triassic in English

adjective
1
of, relating to, or denoting the earliest period of the Mesozoic era, between the Permian and Jurassic periods.

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Below are sample sentences containing the word "triassic" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "triassic", or refer to the context using the word "triassic" in the English Dictionary.

1. Triassic and Jurassic together have an accumulated sediment thickness of 1,000–1,700 m.

2. The Asylum Transplants You to Triassic World and More Mockbuster Madness

3. Triassic phylloid algae have recently been discovered in a reef in the southern Yukon.

4. The bedrock underlying Birmingham was mostly laid down during the Permian and Triassic periods.

5. The palaeogeographical evolution sensitively responds to the tectonism in the whole Triassic.

6. The Triassic of Cyprus represents a time of epirogenetic movements with occasional volcanic activity.

7. Therocephalians included both carnivorous and herbivorous forms; both died out after the Early Triassic.

8. 19 By the beginning of the Upper Triassic, rhynchosaurs were still the dominant herbivores.

9. Together with the subsequent vulcanism of the Upper Permian and Lower Triassic occurred lead-zinc-barite deposits.

10. The earliest Calcareous nannofossils are found from the late Triassic period (around 225 million years ago)

11. The lungfish's greatest diversity was in the Triassic period; today there are fewer than a dozen genera left.

12. In South China this mixed fauna is associated withOtoceras woodwardi, the index ammonite of the Lowermost Triassic.

13. The true "Age of Dinosaurs" is during the following Jurassic and Cretaceous periods, rather than the Triassic.

14. Soil type consisting of marl and limestone common in Alsace dating back from the Upper Triassic period.

15. Associated evolution of bipedality and Cursoriality among Triassic archosaurs: a phylogenetically controlled evaluation Tai Kubo and Mugino O

16. Foraminifera (the same species as in the Alpine Upper Triassic; in additionFoliotortus PILLER & SENOWBARI-DARYAN and amphora-like tests (Cucurbita, Amphorella etc., until now only known from the Upper Triassic of the Western Carpathians and from the Hohe Wand near Vienna, Austria); 7.

17. Crinoids recovered during the Triassic and re-occupied almost all ecological niches they had held in Palaeozoic times

18. Fluorite-mineralizations in fissures of the Gutenstein Strata (Anis—Mid-Triassic) are located in tectonic zones, near evaporites.

19. During the Carnian (early part of the Late Triassic), some advanced cynodonts gave rise to the first mammals.

20. The goal of the project ET MICROBIALITES (Formation mechanisms of Early Triassic microbialites in the aftermath of the greatest mass extinction at the Permian-Triassic-Boundary) was to understand microbialite formation in periods of Earth’s history typified by changing environments and ecosystems.

21. Amphibolite from an abyssal sea floor or marginal basin environment of either Permian or Triassic age originally was low-potassium basalt.

22. Belemnites are an extinct cephalopod that existed between the late Triassic and Late Cretaceous, related to modern cuttlefish and squid

23. The southern edge of the dome is overlain by sandstones of Triassic age though they barely impinge on the National Park.

24. The Belemnites are a diverse order of widespread cephalopod mollusks from the Late Triassic-Late Cretaceous of the entire world

25. There exists an extended set of early Triassic intermediate-acid volcanics closely related to microdot gold ore in Southwestern Guangxi.

26. Angularia: genus: belongs to Neotaenioglossa: second hand: Sepkoski, 2002: Angularia: genus: belongs to Purpurinidae: stated with evidence: Nützel and Erwin, 2004: Status (PBDB) extinct: Taxon Size (PBDB) 5: First Recorded Appearance: 235 - 232 Ma Late Triassic: Last Recorded Appearance: 212 - 206 Ma Late Triassic:

27. Soil type consisting of various compositions of sandstone, marl, dolomite, and shingle common in Alsace dating back from the Middle Triassic period.

28. The deposit is explained as a kind of an ancient superficial pavement formed under arid climatic conditions of the Lower Triassic.

