The Triassic–Jurassic extinction event marks the boundary between the Triassic and Jurassic periods, 201.3 million years ago, and is one of the major extinction events of the Phanerozoic eon, profoundly affecting life on land and in the oceans. In the seas, a whole class (conodonts) and 23–34% of marine genera disappeared. On land, all archosaurs other than crocodylomorphs (Sphenosuchia and Crocodyliformes) and Avemetatarsalia (pterosaurs and dinosaurs), some remaining therapsids, and many of the large amphibians became extinct.
Effects
This event vacated terrestrial ecological niches, allowing the dinosaurs to assume the dominant roles in the Jurassic period. This event happened in less than 10,000 years and occurred just before Pangaea started to break apart. In the area of Tübingen (Germany), a Triassic–Jurassic bonebed can be found, which is characteristic for this boundary.
The extinction event marks a floral turnover as well. About 60%
of the diverse monosaccate and bisaccate pollen assemblages disappear at
the Tr–J boundary, indicating a major extinction of plant genera. Early Jurassic pollen assemblages are dominated by Corollina, a new genus that took advantage of the empty niches left by the extinction.
Statistical analysis of marine losses at this time suggests that the decrease in diversity was caused more by a decrease in speciation than by an increase in extinctions.
Marine vertebrates
Fish did not suffer a mass extinction at the end of the Triassic. The late Triassic in general did experience a gradual drop in actinopterygiian diversity after an evolutionary explosion in the middle Triassic. Though this may have been due to falling sea levels or the Carnian pluvial event, it may instead be a result of sampling bias considering that middle Triassic fish have been more extensively studied than late Triassic fish. Despite the apparent drop in diversity, neopterygiians
(which include most modern bony fish) suffered less than more
"primitive" actinopterygiians, indicating a biological turnover where
modern groups of fish started to supplant earlier groups.
Like fish, marine reptiles experienced a substantial drop in
diversity between the middle Triassic and the Jurassic. However, their
extinction rate at the Triassic–Jurassic boundary was not elevated. The
highest extinction rates experienced by Mesozoic marine reptiles
actually occurred at the end of the Ladinian stage, which corresponds to the end of the middle Triassic. The only marine reptile families which went extinct at or slightly before the Triassic–Jurassic boundary were the placochelyids (the last family of placodonts), and giant ichthyosaurs such as shastasaurids and shonisaurids. Nevertheless, some authors have argued that the end of the Triassic acted as a genetic "bottleneck"
for ichthyosaurs, which never regained the level of anatomical
diversity and disparity which they possessed during the Triassic.
Terrestrial vertebrates
One
of the earliest pieces of evidence for a late Triassic extinction was a
major turnover in terrestrial tetrapods such as amphibians, reptiles,
and synapsids. Edwin H. Colbert
drew parallels between the system of extinction and adaptation between
the Triassic–Jurassic and Cretaceous-Paleogene boundaries. He recognized
how dinosaurs, lepidosaurs (lizards and their relatives), and crocodyliforms (crocodilians
and their relatives) filled the niches of more ancient groups of
amphibians and reptiles which were extinct by the start of the Jurassic.
Olson (1987) estimated that 42% of all terrestrial tetrapods went
extinct at the end of the Triassic, based on his studies of faunal
changes in the Newark Supergroup of eastern North America.
More modern studies have debated whether the turnover in Triassic
tetrapods was abrupt at the end of the Triassic, or instead more
gradual.
During the Triassic, amphibians were mainly represented by large, crocodile-like members of the order Temnospondyli. Although the earliest lissamphibians (modern amphibians like frogs and salamanders)
did appear during the Triassic, they would become more common in the
Jurassic while the temnospondyls diminished in diversity past the
Triassic–Jurassic boundary.
Although the decline of temnospondyls did send shockwaves through
freshwater ecosystems, it was probably not as abrupt as some authors
have suggested. Brachyopoids, for example, survived until the Cretaceous
according to new discoveries in the 1990s. Several temnospondyl groups
did go extinct near the end of the Triassic despite earlier abundance,
but it is uncertain how close their extinctions were to the end of the
Triassic. The last known metoposaurids ("Apachesaurus") were from the Redonda Formation, which may have been early Rhaetian or late Norian. Gerrothorax, the last known plagiosaurid, has been found in rocks which are probably (but not certainly) Rhaetian, while a capitosaur
humerus was found in Rhaetian-age deposits in 2018. Therefore,
plagiosaurids and capitosaurs were likely victims of an extinction at
the very end of the Triassic, while most other temnospondyls were
already extinct.
