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      The Late Triassic World 

      The Missing Mass Extinction at the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary

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      Springer International Publishing

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          GEOCARB III: A revised model of atmospheric CO2 over Phanerozoic time

          R. Berner (2001)
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            The Mesozoic marine revolution: evidence from snails, predators and grazers

            Tertiary and Recent marine gastropods include in their ranks a complement of mechanically sturdy forms unknown in earlier epochs. Open coiling, planispiral coiling, and umbilici detract from shell sturdiness, and were commoner among Paleozoic and Early Mesozoic gastropods than among younger forms. Strong external sculpture, narrow elongate apertures, and apertural dentition promote resistance to crushing predation and are primarily associated with post-Jurassic mesogastropods, neogastropods, and neritaceans. The ability to remodel the interior of the shell, developed primarily in gastropods with a non-nacreous shell structure, has contributed greatly to the acquisition of these antipredatory features.
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              Fossil Plants and Global Warming at the Triassic-Jurassic Boundary.

              The Triassic-Jurassic boundary marks a major faunal mass extinction, but records of accompanying environmental changes are limited. Paleobotanical evidence indicates a fourfold increase in atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and suggests an associated 3 degrees to 4 degrees C "greenhouse" warming across the boundary. These environmental conditions are calculated to have raised leaf temperatures above a highly conserved lethal limit, perhaps contributing to the >95 percent species-level turnover of Triassic-Jurassic megaflora.
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                Book Chapter
                2018
                November 17 2017
                : 721-785
                10.1007/978-3-319-68009-5_15
                8fe6d31c-3fdf-4a08-b44e-ab6f29418811
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