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Vertebrate Life

Vertebrate Life (Eleventh Edition)

F. Harvey Pough, William E. Bemis, Betty Mcguire, and Christine M. Janis
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date: 15 September 2024

10. p. 223Geography and Ecology of the Mesozoiclocked

10. p. 223Geography and Ecology of the Mesozoiclocked

  • F. Harvey Pough, F. Harvey PoughProfessor Emeritus, Rochester Institute of Technology
  • William E. Bemis, William E. BemisProfessor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Faculty Curator of Ichthyology, Cornell University
  • Betty McguireBetty McguireSenior Lecturer, Cornell University
  • , and Christine M. JanisChristine M. JanisProfessor Emerita of Biology, Brown University, USA, Honorary Professor of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, UK

Abstract

This chapter details the geography and ecology of the Mesozoic period. It explains that the Mesozoic period was a time of major diversification and radiation, leading to large-scale changes in flora and fauna by the end of the era. In Mesozoic oceans, neoselachians diversified, while the total diversity of tetrapods changed relatively slowly. Meanwhile, lissamphibians evolved and the two major lineages of amniotes diversified into Synapsida and Sauropsida. The chapter highlights how the era's history of extinction events opened the way for a new faunal balance in the Cenozoic period. Most Mesozoic extinction events resulted from intense episodes of volcanic activity accompanying collisions and splitting of continents as Pangaea formed and later ruptured.

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