Terrestrial reptile faunas were dominated by archosauromorphs during the Triassic, particularly phytosaurs and members of Pseudosuchia (the reptile lineage which leads to modern crocodilians). In the early Jurassic and onwards, dinosaurs and pterosaurs became the most common land reptiles, while small reptiles were mostly represented by lepidosauromorphs (such as lizards and tuatara relatives). Among pseudosuchians, only small crocodylomorphs did not go extinct by the end of the Triassic, with both dominant herbivorous subgroups (such as aetosaurs) and carnivorous ones (rauisuchids) having died out. Phytosaurs, drepanosaurs, trilophosaurids, tanystropheids, and procolophonids,
which were other common reptiles in the late Triassic, had also become
extinct by the start of the Jurassic. However, pinpointing the
extinction of these different land reptile groups is difficult, as the
last period of the Triassic (the Rhaetian) and the first period of the
Jurassic (the Hettangian)
each have few records of large land animals. Out of the different
groups known to have gone extinct in the late Triassic, only phytosaurs,
procolophonids, and possibly some basal paracrocodylomorphs are known from fossils considered to be near the Triassic-Jurassic boundary, and other groups may have died out earlier.
Current theories
Several explanations for this event have been suggested, but all have unanswered challenges.
Gradual processes
Gradual climate change, sea-level fluctuations, or a pulse of oceanic acidification during the late Triassic may have reached a tipping point. However, the effect of such processes on Triassic animal and plant groups is not well understood.
The extinctions at the end of the Triassic were initially
attributed to gradually changing environments. Within his 1958 study
recognizing biological turnover between the Triassic and Jurassic, Edwin H. Colbert's
1958 proposal was that this extinction was a result of geological
processes decreasing the diversity of land biomes. He considered the
Triassic period to be an era of the world experiencing a variety of
environments, from towering highlands to arid deserts to tropical
marshes. On the other hand, the Jurassic period was much more uniform
both in climate and elevation due to excursions by shallow seas.
Later studies noted a clear trend towards increased aridification
towards the end of the Triassic. Although high-latitude areas like
Greenland and Australia actually became wetter, most of the world
experienced more drastic changes in climate as indicated by geological
evidence. This evidence includes an increase in carbonate and evaporite
deposits (which are most abundant in dry climates) and a decrease in
coal deposits (which primarily form in humid environments such as coal forests). In addition, the climate may have become much more seasonal, with long droughts interrupted by severe monsoons.
Geological formations in Europe seem to indicate a drop in sea
levels in the late Triassic, and then a rise in the early Jurassic.
Although falling sea levels have sometimes been considered a culprit for
marine extinctions, evidence is inconclusive since many sea level drops
in geological history are not correlated with increased extinctions.
However, there is still some evidence that marine life was affected by
secondary processes related to falling sea levels, such as decreased
oxygenation (caused by sluggish circulation), or increased
acidification. These processes do not seem to have been worldwide, but
they may explain local extinctions in European marine fauna.
Extraterrestrial impact
Some have theorized that an impact from an asteroid or comet may have caused the Triassic–Jurassic extinction, similar to the extraterrestrial object which was the main factor in the Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction about 66 million years ago, as evidenced by the Chicxulub crater
in Mexico. However, so far no impact crater of sufficient size has been
dated to precisely coincide with the Triassic–Jurassic boundary.
Nevertheless, the late Triassic did experience several impacts,
including the second-largest confirmed impact in the Mesozoic. The Manicouagan Reservoir in Quebec is one of the most visible large impact craters on Earth, and at 100 km (62 mi) in diameter it is tied with the Eocene Popigai crater in Siberia as the fourth-largest impact crater on Earth. Olsen et al.
(1987) were the first scientists to link the Manicouagan crater to the
Triassic–Jurassic extinction, citing its age which at the time was
roughly considered to be late Triassic. More precise radiometric dating
by Hodych & Dunning (1992) has shown that the Manicouagan impact
occurred about 214 million years ago, about 13 million years before the
Triassic–Jurassic boundary. Therefore, it could not have been
responsible for an extinction precisely at the Triassic–Jurassic
boundary. Nevertheless, the Manicougan impact did have a widespread effect on the planet; a 214-million-year-old ejecta blanket of shocked quartz has been found in rock layers as far away as England
and Japan. There is still a possibility that the Manicouagan impact was
responsible for a small extinction midway through the late Triassic at
the Carnian–Norian boundary,
although the disputed age of this boundary (and whether an extinction
actually occurred in the first place) makes it difficult to correlate
the impact with extinction. Onoue et al.
