Fossil trove shows life’s fast recovery after big extinction

In this photo provided by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios in October 2019, a storm rolls in towards Corral Bluffs, Colo, outside of Denver. The area represents about 300 vertical feet of rock and preserves the extinction of the dinosaurs through the first million years of the Age of the Mammals. The exposure is composed of hard yellow sandstone and mudstones, which represent ancient rivers and floodplains, respectively. (Frank Verock/HHMI Tangled Bank Studios via AP)
This photo provided by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios in October 2019 shows some of the plant fossils retrieved from Corral Bluffs, Colo. More than 6,000 leaves were collected as part of the study to help determine how and when Earth's forest rebounded after the mass extinction event. (Frank Verock/HHMI Tangled Bank Studios via AP)
This photo provided by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios in October 2019 shows a collection of four mammal skulls collected from Corral Bluffs, Colo. From left are Loxolophus, Carsioptychus, Taeniolabis, Eoconodon. A trove of fossils has revealed details of how life rebounded after the cataclysm that killed off the dinosaurs. (HHMI Tangled Bank Studios via AP)
This photo provided by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios in October 2019 shows some of the mammal skull fossils retrieved from Corral Bluffs, Colo. A trove of fossils has revealed details of how life rebounded after the cataclysm that killed off the dinosaurs. (Frank Verock/HHMI Tangled Bank Studios via AP)
This image provided by HHMI Tangled Bank Studios in October 2019 shows a rendering of the ancient Carsioptychus mammal taken from the PBS NOVA special, Rise of the Mammals. In this recreation, Carsioptychus coarctatus eats plants in a newly diversified forest, 300,000 years after the mass extinction that wiped out the dinosaurs. (Jellyfish Pictures/HHMI Tangled Bank Studios via AP)

NEW YORK — A remarkable trove of fossils from Colorado has revealed details of how mammals grew larger and plants evolved after the cataclysm that killed off the dinosaurs.