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Life of the Mesozoic

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Title: Life of the Mesozoic


1
Life of the Mesozoic
  • CHAPTER 12

2
Introduction
  • The Mesozoic Era is referred to as the "Age of
    Reptiles". During the Mesozoic, reptiles
    inhabited the land, the seas, and the air. The
    Mesozoic is the time in which the dinosaurs
    lived.
  • The Mesozoic is also the time in which mammals
    and birds first appeared on Earth.

3
Overview of Mesozoic Era age of reptiles
  • Diverse Reptiles, including Dinosaurs
  • Beginning of Evolution for Birds and Mammals
  • Expansion of Grasses and Flowering Plants
  • Climate, a Strong Influence
  • Locations of continents
  • Major sea-level changes
  • Mountain building

4
Mesozoic Climates
  • Primary Control balance of incoming and outgoing
    solar radiation
  • Factors affecting balance
  • configuration and dimension of oceans and
    continents
  • development and location of mountain systems and
    land bridges
  • changes in snow, cloud, or vegetative cover
  • carbon dioxide content of atmosphere
  • location of poles (no ice caps)
  • amount of radiation-aerosols contributed by
    volcanoes
  • astronomic factors changes in Earths orbital
    parameters

5
Triassic Climate
  • Relatively cool
  • Pangaea continents still clustered
  • lower sea level
  • mountain building, many highlands
  • Paleo-equator central Mexico to northern Africa
  • Wind shadow deserts (aridity) in continental
    interiors
  • red beds
  • evaporites

6
Figure 11-3 (p. 384) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Triassic of North
America.
7
Jurassic Climate
  • Relatively mild
  • no glacial deposits
  • evidence of monsoons and aridity
  • coals in many spots, including Antarctica
  • tropical conditions in wide belts
  • Continents at latitudes of today
  • Atlantic opening
  • Tethys was an arm of proto-Pacific warm ocean
    currents flowed through Tethys

8
Figure 11-7 (p. 387) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Jurassic of North
America.
9
Cretaceous Climate
  • Relatively warm
  • subtropical flora at 70o of equator
  • high and low latitude coals
  • high sea-level stand maximum inundation of
    Phanerozoic
  • Continents near todays position
  • Arctic Canada near north pole
  • Antarctica at South Pole
  • End-Cretaceous change
  • rapid cooling and temporary vast chilling
  • vast regression
  • major mountain building
  • plankton-produced CO2 shortage
  • volcanic activity
  • Terminal Cretaceous climatic event shown by
  • tropical cycads sharply reduced
  • hardy conifers and angiosperms expanded
  • oxygen isotope studies of shells show ocean
    temperature decline began 80 m.y. ago
  • strong connection to global extinctions at 65
    m.y. ago?

10
Figure 11-12 (p. 392) Generalized
paleogeographic map for the Cretaceous of North
America.
11
The Diversity of Life in the Mesozoic
  • At the beginning of the Mesozoic Era, diversity
    (as indicated by the number of genera) was low,
    following the Permian extinctions. Recovery from
    the Permian extinctions was slow for many groups.
  • In the oceans, the molluscs re-expanded to become
    much more diverse than in the Paleozoic, and
    modern reef-building corals, swimming reptiles,
    and new kinds of fishes appreared.
  • A mass extinction occurred at the end of the
    Triassic Period. The Triassic extinction affected
    life on the land and in the sea, causing about
    20 of all marine animal families to become
    extinct.

12
The Diversity of Life in the Mesozoic (cont)
  • Diversity increased in the Jurassic, and rose
    quickly during the Cretaceous to higher levels
    than had existed previously.
  • Much of this expansion in diversity was related
    to the appearance of new types of marine
    predators, including advanced teleost fishes,
    crabs, and carnivorous gastropods.
  • Life in the Cretaceous consisted of a mixture of
    both modern and ancient forms.
  • A major extinction event occurred at the end of
    the Cretaceous Period, affecting both vertebrates
    and invertebrates, on land and in the sea.

13
Mesozoic Vertebrates
  • Amphibians rise of modern forms
  • Triassic Transition continuity among land
    animals
  • Survivors of Permian extinction (245 m.y. ago)
  • temnospondyl amphibians
  • mammal-like reptiles (including therapsids,
    mammal ancestors)
  • New reptile groups
  • first turtles (toothed turtles)
  • tuataran lizards
  • archosaurs crocodiles, flying reptiles,
    thecodonts, dinosaurs
  • Example basal archosaur Hesperosuchus

14
Mesozoic Vertebrates (cont)
  • Diapsid groups
  • lepidosaurs snakes, lizards, and their ancestors
  • archosaurs ornithischian and saurischian
    dinosaurs, flying reptiles (pterosaurs), and
    crocodilians.