(2016) alternatively proposed that the Manicouagan impact was
responsible for a marine extinction in the middle of the Norian which
impacted radiolarians, sponges, conodonts, and Triassic ammonoids. Thus,
the Manicouagan impact may have been partially responsible for the
gradual decline in the latter two groups which culminated in their
extinction at the Triassic–Jurassic boundary.
The boundary between the Adamanian and Revueltian land vertebrate
faunal zones, which involved extinctions and faunal changes in tetrapods
and plants, was possibly also caused by the Manicouagan impact,
although discrepancies between magnetochronological and isotopic dating
lead to some uncertainty.
Other Triassic craters are closer to the Triassic–Jurassic
boundary but also much smaller than the Manicouagan reservoir. The
eroded Rochechouart crater in France has most recently been dated to 201±2 million years ago,
but at 25 km (16 mi) across (possibly up to 50 km (30 mi) across
originally), it appears to be too small to have affected the ecosystem. Other putative or confirmed Triassic craters include the 80 km (50 mi) wide Puchezh-Katunki crater in Eastern Russia (though it may be Jurassic in age), the 40 km (25 mi) wide Saint Martin crater in Manitoba, the 15 km (9 mi) wide Obolon' crater in Ukraine, and the 9 km (6 mi) wide Red Wing Creek structure in North Dakota. Spray et al.
(1998) noted an interesting phenomenon, that being how the Manicoagan,
Rochechoart, and Saint Martin craters all seem to be at the same
latitude, and that the Obolon' and Red Wing craters form parallel arcs
with the Rochechoart and Saint Martin craters, respectively. Spray and
his colleagues hypothesized that the Triassic experienced a "multiple
impact event", a large fragmented asteroid or comet which broke up and
impacted the earth in several places at the same time. Such an impact has been observed in the present day, when Comet Shoemaker-Levy 9
broke up and hit Jupiter in 1992. However, the "multiple impact event"
hypothesis for Triassic impact craters has not been well-supported; Kent
(1998) noted that the Manicouagan and Rochechoart craters were formed
in eras of different magnetic polarity, and radiometric dating of the individual craters has shown that the impacts occurred millions of years apart.
Volcanic eruptions
Massive volcanic eruptions, specifically the flood basalts of the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province (CAMP), would release carbon dioxide or sulfur dioxide and aerosols, which would cause either intense global warming (from the former) or cooling (from the latter).
The record of CAMP degassing shows several distinct pulses of carbon
dioxide immediately following each major pulse of magmatism, at least
two of which amount to a doubling of atmospheric CO2.
The isotopic composition of fossil soils of the Late Triassic and Early Jurassic has been tied to a large negative carbon isotope excursion (Whiteside et al. 2010). Carbon isotopes of lipids (n-alkanes) derived from leaf wax and lignin,
and total organic carbon from two sections of lake sediments
interbedded with the CAMP in eastern North America have shown carbon
isotope excursions similar to those found in the mostly marine St. Audrie’s Bay
section, Somerset, England; the correlation suggests that the
end-Triassic extinction event began at the same time in marine and
terrestrial environments, slightly before the oldest basalts in eastern
North America but simultaneous with the eruption of the oldest flows in
Morocco (Also suggested by Deenen et al., 2010), with both a critical CO
2 greenhouse and a marine biocalcification crisis.
2 greenhouse and a marine biocalcification crisis.
Contemporaneous CAMP eruptions, mass extinction, and the carbon
isotopic excursions are shown in the same places, making the case for a
volcanic cause of a mass extinction. The catastrophic dissociation of gas hydrates (suggested as one possible cause of the largest mass extinction of all time, the so-called "Great Dying" at the end of the Permian Period) may have exacerbated greenhouse conditions.
Some scientists reject the volcanic eruption theory, because the Newark Supergroup, a section of rock that records the Triassic–Jurassic boundary, contains no ash-fall horizons and the first basalt flows lie around 10 m above the transition zone.
However, updated dating protocol and wider sampling has generally
confirmed that most (but not all) volcanic activity occurred before the
boundary.