Title: Geologic Time
1Geologic Time
2Evolutionary Time
- Evolution is documented in layers deposited over
4.6 billion years.
3Big Bang
4Big Bang Video
5In the Beginning
- At one time people believed that the Universe was
infinite It had no beginning and no end.
6Beginning of Time
- Now we know that the Earth has a beginning and a
history.
715 Billion Years Ago
- Scientists believe that about 15 billion years
ago a tremendous explosion started the expansion
of the Universe.
8Big Bang
- This occurrence was not a conventional explosion
but rather an event filling all of space with all
of the particles of the new universe rushing away
from each other.
9Geologic Time
10Precambrian Eon4.55 Billion to 543 Million Years
- Hadean Era
- Archaean Era
- Proterozoic Era
11Precambrian Video
12Hadean Era 4.5 to 3.8 Billion Years Ago
- The solar system forms out of gas and dust about
4.5 billion years ago. - About 4.4 billion years ago the Earths core
forms. - About 4.2 billion years ago the Earth begins to
cool causing massive rainfall and great oceans
form.
13Liquid to Solid Earth
- Sometime during the first 800 million or so years
of its history, the surface of the Earth changed
from liquid to solid. Once solid rock formed on
the Earth, its geological history began.
14Rocks
- About 4 billion years ago rocks form.
- The oldest meteorites and lunar rocks are about
4.5 billion years old, but the oldest Earth rocks
currently known are 3.8 billion years old.
15Meteors
- Meteors and other galactic debris showered the
Earth for its first half billion years, making it
uninhabitable.
16Archaean Era3.5 to 2.8 Billion Years Ago
- Both life and geological processes begin.
- The atmosphere is methane CH4 and ammonia NH3.
- There is little or no free oxygen.
- The Earths crust forms mostly from silicon,
aluminum, iron, calcium, sodium, magnesium and
potassium.
17Archaean EraLife Begins
- Life begins with bacteria that can fix nitrogen
and are photosynthetic called stromatolites that
appear in the shallow waters of the early oceans. - The oldest fossils are 3.5 billion year old
bacteria fossils. - The first small continents form.
18End of Archaean Era
- By the end of the Archaean
- Bacteria had begun to conquer land.
- The first multicellular, organisms with cells
containing a nucleus, appear in the oceans. - An ozone layer had developed.
- The ozone layer meant sufficient oxygen for life
to evolve and providing protection from harmful
ultraviolet radiation.
19Proterozoic Era2.5 Billion to 543 Million Years
Ago
- Oxygen produced by photosynthetic organisms
collects in the oceans and the atmosphere. - Oxygen loving organisms are now able to evolve.
- Soft bodied animals large enough to be seen by
the naked eye evolve.
20Late Proterozoic
- The first supercontinent, Rodinia forms.
- A major glaciation period begins.
- The ozone layer fully forms.
21Phanerozoic Eon543 Million Years Ago to Now
- Paleozoic Era
- Mesozoic Era
- Cenozoic Era
22Phanerozoic
23Paleozoic Era Periods
- Cambrian Period
- Ordovician
- Silurian
24(No Transcript)
25- Devonian Period
- Carboniferous Pennsylvanian
- Mississippian
- Permian Period
26Paleozoic Era
- The Paleozoic begins with the Cambrian which is
marked by the appearance of hard-shelled fossils
about 543 million years ago. - Two of the most important events in the history
of animal life happen during this period. - Multicellular organisms undergo an explosion in
diversity. - The largest mass extinction in history wipes out
90 of life.
27Cambrian543 to 490 Million Years Ago
- Land covers 1/3 of the planet but remains devoid
of life. - Rodinia drifts apart.
- Gondwana forms.
- Climate is warm and stable.
- Life explodes About three dozen new animal
species first appear in the oceans. - The first chordates appear.
28Ordovician490 to 443 Million Years Ago
- Life Diversifies in a huge way.
- Jawless and heavily armored fish appear.
- The first sharks evolve.
- Green algae adapt to land.
- Glaciation on Gondwana wipes out 70 of marine
species.
29Silurian443 to 416 Million Years Ago
- Climate warms again.
- Global ocean levels rise creating new marine
habitats. - Shallow water marine animals venture into fresh
water habitats and then land habitats.
30Silurian
- Land areas are divided into Gondwana in the
southern hemisphere. - Baltica and Siberia near the Equator which will
merge to become Laurussia (Euramerica). - Complex vascular plants evolve on land.
- Arthropods become the first animal on land!
31Gondwana
32Devonian
- The Devonian climate is warm and stable.
- Plant life explodes.
- First four-legged animals evolve on land.
- Gondwana and Laurussia (or Euramerica) are drawn
together.
33Devonian
- The Devonian ends with a cataclysmic extinction
event. - 70 to 80 of marine invertebrates are wiped out.
34Carboniferous
- Hot humid conditions are found in Laurussia.
- Gondwana is glacier ridden because it resides
near the North Pole. - Seed and spore producing plants that grow 50 to
100 feet tall dominate the land.
35Carboniferous
- Giant insects fly around.
- Amphibians are the dominant vertebrate land
animal. - Reptiles evolve as the first animal who lives its
entire life on land.
