Dinosaurs and fluctuating sea levels during the mesozoic
- 1 January 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Historical Biology
- Vol. 4 (2) , 75-106
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08912969009386535
Abstract
The very different frequency of dinosaurs during the Mesozoic can be allied to the correlation between global sea level cyclicity and fossilization. This is based upon the sedimentary situation in the inner shelf, the area of predominant fossil record of dinosaurs, and sea level fluctuations. A rich fossil record is found in times of high sea level, and vice versa. Due to natural laws acting on sea level stands, the fossil record of dinosaurs and other terrestrial tetrapods is incomplete. This is causally explainable in the sequence stratigraphy. Among causes of global sea level fluctuations, the change from warm to cold times has been accorded greatest probability even in the Mesozoic. Consequently, the problem of dinosaur evolution and distribution should not be confused with the pattern of their fossil record. The latter, however, is so far nearly always used for all interpretations. The context presented here results in basic modifications. During the phases of reduced to missing fossil record (low sea level, cold times), dinosaurs existed at least in circumequatorial regions in high diversity. Highly diverse faunas recorded exceptionally in the Upper Jurassic, Middle and Late Cretaceous, were each time the result of a long previous evolution and not the result of short term radiations at these times. Phases of sea level highstand and warm times caused an increased fossil record and poleward distribution. Cretaceous dinosaurs in paleolatitudes of 70° to 80° N and S are no proof for endothermy, but are only the effect of favorable climatic conditions at limited times. Any endothermy of the dinosaurs is not coincident with the supposedly uniformly warm equable climate of the Mesozoic, but with the opposite. Cold times did not hamper the existence of dinosaurs, but led in extreme cases (Aalenian and Valanginian) to the global lack of their fossil record. The situation at the Cretaceous‐Tertiary boundary is also explainable in this context. According to the sea level cyclicity, no extreme sea level fall and no globablly cold time were present in the critical time segment. The regression in the late Maastrichtian is found to belong to a sequence of third‐order cycles beginning in the Campanian. Every one of the cycle boundaries with regression and transgression produced apparent extinction effects which in reality are only gaps in the fossil record. After the late Maastrichtian regression the dinosaurs persisted with six lineages. The so far youngest dinosaur fauna in the Puercan (basal Paleocene) lies in a phase of sea level highstand of minor amplitude and duration with comparatively minor chances for a fossil record. The occurrences in the Puercan are governed by natural law, and, thus, dinosaurs are untied from the short term problems of the Cretaceous‐Tertiary boundary. Why dinosaurs are then missing at the next highstand, remains an open question. Anyhow, mechanisms which control fossil record, diversification and distribution, including global cold periods, do not belong to the direct causes of extinction, because identical occurrences happened many times during the Mesozoic without inducing extinction.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Eustatic cycles in the JurassicPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- A guide to Phanerozoic cold polar climates from high-latitude ice-rafting in the CretaceousNature, 1988
- Dinosaurs on the North Slope, Alaska: High Latitude, Latest Cretaceous EnvironmentsScience, 1987
- Chronology of Fluctuating Sea Levels Since the TriassicScience, 1987
- Duck-bill dinosaurs (Hadrosauridae, Ornithischia) from the North Slope of AlaskaJournal of Paleontology, 1987
- Dinosaurs, pollen and spores, and the age of the Ojo Alamo Sandstone, San Juan Basin, New MexicoPublished by Geological Society of America ,1987
- Pre-Quaternary Sea-Level ChangesAnnual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences, 1984
- A revised sea-level curve for the early JurassicJournal of the Geological Society, 1981
- The earliest known Palaeocene mammal fauna and its implications for the Cretaceous–Tertiary transitionNature, 1981
- The great transgressions of the Late CretaceousJournal of the Geological Society, 1979