Publication | Closed Access
Evidence for Extreme Climatic Warmth from Late Cretaceous Arctic Vertebrates
254
Citations
26
References
1998
Year
EngineeringArctic StructureHigh Canadian ArcticBiogeographyGlobal WarmthPaleoenvironmental ChangeEvolutionary BiologyCretaceous PeriodCretaceous BirdExtreme Climatic WarmthCryosphereLate CretaceousPleistoceneGeochronologyPaleoclimatologyCretaceous-paleogene BoundaryEarth Science
A Late Cretaceous (92 to 86 million years ago) vertebrate assemblage from the high Canadian Arctic (Axel Heiberg Island) implies that polar climates were warm (mean annual temperature exceeding 14 degreesC) rather than near freezing. The assemblage includes large (2.4 meters long) champsosaurs, which are extinct crocodilelike reptiles. Magmatism at six large igneous provinces at this time suggests that volcanic carbon dioxide emissions helped cause the global warmth.
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