Climate Modelling of Mass-Extinction Events: A Review
Georg Feulner (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research)

TL;DR
This review discusses how climate modelling can help understand the causes of Earth's mass-extinction events, highlighting the limited number of such studies and proposing future research directions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of climate-modelling studies related to mass extinctions and discusses the role of modelling in extinction research.
Findings
Few climate-modelling studies of extinction events exist
Climate changes are linked to mass extinctions
Future modelling research is needed
Abstract
Despite tremendous interest in the topic and decades of research, the origins of the major losses of biodiversity in the history of life on Earth remain elusive. A variety of possible causes for these mass-extinction events have been investigated, including impacts of asteroids or comets, large-scale volcanic eruptions, effects from changes in the distribution of continents caused by plate tectonics, and biological factors, to name but a few. Many of these suggested drivers involve or indeed require changes of the Earth's climate, which then affect the biosphere of our planet causing a global reduction in the diversity of biological species. It can be argued, therefore, that a detailed understanding of these climatic variations and their effects on ecosystems are prerequisites for a solution to the enigma of biological extinctions. Apart from investigations of paleoclimate data of the…
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