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      Fusuline biotic turnover across the Guadalupian–Lopingian (Middle–Upper Permian) boundary in mid-oceanic carbonate buildups: Biostratigraphy of accreted limestone in Japan

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      Journal of Asian Earth Sciences
      Elsevier BV

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          Most cited references18

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          Permo-Triassic Boundary Superanoxia and Stratified Superocean: Records from Lost Deep Sea

          Isozaki (1997)
          Pelagic cherts of Japan and British Columbia, Canada, recorded a long-term and worldwide deep-sea anoxic (oxygen-depleted) event across the Permo-Triassic (or Paleozoic and Mesozoic) boundary (251 ± 2 million years ago). The symmetry in lithostratigraphy and redox condition of the boundary sections suggest that the superocean Panthalassa became totally stratified for nearly 20 million years across the boundary. The timing of onset, climax, and termination of the oceanic stratification correspond to global biotic events including the end-Guadalupian decline, the end-Permian extinction, and mid-Triassic recovery.
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            A double mass extinction at the end of the paleozoic era.

            Three tests based on fossil data indicate that high rates of extinction recorded in the penultimate (Guadalupian) stage of the Paleozoic era are not artifacts of a poor fossil record. Instead, they represent an abrupt mass extinction that was one of the largest to occur in the past half billion years. The final mass extinction of the era, which took place about 5 million years after the Guadalupian event, remains the most severe biotic crisis of all time. Taxonomic losses in the Late Permian were partitioned among the two crises and the intervening interval, however, and the terminal Permian crisis eliminated only about 80 percent of marine species, not 95 or 96 percent as earlier estimates have suggested.
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              Accreted oceanic materials in Japan

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Asian Earth Sciences
                Journal of Asian Earth Sciences
                Elsevier BV
                13679120
                March 2006
                March 2006
                : 26
                : 3-4
                : 353-368
                Article
                10.1016/j.jseaes.2005.04.001
                0684e6a3-aade-4aa6-afe4-3b0db4c00e23
                © 2006

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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