Title: The History of Life on Earth
1The History of Life on Earth
221 The History of Life on Earth
- 21.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- 21.2 How Have Earths Continents and Climates
Changed over Time? - 21.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- 21.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
321.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Many evolutionary changes take place over long
periods of time. - To study long-term evolutionary change, we must
think in time frames spanning millions of years
and imagine conditions very different from
todays.
421.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Fossils are preserved remains of ancient
organisms, they tell us about body form or
morphology, and where and how they lived. - Earths history is recorded in rocks. Layers of
rocks are called strata.
521.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Relative ages of rocks can be determined by
looking at strata of undisturbed sedimentary
rock. The oldest layers are at the bottom,
youngest at the top. - First observed in the 17th century by Nicolaus
Steno.
6Chapter Opener 2 Younger Rocks Lie on Top of
Older Rocks
721.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- In the eighteenth century, geologists realized
that fossils could also be used to age rocks. - Certain fossils were always found in younger
rocks, others were found in older rocks. - Fossils in more recent strata were more similar
to modern organisms.
821.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Radioisotopes can be used to determine the actual
age of rocks. - Radioisotopes decay in a predictable pattern.
- Half-life is the time interval over which one
half of the remaining radioisotope decays,
changing into another element.
9Figure 21.1 Radioactive Isotopes Allow Us to Date
Ancient Rocks
10Table 21.1
Each radioisotope has a characteristic half-life.
1121.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- To date an event, we must know (or be able to
estimate) the concentration of the radioisotope
at the start of the event. - For 14C, production in the upper atmosphere is
about equal to its natural decay. - In an organism, the ratio of 14C to 12C stays
constant during its lifetime.
1221.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- When an organism dies, it is no longer
incorporating 14C from the environment. - The 14C that was present in the body decays with
no replacement and the ratio of 14C to 12C
decreases. - This ratio can then be used to date fossils, up
to about 50,000 years old.
1321.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Sedimentary rocks can not be dated accurately
the materials that form the rocks existed for
varying lengths of time before being transported
and converted to rock. - But igneous rocks (e.g., lava or volcanic ash),
that have intruded into layers of sedimentary
rock can be dated.
1421.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Other radioisotopes are used to date older rocks.
- Decay of potassium-40 to argon-40 is used for the
most ancient rocks. - Radioisotope dating is combined with fossil
analysis.
1521.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- Other dating methods include paleomagnetic
dating - Movement and reversals of Earths magnetic poles
are recorded in igneous and sedimentary rocks at
the time they were formed, by alignment of
mineral grains and other characteristics.
1621.1 How Do Scientists Date Ancient Events?
- The history of life is divided into geologic
eras, which are subdivided into periods. - Boundaries are based on changes in fossils.
- The eras were established before actual ages of
rocks were known.
17Table 21.2 (Part 1)
18Table 21.2 (Part 2)
1921.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- The idea that land masses have moved over time
was first suggested by Alfred Wegener in 1912. - By the 1960s, evidence of plate tectonics
convinced geologists that he was right.
2021.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Earths crust is divided into solid plates about
40 km thickcollectively, the lithosphere. - The plates float on a fluid layer of liquid rock
or magma. - Heat from radioactive decay in Earths core
causes the magma to circulate, setting up
convection currents.
2121.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- The movement of plates is called continental
drift. - Where plates are pushed together, they move
sideways past one another, or one is pushed
underneath the other. - Mountain ranges are pushed up, and deep rift
valleys or trenches are formed. - Where plates are pushed apart, ocean basins form.
22Figure 21.2 Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift
2321.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Position of the continents has changed
dramatically over time. - Influences of ocean circulation patterns, sea
level, and global climate - Mass extinctions of marine animals have occurred
when sea level dropped, exposing the continental
shelves.
24Figure 21.3 Sea Levels Have Changed Repeatedly
2521.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Earths atmosphere has also changed.
- Early atmosphere probably contained little or no
free oxygen (O2). - O2 began to increase when certain bacteria
evolved the ability to use H2O as a source of H
ions in photosynthesis. O2 was a waste product.
2621.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Cyanobacteria formed rock-like structures called
stromatolites which are abundant in the fossil
record. - Enough O2 was liberated to allow evolution of
oxidation reactions to synthesize ATP.
27Figure 21.4 Stromatolites (Part 1)
28Figure 21.4 Stromatolites (Part 2)
2921.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- The evolution of life changed the physical nature
of Earth. - These changes in turn influenced the evolution of
life. - When O2 first appeared in the atmosphere it was
poisonous to the anaerobic prokaryotes.
3021.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Some evolved the ability to metabolize the O2.
- Advantages aerobic metabolism is faster and more
energy is harvested. - Aerobes replaced anaerobes in most environments.
3121.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Atmospheric O2 also made possible larger and more
complex cells. - About 1 billion years ago, eukaryote cells
appeared.
32Figure 21.5 Larger Cells Need More Oxygen
3321.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Change in atmospheric O2 concentrations was
unidirectional. - Most physical conditions have oscillated over
time in response to drifting continents, volcanic
activity, and even extraterrestrial events such
as meteorite impacts. - Sometimes these events caused mass extinctions.
3421.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Earths climate has changed over time.
- Sometimes Earth was considerably hotter than
today sometimes colder, with extensive
glaciation.
35Figure 21.6 Hot/Humid and Cold/Dry Conditions
Have Alternated over Earths History
3621.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- For Earth to be cold and dry, atmospheric CO2
must have been much lower, but it is unclear what
would cause low concentrations. - Some climate changes have been very rapid.
Extinctions caused by them appear to be
instantaneous in the fossil record.
