“…Global studies of Triassic paleoclimate typically take one of two complimentary but separate strategies, either mapping the distribution of proxy data (e.g., Robinson 1973;Golonka 2007;Golonka et al, 2018;Boucot et al, 2013), or using global climate models (GCMs) to infer past climate variables based on our knowledge of modern climate systems (e.g., Parrish and Curtis 1982;Kutzbach and Gallimore 1989;Wilson et al, 1994;Huynh and Poulsen 2005;Péron et al, 2005;Sellwood and Valdes 2006;Winguth and Winguth 2012;Winguth et al, 2015;Harris et al, 2017;Dunne et al, 2021). Most examples of the latter focus on aspects of temperature and precipitation, but there are also classes of models that reconstruct the spatial distribution of weathering fluxes and vegetation and their relationship to atmospheric CO 2 (e.g., Donnadieu et al, 2006;Goddéris et al, 2008;Goddéris and Donnadieu 2019).…”