29. Belemnite [ bĕl ′əm-nīt′ ] Any of various extinct cephalopod mollusks of the order Belemnoidea that lived from the Triassic into the Tertiary Period

30. The first Mesozoic record of the extinct Apterygote insect genus Dasyleptus (Insecta: Archaeognatha: Monura: Dasyleptidae) from the Triassic of Monte San Giorgio (Switzerland)

31. Another family of prehistoric reptile, called the Archosaurs, coexisted with the therapsids (as well as the other land reptiles that survived the Permian/Triassic extinction).

32. Near Sydney, Australia, unconsolidated aeolian and alluvial sediments of Quaternary age form the Botany Sands aquifer and lie unconformably on Triassic-age sandstone (Narrabeen Group).

33. Fossil Ensifera are found from the late Carboniferous period (300 Mya) onwards, and the true crickets, Gryllidae, from the Triassic period (250 to 200 Mya).

34. Archosaurs ([Greek for 'ruling lizards') are a group of diapsid reptiles that first evolved from Archosauriform ancestors during the Olenekian (Lower Triassic Period).They are represented today by birds and crocodiles.Archosaurs are set apart by having socketed teeth (a feature that inspired the traditional name, 'thecodonts', for the Triassic forms) and four-chambered hearts, among other

35. (also Conodont animal) A fossil marine animal of the Cambrian to Triassic periods, having a long wormlike body, numerous small teeth, and a pair of eyes

36. The jaw apparati of Paleozoic and Triassic ammonoids are simìlar in shape to parrots’ beaks; they possess sharp cutting-edges and consist of chitinous material.

37. Any of various small marine chordates of the group Conodonta of the Paleozoic Era and the Triassic Period, preserved primarily in the form of their conelike teeth

38. Both of these reproduced by spores rather than seeds and are considered to be links between ferns and the gymnosperms which evolved in the Triassic period.

39. Triassic corresponds to an extraordinary transgression in the sense of a new onlap of the sedimentary realm, a reconquest of ancient areas by new deposits, however their facies may be.

40. 11 Based on the Middle-Late Paleozoic pillow lava and Permian-Triassic tectonic melange, this paper shows that there is a melange zone along Qinzhou-Cenxi-Luoding-Yunfu.

41. Any of various small marine chordates of the group Conodonta of the Paleozoic Era and the Triassic Period, preserved primarily in the form of their conelike teeth

42. This study aims to reveal the mineralogical characteristics of the carbonate and pelitic rocks in the Lower Triassic Cigli Group in the Uludere-Uzungecit (Sirnak) region from Southeast Anatolian Autochthone (SEAA).

43. Conodont biostratigraphy across the Permian–Triassic boundary at the Dawen section, Great Bank of Guizhou, Guizhou Province, South China: implications for the Late Permian extinction and correlation with Meishan

44. New finds of fossils including bivalves, ammonoids, brachiopods and palynomorphs from the Middle Triassic Reifling Formation significantly improve the age assignment for this unit in Liechtenstein and Vorarlberg.

45. The scientists speculate that this impact may have caused the Permian–Triassic extinction event, although its age is bracketed only between 100 million and 500 million years ago.

46. In a first period of exploration, until the beginning of our century, the Mediterranean or Alpine Triassic advanced to be a standard type of the marine development of that period.

47. Archosaurs have a nearly 250 million year record that originated shortly after the Permian-Triassic extinction event and is continued today by two extant clades, the crocodylians and the avians

48. Conodonts occur in sediments from the CAMBRIAN to the TRIASSIC and are thought to be associated with the mouth-parts of primitive chordates such as members of the AGNATHA.

49. Conodonts occur in sediments from the CAMBRIAN to the TRIASSIC and are thought to be associated with the mouth-parts of primitive chordates such as members of the AGNATHA

50. Kō'nə-dŏnt', kŏn'ə- Any of various small marine chordates of the group Conodonta of the Paleozoic Era and the Triassic Period, preserved primarily in the form of their conelike teeth.