15
Basal Archosaurs
  • Several groups of archosaurs were present during
    the Triassic, and they are referred to as "basal
    archosaurs" because they are at the starting
    point (or base) of archosaur evolution.

16
Basal Archosaurs
  • Basal archosaurs (formerly called thecodonts)
    were small, agile reptiles with long tails and
    short fore-limbs.
  • Many were bipedal (walked on 2 legs). This freed
    their fore-limbs for other tasks such as catching
    prey, and later, flight.

Hesperosuchus
17
Relationships among fossil and living reptiles
and birds
18
Dinosaurs
  • The name "dinosaur" comes from the Greek deinos
    "terrifying" and sauros "lizard".
  • Dinosaurs appeared in the Late Triassic, about
    225 m.y. ago.
  • The earliest dinosaurs were small. Many were less
    than 3 ft long.
  • By the end of the Triassic, dinosaurs were up to
    20 feet long.
  • They became much larger later in the Jurassic and
    Cretaceous.

19
Dinosaurs
  • Basal Archosaurs (Thecodonts) were the ancestors
    of the dinosaurs
  • Dinosaurs were composed of two orders saurischia
    (lizard-hipped) and ornithischia (bird-hipped)
  • Saurischia pelvic bones like thecodonts
  • Ornithischia pubis parallel to ischium like
    birds
  • Earliest dinosaurs saurischia (Traissic, 225
    m.y. old, Argentina)

20
Dinosaurs
  • Saurischian dinosaurs - lizard-hipped
  • Ornithischian dinosaurs - bird-hipped

21
Dinosaurs
  • Comparison of the skulls and teeth of
    saurischian dinosaurs (A) and ornithischian
    dinosaurs (B).

22
Figure 12-18 (p. 428) Major groups of dinosaurs.
23
Saurischian Dinosaurs
  • "Lizard-hipped". Pelvic structure like lizards.
  • Both two-legged and four-legged types.
  • Both herbivores and carnivores.
  • Teeth extended around entire margin of jaws, or
    were limited to the front.
  • Teeth adapted to cutting and tearing, but not
    chewing.
  • Food was ground up in the gizzard, probably aided
    by stones the dinosaurs swallowed, called
    gastroliths.
  • The earliest dinosaurs and their basal archosaur
    ancestors were saurischians.

24
Saurischian Dinosaurs
  • Two groups
  • Theropods - bipedal carnivorous dinosaurs
  • Sauropods - large quadrupedal herbivorous
    dinosaurs

25
Coelophysis. One of the earliest known theropods
(about 6 feet long)
26
Carnivorous saurischians (Theropods)
  • Larger carnivores hind limbs robust claws on
    toes small fore limbs serrated teeth
  • Deinonychus and Velociraptor Cretaceous
    predators
  • Family Allosauridae Allosaurus (U.S.)
  • Giant theropods Tyrannosaurus (13 m, 4 tons,
    North America) Gigantosaurus (Argentina)
    Carcharodontosaurus (Africa)

27
Theropods
  • Bipedal carnivorous dinosaurs
  • Coelophysis
  • Ornithomimus
  • Giganotosaurus
  • Allosaurus
  • Tyrannosaurus
  • Deinonychus
  • Velociraptor

28
Artist reconstruction of Velociraptor
29
Sauropods
  • Large 4-legged herbivorous dinosaurs - long
    necks
  • Seismosaurus
  • Argentinosaurus
  • Nuoerosaurus
  • Diplodocus
  • Apatosaurus
  • Brachiosaurus
  • Supersaurus
  • Ultrasaurus

30
Sauropods and Prosauropods
  • The prosauropods were the likely ancestors of the
    sauropods, and lived from Late Triassic to Early
    Jurassic.
  • The front legs of the prosauropods were shorter
    than the hind legs, although they walked on four
    legs.
  • The prosauropods were replaced by the giant
    sauropods in the Early Jurassic.

