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rseeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeenatures within the area’s rocks indicate that someday

between 174 and 157 million years ago, the total region shifted southward by a surprising
twenty five degrees, plunging once lush landscapes into zones of desiccating heat (Kent et al,
2006). The ancient rocky lurch was a part of a development referred to as true polar wander,
within which the uppermost layers of the earth, possible all the method all the way down to the
liquid outer core, rotate considerably when Earth continues its daily circle its usual spin axis.

More than one hundred sixty million years ago, northeastern China was home to a large
array of plants and animals referred to as the Yanliao biology. A dramatic change in climate
from temperate to arid conditions likely led to their demise. But what drove this shift has long
been a mystery. Irving (2019) says, that a new study of paleomagnetic data from northeastern
China suggests that between 174 and 157 million years ago, the Earth’s surface as a whole
turned a lurching twenty five degrees, which might have moved the landscape underpopulated
by the Yanliao biology from a cool, humid zone into a hot, dry band.

More than one hundred sixty million years ago, northeastern China was home to a large array
of plants and animals referred to as the Yanliao biology. A dramatic change in climate from
temperate to arid conditions likely led to their demise. But what drove this shift has long been a
mystery. Irving (2019) says, that a new study of paleomagnetic data from northeastern China
suggests that between 174 and 157 million years ago, the Earth’s surface as a whole turned a
lurching twenty five degrees, which might have moved the landscape underpopulated by the
Yanliao biology from a cool, humid zone into a hot, dry band.

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