaea called Angara. There were also some small islands east of Pangaea called Cathaysia. Of course, with most of the land mass gathered into one supercontinent, the rest of the globe was ocean. The superocean of the time was the Panthalassa. Pangaea straddled the equator and reached for the poles (but didn't necessarily get there). This, of course, had an effect on the ocean currents of the time.

Early in this time period, Cimmeria—a string of microcontinental islands—tore off from the Gondwana area in the Southern Hemisphere and during the course of the period, moved up to join the Eurasian part of Pangaea in the Northern Hemisphere. Cimmeria included parts of today's Turkey, Iran, Afghanistan, Tibet and the Malay Peninsula. The Central Pangean Mountains, which began forming due to the collision of Laurasia and Gondwana during the Carboniferous Period, reached their maximum height shortly after the beginning of the Permian, and would have been comparable to the present Himalayas.

The Carboniferous rainforest collapse left behind vast regions of desert stretching over the continental interior. From approximately 262 million years ago to 259 million years ago, a series of volcanic erruptions in what is now China (was then part of Pangaea) led the way to an extinction event. This was compounded when a similar series of volcanic activity over a wide swath of Siberia (then located in Angara) continued to change the atmosphere. This mass extinction event ended the Permian Period, and started the next period. It was the largest mass extinction in Earth's history, with nearly 81% of marine species and 70% of terrestrial species dying. On land, it took 30 million years into the next time period for the ecosystems to recover.

Sea levels were mostly stable during the Permian, at several tens of meters (yards) above the present level. There was a sharp drop at one point, producing the lowest sea level of the entire Palaeozoic Era, roughly the same as today's level.

At the start of the Permian, the Earth was still in an icehouse. Around 323 million years ago, glaciers began to form around the South Pole, which would eventually cover a vast area of the southern Amazon Basin, Southern Africa, Australia and Antarctica. The coldest period was around 293 million years ago. By 285 million years ago, temperatures warmed, and a great deal of the ice retreated, although some glaciers remained. The Permian was cool compared to other time periods, at least until those volcanoes started pouring CO2 (a greenhouse gas) into the atmosphere.

It sounds like the Permian had a lot of diverse climates and ecosystems, right? So as long as we stayed away from that awful desert, we should be able to find a nice place to live. So let's take a look at the neighbors we'd have in the next blog.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permian

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emeishan_Traps

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cimmeria_(continent)

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