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Carbon dioxide dip may have helped dinosaurs walk from South America to Greenland

Climate shift may have aided herbivores on a 6,500-mile trek

Date:
February 15, 2021
Source:
Earth Institute at Columbia University
Summary:
A new study identifies a climate phenomenon that may have helped sauropodomorphs spread northward across the Pangea supercontinent.
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A new paper refines estimates of when herbivorous dinosaurs must have traversed North America on a northerly trek to reach Greenland, and points out an intriguing climatic phenomenon that may have helped them along the journey.

The study, published in theProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, is authored by Dennis Kent, adjunct research scientist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, and Lars Clemmensen from the University of Copenhagen.

以前的估计表明sauropodomorphs-- a group of long-necked, herbivorous dinosaurs that eventually included Brontosaurus and Brachiosaurus -- arrived in Greenland sometime between 225 and 205 million years ago. But by painstakingly matching up ancient magnetism patterns in rock layers at fossil sites across South America, Arizona, New Jersey, Europe and Greenland, the new study offers a more precise estimate: It suggests that sauropodomorphs showed up in what is now Greenland around 214 million years ago. At the time, the continents were all joined together, forming the supercontinent Pangea.

With this new and more precise estimate, the authors faced another question. Fossil records show that sauropodomorph dinosaurs first appeared in Argentina and Brazil about 230 million years ago. So why did it take them so long to expand into the Northern Hemisphere?

"In principle, the dinosaurs could have walked from almost one pole to the other," explained Kent, who is also an emeritus professor at Rutgers University. "There was no ocean in between. There were no big mountains. And yet it took 15 million years. It's as if snails could have done it faster." He calculates that if a dinosaur herd walked only one mile per day, it would take less than 20 years to make the journey between South America and Greenland.

Intriguingly, Earth was in the midst of a tremendous dip in atmospheric CO2right around the time the sauropodomorphs would have been migrating 214 million years ago. Until about 215 million years ago, the Triassic period had experienced extremely high CO2levels, at around 4,000 parts per million -- about 10 times higher than today. But between 215 and 212 million years ago, the CO2concentration halved, dropping to about 2,000ppm.

Although the timing of these two events -- the plummeting CO2and the sauropodomorph migration -- could be pure coincidence, Kent and Clemmensen think they may be related. In the paper, they suggest that the milder levels of CO2may have helped to remove climatic barriers that may have trapped the sauropodomorphs in South America.

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On Earth, areas around the equator are hot and humid, while adjacent areas in low latitudes tend to be very dry. Kent and Clemmensen say that on a planet supercharged with CO2, the differences between those climatic belts may have been extreme -- perhaps too extreme for the sauropodomorph dinosaurs to cross.

"We know that with higher CO2, the dry gets drier and the wet gets wetter," said Kent. 230 million years ago, the high CO2conditions could have made the arid belts too dry to support the movements of large herbivores that need to eat a lot of vegetation to survive. The tropics, too, may have been locked into rainy, monsoon-like conditions that may not have been ideal for sauropodomorphs. There is little evidence they ventured forth from the temperate, mid-latitude habitats they were adapted to in Argentina and Brazil.

But when the CO2水平下降215 - 212年前,也许the tropical regions became more mild, and the arid regions became less dry. There may have been some passageways, such as along rivers and strings of lakes, that would have helped sustain the herbivores along the 6,500-mile journey to Greenland, where their fossils are now abundant. Back then, Greenland would have had a temperate climate similar to New York state's climate today, but with much milder winters, because there were no polar ice sheets at that time.

"Once they arrived in Greenland, it looked like they settled in,'" said Kent. "They hung around as a long fossil record after that."

The idea that a dip in CO2could have helped these dinosaurs to overcome a climatic barrier is speculative but plausible, and it seems to be supported by the fossil record, said Kent. Sauropodomorph body fossils have not been found in the tropical and arid regions of this time period -- although their footprints do occasionally turn up -- suggesting they did not linger in those areas.

Next, Kent hopes to continue working to better understand the big CO2dip, including what caused it and how quickly CO2levels dropped.

Story Source:

Materialsprovided byEarth Institute at Columbia University. Original written by Sarah Fecht.Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Dennis V. Kent, Lars B. Clemmensen.Northward dispersal of dinosaurs from Gondwana to Greenland at the mid-Norian (215–212 Ma, Late Triassic) dip in atmospheric pCO2.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2021; 118 (8): e2020778118 DOI:10.1073/pnas.2020778118

Cite This Page:

Earth Institute at Columbia University. "Carbon dioxide dip may have helped dinosaurs walk from South America to Greenland." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 15 February 2021. /releases/2021/02/210215160230.htm>.
Earth Institute at Columbia University. (2021, February 15). Carbon dioxide dip may have helped dinosaurs walk from South America to Greenland.ScienceDaily. Retrieved September 25, 2023 from www.koonmotors.com/releases/2021/02/210215160230.htm
Earth Institute at Columbia University. "Carbon dioxide dip may have helped dinosaurs walk from South America to Greenland." ScienceDaily. www.koonmotors.com/releases/2021/02/210215160230.htm (accessed September 25, 2023).

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