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Dinosaurs Rise: Triassic Period
Welcome to the age when dinosaurs first walked the Earth! After the catastrophic end of the Permian, life bounced back in amazing ways. Early dinosaurs were actually quite small and nimble, not the towering giants we often imagine. This lesson shows how dinosaurs succeeded where other animals failed: through efficient body design, adaptability, and their ability to thrive in the recovering world. It's a fascinating transition moment in Earth's history.
- Dinosaurs evolved after the mass extinction at the end of the Permian, which removed many competitors.
- Upright posture and efficient movement helped early dinosaurs conserve energy and travel farther.
- Early mammals lived at the same time as dinosaurs, but they were tiny.
- The supercontinent Pangaea allowed animals and plants to spread widely across Earth.
- Hot, dry climates helped certain animals survive better than others.
- Environmental instability favored adaptable animals, giving dinosaurs an advantage.
- DK's Science as You've Never Seen it Before N/A
- Mammoth Science: Breathing pg. 52
- Visual Timelines: Life on Earth pg. 56-65
- Alternatives:
| ✏️ Notebooking Activity Compare and contrast dinosaurs and lizards using a Venn diagram. |
- Triassic — The first period of the Mesozoic Era (about 252-201 million years ago) when dinosaurs first appeared after the Great Dying.
- Dinosaur — A group of reptiles that dominated land during the Mesozoic Era; characterized by an upright stance with legs beneath the body.
- Archosaur — The group of reptiles from which dinosaurs, pterosaurs, and eventually birds and crocodilians evolved.
- Bipedal — Walking upright on two legs; many early dinosaurs were bipedal, giving them speed and freeing their arms.
- Niche — The role an organism plays in its ecosystem — what it eats, where it lives, and how it interacts with other species.
- Mesozoic Era — The 'Age of Reptiles' (252-66 million years ago), spanning the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods.
- Recovery — The process by which life rebounds and diversifies after a mass extinction, filling niches left empty by extinct species.
The Triassic spans December 24th into Christmas Day on the Cosmic Calendar. Read the script below before the lesson.
Read aloud: We’re still on December 24th into December 25th on our Cosmic Calendar. The world is rebuilding after the Great Dying. The Triassic Period, about 252 to 201 million years ago, is a time of recovery and experimentation. Life is finding its footing again. Reptiles are diversifying, and toward the end of the Triassic, the first true dinosaurs appear. Everything on Earth right now is shaped by what survived the extinction. The animals that made it through are the ancestors of most of what will dominate the next chapter. We’ve got less than a week left on the calendar. The dinosaurs are just arriving, and they’re going to be here for a while.
Timeline Entries
- What happened before dinosaurs appeared?
Sample answer: Many animals died out, leaving fewer animals alive on Earth. - Were dinosaurs big and scary right away?
Sample answer: No, the first dinosaurs were small and fast. - Did mammals exist during the Triassic Period?
Sample answer: Yes, but they were very small. - What was special about Earth’s land during this time?
Sample answer: All the land was connected as one big continent.
- Why did dinosaurs succeed after the Permian extinction
Sample answer: Many competing animals were gone, and dinosaurs had traits that helped them survive in harsh conditions. - How did dinosaurs’ body structure help them thrive?
Sample answer: Their upright legs made movement more efficient and less tiring. - Why didn’t early mammals dominate ecosystems like dinosaurs did?
Sample answer: Mammals were small and filled limited roles, often staying hidden or active at night. - How did Pangaea influence dinosaur success?
Sample answer: With land connected, dinosaurs could spread easily and adapt to many environments.
- Eoraptor — One of the earliest known dinosaurs; small, fast, and bipedal; found in Argentina.
- Coelophysis— An early carnivorous dinosaur that likely traveled in groups; fossils found in New Mexico.
- Plateosaurus— An early long-necked plant-eater and ancestor of the giant sauropods.
- Postosuchus— Not a dinosaur, but a fearsome archosaur that competed with early dinosaurs for dominance.
- Lystrosaurus— A therapsid (mammal-like reptile) that survived the Great Dying and dominated early Triassic landscapes.
- Encyclopaedia Britannica. (n.d.). Triassic Period. Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/science/Triassic-Period
- Kiddle. (n.d.). Triassic facts for kids. https://kids.kiddle.co/Triassic
- Paleo Analysis. (2025, August 31). The complete history of the Earth: Triassic Period [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9Hh9_aIU9I
- PBS Eons. (2019, June 19). When the synapsids struck back [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w6YX8AWXrCA