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Dive into the research topics where Ryosuke Saito is active.

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Featured researches published by Ryosuke Saito.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Global climate change driven by soot at the K-Pg boundary as the cause of the mass extinction

Kunio Kaiho; N. Oshima; Kouji Adachi; Yukimasa Adachi; Takuya Mizukami; Megumu Fujibayashi; Ryosuke Saito

The mass extinction of life 66 million years ago at the Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary, marked by the extinctions of dinosaurs and shallow marine organisms, is important because it led to the macroevolution of mammals and appearance of humans. The current hypothesis for the extinction is that an asteroid impact in present-day Mexico formed condensed aerosols in the stratosphere, which caused the cessation of photosynthesis and global near-freezing conditions. Here, we show that the stratospheric aerosols did not induce darkness that resulted in milder cooling than previously thought. We propose a new hypothesis that latitude-dependent climate changes caused by massive stratospheric soot explain the known mortality and survival on land and in oceans at the Cretaceous/Paleogene boundary. The stratospheric soot was ejected from the oil-rich area by the asteroid impact and was spread globally. The soot aerosols caused sufficiently colder climates at mid–high latitudes and drought with milder cooling at low latitudes on land, in addition to causing limited cessation of photosynthesis in global oceans within a few months to two years after the impact, followed by surface-water cooling in global oceans in a few years. The rapid climate change induced terrestrial extinctions followed by marine extinctions over several years.


Heliyon | 2016

Effects of soil erosion and anoxic-euxinic ocean in the Permian-Triassic marine crisis.

Kunio Kaiho; Ryosuke Saito; Kosuke Ito; Takashi Miyaji; Raman Kumar Biswas; Li Tian; Hiroyoshi Sano; Zhiqiang Shi; Satoshi Takahashi; Jinnan Tong; Lei Liang; Masahiro Oba; Fumiko Watanabe Nara; Noriyoshi Tsuchiya; Zhong Qiang Chen

The largest mass extinction of biota in the Earth’s history occurred during the Permian–Triassic transition and included two extinctions, one each at the latest Permian (first phase) and earliest Triassic (second phase). High seawater temperature in the surface water accompanied by euxinic deep-intermediate water, intrusion of the euxinic water to the surface water, a decrease in pH, and hypercapnia have been proposed as direct causes of the marine crisis. For the first-phase extinction, we here add a causal mechanism beginning from massive soil and rock erosion and leading to algal blooms, release of toxic components, asphyxiation, and oxygen-depleted nearshore bottom water that created environmental stress for nearshore marine animals. For the second-phase extinction, we show that a soil and rock erosion/algal bloom event did not occur, but culmination of anoxia–euxinia in intermediate waters did occur, spanning the second-phase extinction. We investigated sedimentary organic molecules, and the results indicated a peak of a massive soil erosion proxy followed by peaks of marine productivity proxy. Anoxic proxies of surface sediments and water occurred in the shallow nearshore sea at the eastern and western margins of the Paleotethys at the first-phase extinction horizon, but not at the second-phase extinction horizon. Our reconstruction of ocean redox structure at low latitudes indicates that a gradual increase in temperature spanning the two extinctions could have induced a gradual change from a well-mixed oxic to a stratified euxinic ocean beginning immediately prior to the first-phase extinction, followed by culmination of anoxia in nearshore surface waters and of anoxia and euxinia in the shallow-intermediate waters at the second-phase extinction over a period of approximately one million years or more. Enhanced global warming, ocean acidification, and hypercapnia could have caused the second-phase extinction approximately 60 kyr after the first-phase extinction. The causes of the first-phase extinction were not only those environmental stresses but also environmental stresses caused by the soil and rock erosion/algal bloom event.


Global and Planetary Change | 2013

A terrestrial vegetation turnover in the middle of the Early Triassic

Ryosuke Saito; Kunio Kaiho; Masahiro Oba; Satoshi Takahashi; Zhong-Qiang Chen; Jinnan Tong


Organic Geochemistry | 2015

Predominance of archaea-derived hydrocarbons in an Early Triassic microbialite

Ryosuke Saito; Kunio Kaiho; Masahiro Oba; Megumu Fujibayashi; Jinnan Tong; Li Tian


Organic Geochemistry | 2013

Ether lipids from the Lower and Middle Triassic at Qingyan, Guizhou Province, Southern China

Ryosuke Saito; Masahiro Oba; Kunio Kaiho; Chikako Maruo; Megumu Fujibayashi; Jing Chen; Zhong-Qiang Chen; Jinnan Tong


Organic Geochemistry | 2014

Extreme euxinia just prior to the Middle Triassic biotic recovery from the latest Permian mass extinction

Ryosuke Saito; Masahiro Oba; Kunio Kaiho; Philippe Schaeffer; Pierre Adam; Satoshi Takahashi; Fumiko Watanabe Nara; Zhong-Qiang Chen; Jinnan Tong; Noriyoshi Tsuchiya


Organic Geochemistry | 2017

Tentative identification of diagenetic products of cyclic biphytanes in sedimentary rocks from the uppermost Permian and Lower Triassic

Ryosuke Saito; Kunio Kaiho; Masahiro Oba; Jinnan Tong; Zhong-Qiang Chen; Li Tian; Satoshi Takahashi; Megumu Fujibayashi


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2016

Secular changes in environmental stresses and eukaryotes during the Early Triassic to the early Middle Triassic

Ryosuke Saito; Kunio Kaiho; Masahiro Oba; Jinnan Tong; Zhong-Qiang Chen; Satoshi Takahashi; Jing Chen; Li Tian; Raman Kumar Biswas


Annual Meeting of the Geological Society of Japan The 120th Annual Meeting(2013' Sendai) | 2013

Marine euxinia during the late Early Triassic in Chaohu, South China: A cause of delay of recovery after the end-Permian mass extinction

Ryosuke Saito; Masahiro Oba; Kunio Kaiho; Satoshi Takahashi; Fumiko Watanabe Nara


The Japan Society of Applied Physics | 2017

Electro-Optical Properties of Dye-Doped Liquid Crystal Gel Film for Stretchable Liquid Crystal Displays

Ryosuke Saito; Yosei Shibata; Takahiro Ishinabe; Hideo Fujikake

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Jinnan Tong

China University of Geosciences

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Zhong-Qiang Chen

China University of Geosciences

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Li Tian

China University of Geosciences

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