Scientists don't call it the "Great Dying" for nothing. About 252 million years ago, upward of 80% of all marine species ...
Fossils from China’s Turpan-Hami Basin reveal it was a rare land refuge during the end-Permian extinction, with fast ...
Stanford scientists found that dramatic climate changes after the Great Dying enabled a few marine species to spread globally ...
After Earth's worst mass extinction, surviving ocean animals spread worldwide. Stanford's model shows why this happened.
After the end-Permian mass extinction, certain species thrived in warmer, oxygen-depleted waters, spreading globally. This ...
Fossils before and after the end-Permian extinction “go from ... even those seen in the earliest Triassic, which has been the greatest homogenization event to date,” the study authors wrote.