31
Herbivorous saurischians or sauropodomorphs
(Jurassic-Cretaceous)
  • Evolved from Late Triassic protosaurapod
    (Plateosaurus)
  • Long necks, long tails, four-legged stance
  • Apatosaurus (formerly Brontosaurus Jurassic,
    Colorado) 30 tons
  • Brachiosaurus longer fore limbs to reach higher
    vegetation
  • Supersaurus 80 to 100 tons
  • Sauropodomorphs left extensive footprint record
    (track ways of Colorado, for example)
  • Advantages of size avoid predators, slow
    temperature changes due to surface-to-mass ratio
    (gigantothermism)
  • Expansion during Early Jurassic lasted until
    Early Cretaceous southern hemisphere
    sauropodomorphs contined into Late Cretaceous

32
Nuoerosaurus
33
Apatosaurus (Brontosaurus)
34
Ornithischians (Late Triassic-Cretaceous)
  • Evolved near the end of the Triassic
  • "Bird-hipped"
  • Pelvic structure resembles that of birds.
  • All herbivores.
  • Front teeth replaced by a beak for cropping
    vegetation
  • Includes both two-legged (bipedal) and
    four-legged (quadrupedal) types.
  • Front legs shorter indicating descent from
    two-legged forms (in four-legged forms).

35
Ornithischian Dinosaurs
  • Examples
  • Ceratopsians
  • Stegosaurs
  • Ankylosaurs
  • Ornithopods

36
Ceratopsians
Triceratops
Styracosaurus
Microceratops
37
Stegosaurs
The plates on the backs of stegosaurs may have
served as body temperature-regulating devices.
They may have been used as "radiators" to
dissipate body heat, or as "solar panels" to
catch the sun's rays.
  • Stegosaurus

38
Ankylosaurs
39
Ornithopods
  • Bipedal and quadrupedal herbivores
  • Camptosaurus
  • Iguanodon
  • Pachycephalosaurus
  • Hadrosaurs (or duck-billed dinosaurs) in the
    Cretaceous, such as Parasaurolophus,
    Edmontosaurus, Bactrosaurus, and Maiasaura

40
Parasaurolophus (hadrosaur)
41
Figure 12-32 (p. 435) Internal structure of the
skull crest of Parasaurolophus cyrtocristatus.
(From Hopson, J. A. 1975. Paleobiology 124.)
42
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • The oldest dinosaurs were discovered in Late
    Triassic beds in Argentina by paleontologist Paul
    Sereno. They are about 225 million years old.
    Eoraptor, one of the oldest dinosaurs, was only
    about 1 m long its teeth indicate it was
    carnivorous.
  • Some dinosaurs apparently roamed in herds.

43
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • Dinosaurs showed sexual dimorphism. Skeletons of
    females may be distinguished from skeletons of
    males.
  • Fossil dinosaur eggs with embryos inside have
    been found in the Gobi Desert of Mongolia.

44
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • The jaws of Tyrannosaurus could exert more than
    3000 pounds of biting force (compared with the
    lion, at "only" 937 pounds of biting force).
  • Its tail was held out horizontally to the back,
    serving as a counterbalance to the forward part
    of the body.

45
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • Sauropods, with their long necks, apparently fed
    on vegetation high in the treetops. Their heads
    were relatively small, which avoided a heavy
    burden on the long necks.
  • The large size of the sauropods provided an
    advantage in dealing with predators, and served
    to prevent body heat loss. (Large animals lose
    body heat slower than small animals.) Animals
    which preserve body heat as a result of their
    large size are called homeotherms.

46
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • Their footprints suggest that they walked on four
    legs--able to support weight on land.
  • The rear feet rested on large "pads" like those
    of elephants.

47
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • Nests of dinosaur eggs suggest that some groups
    of dinosaurs cared for their young. The Maiasaura
    were apparently one group of dinosaurs which
    nurtured their young, as their babies stayed in
    the nests and grew after hatching.

48
Interesting Facts about Dinosaurs
  • Were dinosaurs warm blooded? Paleontologist
    Robert Bakker has argued since 1968 that
    dinosaurs were warm blooded like birds. If so,
    they would no longer be classified as reptiles.
  • Lines of evidence for warm bloodedness include

49
EcologyCold/Warm Blooded Debate
  • All living reptiles are ectotherms. That is they
    are cold-blooded animals whose body temperature
    varies with the outside temperatures. Mammals and
    birds are endotherms. That is they are
    warm-blooded and maintain a constant body
    temperature, regardless of the outside
    temperature.
  • Some dinosaurs may have been warm-blooded. What
    is the evidence for this?