36Permian
- The super-continent, Pangaea is formed.
- Its surrounded by a single world-ocean called
Panthalassa. - Reptiles continue to evolve.
37Permian
- Mammal-like reptiles appear.
- Gymnosperms become the dominant plant group.
- Massive extinction nearly ends all life.
38Mesozoic Era
- Triassic Period
- Jurassic Period
- Cretaceous Period
39Triassic
- Mountains form in the West Coast of North
America, Alaska and Chile. - Life comes back from the edge of extinction.
- Mammal-like Lystrosaurs, dinosaurs, frogs and
early crocodiles are the dominant vertebrates. - The first true mammals arrive at the end of the
Triassic.
40Jurassic
- Pangaea, which formed towards the end of the
Paleozoic, begins to split apart. - Greenland and North America split from Europe and
Africa. - Rocky and Sierra Nevada Mountain ranges form.
41Jurassic
- Modern sharks and bony fishes dominate the seas.
- Insects and dinosaurs dominate the land.
- Theropod dinosaurs, the ancestors of birds
display feathers and soon take to the skies. - Mammals continue to evolve.
42Cretaceous
- Pangaea continues to break apart and the present
day continents take shape. - The first flowering plants and pollinating
insects appear. - Dinosaurs dominate the landscape.
43Cretaceous
- Placentals, marsupials and monotremes join the
mammals. - Mass extinction at the end of the Cretaceous
wipes out half of all animal life including all
of the dinosaurs. - The age of mammals begins!
44Cenozoic Era65 Million Years Ago-Now
- Tertiary Period
- Paleocene Epoch
- Eocene Epoch
- Oligocene Epoch
- Miocene Epoch
- Pliocene Epoch
- Pleistocene Epoch
- Holocene Epoch
45Paleocene65 Million Years Ago to 55 Million
Years Ago
- Climate is warm, damp and temperate.
- Dense forests are everywhere.
- Giant pines and sequoias grow to dizzying
heights. - Sea level falls exposing North America, Africa
and Australia.
46Paleocene
- Mammals are able to migrate across continents
that are still joined Europe, Asia and North
America in the Northern Hemisphere - Australia, South America and Antarctica in the
Southern Hemisphere. - Lizards, snakes and crocodiles are some of the
largest predators.
47Eocene55 Million Years Ago to 35 Million Years
Ago
- Eocene starts out warm.
- The continents move closer to their current
positions. - Ocean and air circulation are changed by the
moving continents. - By the end of the Eocene, temperatures cool
considerably.
48Eocene
- Open woodlands replace forests in subtropical
latitudes. - Land mammals become much larger.
- Rhinoceros, early pigs, camels and hippopotamus
first appear. - As the Earth cools many species go extinct.
49Eocene
- Mammals survive.
- Whales evolve from wolf-like mammals and re-enter
the oceans. - Mammals are now able to occupy land, air and sea.
- Horses first evolve.
50Oligocene34 Million Years Ago to 24 Million
Years Ago
- A geologically and biologically uneventful period
by historys standards. - Antarctica splits from Australia and South
America. - Little migration occurs between continents.
51Oligocene
- Some members of the camel family evolve and
become deer-like. - Members of the bear family develop fox-like
characteristics. - At the end of the Oligocene, the evolutionary
line that leads to apes and humans evolves!
52Miocene24 Million Years Ago to 5 Million Years
Ago
- Temperatures begin to rise.
- Extensive mountain ranges form in the Americas
and Asia. Air circulation changes. - Antarctica freezes and global temperatures lower
again. - Marine mammals flourish.
53Miocene
- Land bridges allow animal migrations across
continents. - Grasslands dominate the Americas and parts of
Eurasia. - Grazing animals like deer and antelope evolve.
- Horses evolve their single toe hoof.
- The orangutans separate from the African apes.
54Pliocene5 Million Years Ago to 2 Million Years
Ago
- A land bridge connects North and South America.
- The Earth continues to cool and dry.
- The ocean gets divided into two, the Atlantic and
Pacific. Marine life takes different
evolutionary paths.
55Pliocene
- Human-like primates evolve in East Africa.
- Saber-tooth cats, pack hunting dogs and bears are
the main predators. - At the end of the Pliocene a global ice age
begins.
56Pleistocene2 Million Years ago to 10,000 Years
Ago
- Glaciers repeatedly advance and retreat over
North America and Europe. - The periods of glacial retreat are called
interglacial periods. - Mammoths, rhinos, reindeer etc. evolve to have
wooly coats.
57Pleistocene
- About 100,000 years ago, anatomically modern
humans evolve. - By the end of the Pleistocene nearly all large
mammals are extinct including the wombats.
58Holocene
- The Holocene begins after the last glacial epoch
11,000 years ago. - Many scientists think that we might currently be
in an interglacial period and that another ice
age is coming. - Many plant and animal species are expected to be
extinct by the year 2025. - How much of this is due to human activity versus
natural extinction rates is difficult to
determine.
59- http//www.palaeos.com/Timescale/Phanerozoic.htm
- http//www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/change/deeptime/
index.html - http//www.ucmp.berkeley.edu
- http//www.umich.edu/gs265/bigbang.htm
- http//en.wikipedia.org