Guadalupian
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The Guadalupian is the second and middle series/epoch of the Permian. It came after the Cisuralian and before the Lopingian. The name Guadalupian comes from the Guadalupe Mountains in New Mexico and Texas. This time period lasted from about 274.4 million to 259.51 million years ago.
During the Guadalupian, many important changes happened in the world of animals. Therapsids, which were early ancestors of mammals, began to rise in number and variety. There was also a smaller event called Olson's Extinction, where some species died out. Later in this period, a much bigger mass extinction took place, known as the end-Capitanian extinction event. This middle part of the Permian period helped shape life on Earth.
Name and background
The Guadalupian is the middle part of the Permian period. It used to be called the Middle Permian, but scientists changed the name to help match rock layers all around the world. The name "Guadalupian" comes from the Guadalupe Mountains in Texas and New Mexico. Before the Guadalupian was the Cisuralian, and after it came the Lopingian.
Biodiversity
Therapsids became the main land animals during the Guadalupian, taking the place of pelycosaurs. Therapsids came from a group called sphenacodonts and had four main groups: dinocephalians, anomodonts, biarmosuchians, and theriodonts.
A mass extinction happened around 273 million years ago early in the Guadalupian, before the bigger Permian–Triassic extinction event. This was first called Olson's Gap because it seemed like fossils were hard to find. Since the 1990s, it has been known as Olson's Extinction. During this time, many land vertebrates disappeared worldwide. Life became less diverse for a while, then increased again before dropping once more at the end of the Guadalupian. We don’t fully understand what caused Olson's Extinction, but climate change might have played a role.
Climate
The climate during the Guadalupian was like parts of central Asia today. Pangea, a huge supercontinent, had very hot, dry summers and cold winters. Near the equator, there was a desert that could get very hot. The coastal areas were tropical and had heavy rains called monsoons.
For most of this time, the climate was warm and tropical but then became drier. This change stopped the formation of coal and created new homes for animals and plants. Later, temperatures dropped, many coral reefs disappeared, and volcanic activity made life more difficult.
Subdivisions
The Guadalupian period has three stages: the Roadian, Wordian, and Capitanian.
The Roadian Stage lasted from about 272.3 million to 268.8 million years ago. During this time, a big change called Olson's Extinction happened. It changed many land animals and helped therapsids, the ancestors of mammals, to become more common. The Wordian Stage came next, from about 268.8 million to 265.1 million years ago. The Capitanian Stage was the last stage, from about 265.1 million to 259.8 million years ago. It ended with big changes in the environment, which affected many sea creatures and some land animals.
Other subdivisions
Some people use different names to describe parts of the Guadalupian. In Europe, this time is sometimes called the Kazanian or Maokovian, lasting from about 270.6 million to 260.4 million years ago. In New Zealand, it may be referred to as the Braxtonian, covering the same time period.
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