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PhD: Death of a biome: sedimentary and palaeoecological consequences of the Pennsylvanian collapse of tropical rainforests

Project Title

Death of a biome: sedimentary and palaeoecological consequences of the Pennsylvanian collapse of tropical rainforests

Institution

University of Cambridge

Supervisors and Institutions

Neil Davies

Funding Status

Funding is in competition with other projects and students

Project Description

The geological record permits the opportunity to identify global perturbations induced by the collapse of the Earth’s tropical rainforests. It has been postulated that mass extinction of vegetation on land could trigger mass extinctions of marine fauna due to huge sediment influxes associated with increased rates of erosion. Observations centred on the Permian-Triassic mass extinction have suggested that this is revealed through global facies signatures, including an increase in braided river alluvium, dilution of nearshore bioturbation and a global stratigraphic gap of coal deposits. However, 50 million years before the Permian-Triassic event, the Earth’s vegetation suffered its first mass extinction event in the form of the Kasimovian Rainforest Collapse (KRC) . The interval succeeding KRC is presently unstudied from a sedimentological and ichnological perspective: detailed original fieldwork analysis of select Euramerican sites will shed new light on the post-rainforest collapse, repercussions and recovery of ecosystems and sediment erosion rates.

Contact Name

Neil Davies

Contact Email

Link to More Information

Expiry Date

Wednesday, January 6, 2016
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