An international team led by researchers from the
Evolutionary1 Studies Institute (ESI) at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, has obtained an age from rocks of the Great Karoo that shed light on the
timing2 of a mass
extinction3 event that occurred around 260 million years ago. This led to the
disappearance4 of a diverse group of early mammal-like
reptiles5 called dinocephalians, which were the largest land-living animals of the time.
The project was led by Dr Michael Day, a postdoctoral fellow at Wits University, and the findings are contained in paper, titled: When and how did the terrestrial mid-Permian mass extinction occur? Evidence from the tetrapod record of the Karoo Basin, South Africa, published today, 8 July 2015, in the latest issue of the Royal Society's biological journal,
Proceedings6 of the Royal Society B.
The Karoo is very rich in fossils of terrestrial animals from the Permian and Triassic geological periods, which makes it one of the few places to study extinction events on land during this time. As a result South Africa's Karoo region provides not only a historical record of biological change over a period of Earth's history but also a means to test theories of evolutionary processes over long stretches of time.
By collecting fossils in the Eastern, Western and Northern
Cape7 Provinces the team was able to show that around 74-80% of species became extinct along with the dinocephalians in a geologically short period of time.
The new date was obtained by high precision analyses of the relative abundance of uranium and lead in small zircon crystals from a
volcanic8 ash layer close to this extinction horizon in the Karoo.
This provides a means of linking the South African fossil record with the fossil record in the rest of the world. In particular, it helps correlate the Karoo with the global
marine9 record, which also records an extinction event around 260 million years ago.
"A mid-Permian extinction event on land has been known for some time but was suspected to have occurred earlier than those in the marine realm. The new date suggests that one event may have
affected10 marine and terrestrial environments at the same time, which could mean its impact was greater than we thought," says Day.