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252 million years ago, in modern times the volcanic explosions in Siberia, with 100 trillion metric tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) at the atmosphere in a million years. This natural disaster, which is called “Great Dying”, killed most of the planet animals. New research shows that it has dramatically changed the ecosystem of the world.
An international team of researchers used the climate model and plant fossil to connect the Great Dying to an average global temperature with an 18-degree Fahrenheit (10 degrees Celsius). Their work, in an at -a -at Study Published on Tuesday in the Journal Frontiers in Earth Science, humanity’s carbon dioxide emissions give insight into how dramatically change the planet.
Researchers surrounded the five periods of Permian and Triassic periods: Parmion’s Uchiappingian and Chagsingian and Triassic Induans, Olecian and Anissian. The Great Dying marks the transformation from the Permian to the Triassic period, so it is often referred to as Permian-Trialic Mass extinction or Permian-Trialic border. If “triassic” seems to be known, it is because it is the time that the dinosaurs saw the rise, whose ancestors were died great.
“Mao Bruney, a top writer Mao Bruney, the top writer Maora Bruney, said,” After the Permian-TRYACY boundaries, the Parmian-Trysic boundary has been in conjunction with the Permian-TRYACY Border for several million years after the Permian-Tarasic boundary, “said,” StatementThe
Brunety and its colleagues analyze plant fossils and computer model simulations under different temperature and CO2 level situations and then cross-reference to their results, assuming changes between six different biomes (independent environmental habitat) and then cross-referred to their results. Biomes contained tropical permanent biomes (hot and humid), seasonal tropical or nasty -tempered biomes (conditions of fluctuations) and desert biomes (dry).
Extensively, researchers revealed that the Permian time was cool, Indwan was obscure (needed further research), and Olecian and Anissian were much heated. “This conversion is characterized by an increase in a conversion of about 10⁰C when heated from a cool climate state [18 degrees Fahrenheit] At the average global surface air temperature, “Bruneti explained. It is compatible with CO2 in large quantities of volcanic explosions in the atmosphere – the higher layer of CO2, the planet is warm and wet.
Surprisingly, researchers have discovered that the biomes changed significantly during this infection. Brunety also said, “The tropical Everweight and the Summerweight Biomes were grown in the tropics, mainly replacing the desert landscapes,” Brune said. “Meanwhile, the warm-cold neat-tempered biome has moved to the pole region, which causes the Tundra ecosystem completely disappear.” Simply put, the deserts near the equatorial region have become tropical and the cold Tundra landscapes near the poles were replaced by a more fossil forest.
Brunty added, “This change in the plant’s cover can be associated with the tipping processes,” or irreversible shifts within the stable climate period, “Create a potential structure to understand the current CO2 in response to the climate system,” Bruneti added. “If this growth continues at the same rate, we will reach the level of emission, which causes the extinction of the Permian-Triasic mass in about 2,75 years-the timecale is faster than the permian-triacic border emission.”
Although researchers have warned that further research is needed to confirm their results, the study can be explained as a precaution: In the very long term, the continued human emission of CO2 can change the planet more dramatically than the great death.