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Earth Science, 10e

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Most Precambrian rocks are devoid of fossils. Precambrian era. Precambrian rocks ... Animal fossils date from the late Precambrian ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Earth Science, 10e


1
Earth Science, 10e
  • Edward J. Tarbuck Frederick K. Lutgens

2
Earths History A Brief SummaryChapter 11
  • Earth Science, 10e
  • Stan Hatfield and Ken Pinzke
  • Southwestern Illinois College

3
Precambrian era
  • 4.5 billion to 540 million years ago
  • 88 of Earth's history
  • Only sketchy knowledge
  • Most Precambrian rocks are devoid of fossils

4
Precambrian era
  • Precambrian rocks
  • Most are buried from view
  • Each continent has a "core area" of Precambrian
    rocks called a shield
  • Extensive iron ore deposits
  • Absent are fossil fuels

5
Precambrian shields
6
Precambrian era
  • Earth's atmosphere
  • Primitive atmosphere formed from volcanic gases
  • A process called outgassing
  • Water vapor, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, and
    several trace gases
  • Very little free oxygen
  • Water vapor condenses and forms primitive oceans
    as Earth cools

7
Precambrian era
  • Earth's atmosphere
  • Bacteria evolve
  • Plants evolve and photosynthesis produces oxygen
  • Oxygen content in the atmosphere increases
  • By about 4 billion years after Earth formed,
    abundant ocean-dwelling organisms that require
    oxygen existed

8
Precambrian era
  • Precambrian fossils
  • Most common are stromatolites
  • Material deposited by algae
  • Common about 2 billion years ago
  • Microfossils of bacteria and algae have been
    found in chert
  • Southern Africa (3.1 billion years of age)
  • Lake Superior area (1.7 billion years of age)

9
Precambrian era
  • Precambrian fossils
  • Plant fossils date from the middle Precambrian
  • Animal fossils date from the late Precambrian
  • Diverse and multicelled organisms exist by the
    close of the Precambrian

10
The geologic time scale
11
Paleozoic era
  • 540 million years ago to about 248 million years
    ago
  • First life forms with hard parts
  • Abundant Paleozoic fossils
  • Early Paleozoic history
  • Southern continent of Gondwanaland exists

12
Paleozoic era
  • Early Paleozoic history
  • North America
  • A barren lowland
  • Seas move inland and recede several times and
    shallow marine basins evaporate leaving rock salt
    and gypsum deposits
  • Taconic orogeny, a mountain building event,
    affects eastern North America

13
Reconstruction of Earth in early Paleozoic time
14
Paleozoic era
  • Early Paleozoic life
  • Restricted to seas
  • Vertebrates had not yet evolved
  • Life consisted of several invertebrate groups
  • Trilobites
  • Brachiopods
  • Cephalopods
  • First organisms with hard parts, such as shells
    perhaps for protection

15
Natural cast of a trilobite
16
Appearance and relative abundance of major groups
of organisms
17
Paleozoic era
  • Late Paleozoic history
  • Supercontinent of Pangaea forms
  • Several mountain belts formed during the
    movements of the continents
  • World's climate becomes very seasonal, causing
    the dramatic extinction of many species

18
Formation of Pangaea in late Paleozoic time
19
Paleozoic era
  • Late Paleozoic life
  • Organisms diversified dramatically
  • Land plants
  • Fishes evolve into two groups of bony fish
  • Lung fish
  • Lobe-finned fish which become the amphibians
  • Insects invade the land
  • Amphibians diversify rapidly
  • Extensive coal swamps develop

20
Mesozoic era
  • 248 million years ago to about 65 million years
    ago
  • Often called the age of dinosaurs
  • Mesozoic history
  • Begins with much of the world's land above sea
    level
  • Seas invade western North America
  • Breakup of Pangaea begins forming the Atlantic
    Ocean

21
Mesozoic era
  • Mesozoic history
  • North American plate began to override the
    Pacific plate
  • Mountains of western North America began forming
  • Mesozoic life
  • Survivors of the great Paleozoic extinction
  • Gymnosperms become the dominant trees

22
Reconstruction of Earth in the late Jurassic
period
23
Mesozoic era
  • Mesozoic life
  • Reptiles (first true terrestrial animals) readily
    adapt to the dry Mesozoic climate
  • Reptiles have shell-covered eggs that can be laid
    on the land
  • Dinosaurs dominate
  • One group of reptiles led to the birds
  • Many reptile groups, along with many other animal
    groups, become extinct at the close of the
    Mesozoic

24
Major reptile groups in the Mesozoic era
25
Mesozoic era
  • Mesozoic life
  • Many reptile groups, along with many other animal
    groups, become extinct at the close of the
    Mesozoic
  • One hypothesis is that a large asteroid or comet
    struck Earth
  • Another possibility is extensive volcanism

26
Cenozoic era
  • 65 million years ago to the present
  • Often called the age of mammals
  • Smaller fraction of geologic time than either the
    Paleozoic or the Mesozoic
  • North America
  • Most of the continent was above sea level
    throughout the Cenozoic era

27
Cenozoic era
  • North America
  • Many events of mountain building, volcanism, and
    earthquakes in the West
  • Eastern North America
  • Stable with abundant marine sedimentation
  • Eroded Appalachians were raised by isostatic
    adjustments

28
Cenozoic era
  • North America
  • Western North America
  • Building of the Rocky Mountains was coming to an
    end
  • Large region is uplifted
  • Basin and Range Province formed
  • Re-elevates the Rockies
  • Rivers erode and form gorges (e.g., Grand Canyon
    and Black Canyon)

29
Cenozoic era
  • North America
  • Western North America
  • Volcanic activity is common
  • Fissure eruptions form the Columbia Plateau
  • Volcanoes form from northern California to the
    Canadian border
  • Coast Ranges form
  • Sierra Nevada become fault block mountains

30
Cenozoic era
  • Cenozoic life
  • Mammals replace reptiles as the dominant land
    animals
  • Angiosperms (flowering plants with covered seeds)
    dominate the plant world
  • Strongly influenced the evolution of both birds
    and mammals
  • Food source for both birds and mammals

31
Cenozoic era
  • Cenozoic life
  • Two groups of mammals evolve after the reptilian
    extinctions at the close of the Mesozoic
  • Marsupials
  • Placentals

32
Cenozoic era
  • Cenozoic life
  • Mammals diversify quite rapidly and some groups
    become very large
  • e.g., Hornless rhinoceros, which stood nearly 16
    feet high
  • Many large animals became extinct
  • Humans evolve

33
End of Chapter 11
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