I thought it was established that mountains follow a cycle of being born, then being eroded back into the ocean, and that life thrives through this 'release' of minerals extracted from the core
I wanted to know from the article where this 'super range' was actually located, and to see an old map (preferably animated) which co-incides with the current evidence left behind. It's fascinating learning how the current make up of the Earth is carved throughout billions of years of processes.
In an age where AI can do so much, it's so sad that quality is not improving. An apparent salaried writer with 7 years experience, backed by a company with nearly a billion in revenue, and this is the end game :/
Your link's led me to the Warren Bioregion in SW Australia, and to what extent its geological/bioregional sibling to parts of South Africa.
These details were hidden in the linked paper (which is mostly hidden behind a paywall).