After the ‘Great Dying,’ life on Earth took millions of years to recover. Now, scientists know why.

At the end of the Permian period 252 million years ago, Earth was devastated by a mass extinction that exterminated more than 90% of species on the planet. Unlike after other mass extinctions, recovery from the “Great Dying” was slow: It took TK millions of years for the planet to be repopulated and restore its diversity. 

Now, scientists might have figured out what delayed Earth’s recovery. A group of tiny marine organisms called radiolarians vanished in the extinction’s aftermath. Their absence radically altered marine geochemistry, enabling a type of clay formation that released carbon dioxide. This carbon dioxide release would have kept the atmosphere warm and the oceans acidic, thereby slowing the rebound of life, the scientists explained in a paper published Oct. 3 in the journal Nature Geoscience (opens in new tab)

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