50
Warm-Blooded Evidence
  • Brain size - endothermy necessary for having a
    large brain because a complex nervous system
    requires constant body temperature. Small
    carnivorous dinosaurs had relatively large
    brains, and are also clearly related to birds.
  • Predator-prey ratios - Endotherms have a higher
    metabolism so they need to eat more than
    ectotherms. Thus in endothermic populations, the
    predator/prey ratio is lower than in ectothermic
    populations. Fossil evidence suggests that
    predator/prey ratios among dinosaurs are similar
    to that seen in present day mammal populations.

51
Warm-Blooded Evidence (cont)
  • Bone histology - Bones of some dinosaurs have
    numerous passageways that once contained blood
    vessels. This is more typical of endotherms than
    ectotherms.
  • Apparent activity rates - High activity rates
    require endothermy. Dinosaurs are now known to
    have been a lot more active than previously
    thought.
  • Stance

52
Warm-Blooded Evidence (cont)
  • Presence of feathers and hair Feathers and hair
    insulate and help endotherms maintain body
    temperature. Several dinosaur fossils show
    evidence of feathers or a down-like material. At
    least one species of pterosaur had hair or
    hair-like feathers.
  • Isotopic analysis of bones

53
Birds
  • Birds are warm-blooded (endothermic), have wings
    and feathers, have a toothless beak, and lay
    eggs. Most can fly, but some are flightless.
  • Bird bones are hollow, and not easily preserved.
  • Birds may have evolved from basal archosaurs, or
    from small Triassic theropod dinosaurs. Both
    groups were bipedal and birdlike in the structure
    of their limbs, shoulder girdles, and skulls.
  • Several theropod dinosaurs had feathers, hollow
    bones, and keeled breastbones.

54
Birds
  • Feathers evolved from reptilian scales. The
    earliest feathers may have been used for
    insulation, camouflage, or display, rather than
    flight.
  • The best known bird fossil is Archaeopteryx

55
Archaeopteryx
  • Bird-like features of Archaeopteryx
  • Feathers
  • Wings
  • Reptile-like features of Archaeopteryx
  • Dinosaur-like skeleton
  • Teeth
  • Large tail
  • Forelimbs with claws
  • No breast bone (meaning that it would have been a
    weak flier)

56
Archaeopteryx
57
Origin of Birds
  • Bird-like features are found in some dinosaurs,
    including feathers or protofeathers, in
    Sinosauropteryx prima, more than 120 million
    years old, and Caudipteryx zoui, a dinosaur with
    a feathered tail.
  • The line between dinosaurs and birds has blurred
    with the new discoveries, so it is difficult to
    say when the first bird appeared.
  • Birds probably appeared near the end of the
    Jurassic.
  • Many different types of birds lived during the
    Cretaceous Period.

58
Mammals
  • Mammals evolved from mammal-like reptiles in the
    Late Triassic. Early mammals were rodent-like,
    and remained small throughout Mesozoic (smaller
    than housecats).
  • Among the earliest mammals were Megazostrodon,
    Eozostrodon, and Morganucodon

59
Figure 12-50 (p. 450) Restoration of
Morganucodon, an early mammal from the Late
Triassic of Wales.
60
Mammal Characteristics
  • Mammals are warm-blooded (endotherms), and are
    distinctive because they
  • Have hair or fur
  • Females have mammary glands that secrete milk to
    feed their young
  • Fossils of early mammals, like the cynodonts
    (mammal-like reptiles), show evidence of "whisker
    pits" on the snout region of the skull,
    indicating that they were covered with hair or
    fur.

61
Geographic Distribution Of Life Through Mesozoic
  • Pangea existed as a large landmass through
    Triassic. Climate was relatively similar over a
    wide latitude range. These factors allowed for
    wide distributions of species over many different
    continents
  • South America/Antarctica/Australia became island
    continents in Late Mesozoic
  • Faunas on these continents began to develop
    independently of other continents
  • Marsupials remained the dominant mammals in both
    South America and Australia
  • Laurasian continents continued to have strong
    faunal interchanges until Cenozoic

62
  • A mass extinction occurred at the end of the
    Cretaceous Period that caused the disappearance
    of about 1000 genera of marine animals, and about
    25 of all known families of animals.

63
  • Many groups died out gradually, and others
    disappeared suddenly.
  • The extinctions did not all happen
    simultaneously.
  • On land, only small (less than 50 lb) animals
    survived.
  • Of the reptiles, only turtles, snakes, lizards,
    crocodiles, and the tuatara (a reptile from New
    Zealand) survived the extinction.
  • More than 75 of the marine plankton species
    disappeared at the end of the Cretaceous.

