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Fossilized pollen from the Triassic Period 250 million years ago Credit: University of Zürich |
The Triassic period extends to about 250 to 200 million years ago and is the first period of the Mesozoic Era. This period lies between the Permian and Jurassic periods.
During the Triassic period, the Earth's climate was generally hot and dry and that there are no evidence of glaciers at or near the north and south pole. During this time, the polar regions were moist and temperate. It would have a climate that is suitable for forests and vertebrarates.
The Earth's continents would not have existed then. The land mass of the planet then was one gigantic continent called Pangea. The climate on Pangea was seasonal having hot summers and cold winters.
Plant life during this time was believed to include lycophytes, cycads, ginkgophyta (represented in modern times by Ginkgo biloba) and glossopterids. Seed plants such as spermatophytes are abundant in the north while Glossopteris (a seed fern) was the dominant tree in the southern hemisphere.
The discovery of the pollen would place the appearance of flowering plants during this period, 100 million years earlier than previously believed.