The Mesozoic World: Dinosaur Habitats and Ecosystems
The Mesozoic world was dramatically different from today. Continental positions, climate, sea levels, and vegetation all differed significantly from the modern world, creating diverse habitats that supported an extraordinary range of dinosaur species.
During the Triassic (252-201 Mya), all continents were joined in the supercontinent Pangaea. Climate was generally hot and dry, with no polar ice caps. Early dinosaurs were relatively small and shared ecosystems with larger archosaurs and synapsids.
The Jurassic (201-145 Mya) saw Pangaea begin to break apart. Climate was warm and humid, supporting vast coniferous forests, fern prairies, and cycad woodlands. This is when dinosaurs truly dominated, with giant sauropods like Brachiosaurus and predators like Allosaurus.
The Cretaceous (145-66 Mya) brought the evolution of flowering plants, fundamentally transforming terrestrial ecosystems. Continents continued to separate, creating isolated landmasses where unique dinosaur faunas evolved. Sea levels were much higher, and inland seas covered vast areas.
Understanding these environments is crucial for interpreting dinosaur biology. The vegetation available determined herbivore diets and body plans. Climate affected metabolism and geographic distribution. Continental positions influenced migration routes and evolutionary isolation.
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