64
  • Animals both on land and in the sea were
    affected. The extinction at the end of the
    Cretaceous totally wiped out these groups
  • Dinosaurs
  • Pterosaurs (flying reptiles)
  • Ammonoids (cephalopod molluscs)
  • Large marine reptiles (ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs
    mosasaurs)
  • Rudists (bivalve molluscs)
  • and many other invertebrate taxa

65
  • There were drastic reductions of these groups,
    wiping out entire families. Some of these groups
    had very few survivors
  • Coccolithophores (calcareous phytoplankton)
  • Planktonic foraminifera
  • Radiolarians
  • Belemnoids (cephalopod molluscs)
  • Echinoids
  • Bryozoans

66
What caused the extinctions?
  • There are many hypotheses to attempt to explain
    the cause of these extinctions. They can be
    divided into two groups
  • Catastrophic external or extraterrestrial
    triggers for the event (comet, asteroid)
  • Events occurring on the Earth, without outside
    influences

67
Evidence for extraterrestrial causes?
  • A thin layer of clay with a concentration of
    iridium is found at the boundary at the end of
    the Cretaceous Period (the boundary clay).
  • Since iridium is more abundant in meteorites than
    in normal Earth's surface rocks, it was proposed
    that a large impact of an extra terrestrial
    object with the Earth at the end of the
    Cretaceous might have spread iridium around the
    globe.
  • Other things may also have been responsible for
    the presence of the iridium, and all
    possibilities must be considered.

68
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69
Asteroid impact
  • Alvarezs theory (1977) elemental iridium
    enrichment 30 times normal in terminal Cretaceous
    clay indicates vaporization of asteroid on impact
    with Earth iridium enrichment too great for
    terrestrial-source explanation bolide (comet,
    asteroid, meteorite) impact

70
Other evidence for extraterrestrial causes?
  • Shocked quartz (from an impact?)
  • Tiny glass spherules or tektites (cooled droplets
    of molten rock from an impact?)
  • Carbon soot (remnants of forests burned in a
    firestorm caused by an impact?)
  • Antarctic fish kill
  • 180 km diameter crater in Yucatan, Mexico

71
If a bolide (large extraterrestrial object)
collided with the Earth, where is the impact
crater?
  • The most likely location of an impact structure
    of the proper age is the Chicxulub structure, a
    buried circular crater-like structure on the
    Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico.

72
Figure 12-63 (p. 456) Occurrences of the
iridium-rich sediment layer of the
Cretaceous-Tertiary boundary. (From Alvarez, W.
et al. 1990. Geol. Soc. Am. Special Paper 190
305-315.)
73
K/T Boundary Clay (New Mexico)
74
Closeup of K/T Bopundary Clay
75
Possible Terrestrial Causes
  • Volcanic eruptions causing ash and aerosols in
    atmosphere leading to a drop in temperature.
    Volcanism was widespread toward the end of the
    Cretaceous, and volcanic ash can be a source of
    iridium.
  • Other elements in the boundary clay like antimony
    and arsenic are common in volcanic ash but not in
    meteorites.

76
  • Volcanic eruptions releasing sulfur dioxide,
    leading to sulfuric acid in the atmosphere and
    acid rain, changing the alkalinity of the oceans,
    and placing lethal stress on plankton at the base
    of the food chain, and indirectly affecting the
    organisms that depended on them for food.

77
  • Decrease in rate of seafloor spreading, leading
    to a sea level drop, which eliminated the
    epicontinental seas.There is evidence for a
    global lowering of sea level at the end of the
    Mesozoic. Disappearance of the epicontinental
    seas would have meant a habitat loss for many
    shallow water species.

78
  • Climatic change as a result of the lowering of
    sea level and disappearance of the epicontinental
    seas?Would have caused a harsher climate and
    more extreme seasonality.
  • Change in atmospheric CO2 levels and O2 levels,
    as a result of the appearance of new types of
    plants, or the proliferation of photosynthetic
    plankton that formed the Cretaceous chalk
    deposits?

79
  • Appearance of angiosperms changed food chain on
    land? (Many of the dinosaurs ate gymnosperms.)
  • Disease? Viruses?
  • Melting of Arctic Ocean and spillover of
    freshwater cap onto world oceans, killing marine
    plankton?
  • Magnetic reversal?
  • Other?

80
Extinct!
  • Whatever the cause, changing environmental
    conditions at the end of the Mesozoic Era led to
    the disappearance of many kinds of organisms in
    what may have been a domino effect, as organisms
    at the base of the food chain were killed,
    sending waves of extinctions through species
    higher on the food chain that depended on them.

81
The Mesozoic Era
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