It was the greatest extinction event the world had ever known, wiping out more than 90 per cent of marine life and around two thirds of animals living on land.
In a major study out today, led by a Kiwi researcher, scientists suggest it was iron-rich, low oxygen waters that delayed the planet's recovery from the so-called "Great Dying" by around five million years.
The apocalyptic event, which took place around 252 million years ago, was understood to have been triggered by volcanic eruptions loading the Earth's oceans with massive amounts of carbon dioxide, increasing the acidity of the great water masses with catastrophic results.
That highly acidic oceans were to blame for what is formally known as the Permian-Triassic Boundary extinction was first demonstrated in a study last year co-authored by University of Otago researcher Dr Matthew Clarkson.