3721.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Today we are in a period of rapid climate change
due to increasing CO2 concentrations, mostly from
burning fossil fuels. - Current CO2 concentration is greater than it has
been for several thousand years. - If CO2 concentration doubles, average Earth
temperature will increase, causing droughts, sea
increase, melting ice caps, and other major
changes.
3821.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Volcanic eruptions can trigger major climate
change. - When continents came together to form Pangaea in
the Permian period, many volcanic eruptions
reduced sunlight penetration and thus
photosynthesis. - Massive glaciation resulted.
3921.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- Collisions with large meteorites are probably the
cause of several mass extinctions. - Evidence of impacts include large craters and
disfigured rocks molecules with helium and argon
isotope ratios characteristic of meteorites.
4021.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- A meteorite is thought to have caused or
contributed to the mass extinction at the end of
the Cretaceous period, 65 million years ago. - First evidence was from a thin layer containing
the element iridium. This element is very rare on
Earth but abundant in some meteorites.
41Figure 21.7 Evidence of a Meteorite Impact
4221.2 How Have Earths Continents and
ClimatesChanged over Time?
- A large crater has been located beneath the
northern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico. - A massive plume of debris from the impact heated
the atmosphere, ignited fires, and blocked the
sunlight. - Settling debris formed the iridium-rich layer.
43An Artists Conception of the Presumed Meteorite
Impact of 65 Million Years Ago
4421.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Life first evolved about 3.8 billion years ago.
- Eukaryotic organisms had evolved by about 1.5
billion years ago. - The number of individuals and species increased
dramatically in the late Precambrian.
4521.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- The assemblage of all kinds of organisms alive at
one time (or in one place) is called the biota. - All the plants are the flora and all the animals
are the fauna.
4621.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Although about 300,000 species of fossils have
been described, they are only a tiny fraction of
species that have existed on Earth. - Only a tiny fraction of organisms become fossils,
and only a fraction of those are studied by
paleontologists.
4721.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Most organisms are decomposed quickly after
death. - If they are transported to sites with no oxygen,
where decomposition is very slow, fossilization
could occur. - Many geologic processes transform rocks and
destroy the fossils they contain.
4821.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- A large number of fossil species are marine
organisms that had hard shells or skeletons that
resist decomposition. - Insects and spiders are also well represented in
the fossil record.
49Figure 21.8 Insect Fossils
5021.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- The Precambrian Era
- For most of this era, life was microscopic,
prokaryote cells living in oceans. - Eukaryotes evolved about 2/3 through the
Precambrian. - By the late Precambrian, soft-bodied
multicellular animals had evolved.
51Figure 21.9 Ediacaran Animals
5221.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Cambrian Period
- Beginning of the Paleozoic Era
- O2 concentration was approaching modern levels.
- Continents formed large land masses, the largest
called Gondwana.
53Figure 21.10 Cambrian Continents and Fauna (Part
1)
54Figure 21.10 Cambrian Continents and Fauna (Part
2)
5521.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Rapid diversification of life took placecalled
the Cambrian explosion. - Most of the major groups of animals living today
appeared in the Cambrian. - Three different Cambrian fossil beds have
preserved the soft parts of many animalsthe
Burgess Shale, Sirius Passet, and Chengjiang site.
5621.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Ordovician Period
- A great radiation of marine organisms occurred,
especially among the brachiopods and mollusks. - At the end of the period, massive glaciers formed
over Gondwana, sea levels were lowered, and a
mass extinction occurred.
5721.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Silurian Period
- Marine life rebounded from the late Ordovician
extinction. - The first vascular plants appeared in the late
Silurian, as well as some terrestrial
arthropodsscorpions and millipedes.
58Figure 21.11 Cooksonia, the Earliest Known
Vascular Plant
5921.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Devonian Period
- The northern landmass (Laurasia) and southern
landmass (Gondwana) moved towards each other. - There were evolutionary radiations of corals and
squid-like cephalopods. - Jawed fishes replaced jawless forms.
60Figure 21.12 Devonian Continents and Marine
Communities (Part 1)
61Figure 21.12 Devonian Continents and Marine
Communities (Part 2)
6221.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Club mosses, horsetails, and tree ferns became
common in terrestrial habitats. - Their roots accelerated weathering of rocks and
soil formation. - Ancestors of gymnosperms appeared.
- First known fossils of centipedes, spiders,
mites, and insects. - Fish-like amphibians began to occupy land.
6321.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- An extinction at the end of the Devonian resulted
in loss of 75 percent of marine animals. - Two meteorite impacts may have contributed to
this extinction. The craters are in Nevada and
western Australia.
6421.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Carboniferous Period
- Large glaciers formed over high latitudes but
great swamp forests of horsetails and tree ferns
grew on the tropical continents. - These swamp plants became fossilized as coal.
6521.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Diversity of terrestrial animals increased.
Snails, centipedes, scorpions, and insects were
abundant. - Insects developed wings. Flight gave them access
to tall plants. - Amphibians became larger their lineage split
from the amniotesvertebrates with well-protected
eggs. - In the oceans, crinoids reached their greatest
diversity.
66Figure 21.13 Evidence of Insect Diversification
67Figure 21.14 A Carboniferous Crinoid Meadow
6821.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Permian Period
- Continents came together to form the
supercontinent Pangaea. - Reptiles outnumbered amphibians at the end of
that period. - Ray-finned fishes diversified.
69Figure 21.15 Pangaea Formed in the Permian Period
7021.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Near the end of the Permian, massive volcanic
eruptions poured lava over large areas of Earth. - Volcanic ash blocked sunlight and caused climate
cooling, resulting in the largest glaciers in
Earths history.
7121.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- O2 concentrations dropped to about 12
percentmost animals would have been unable to
survive at elevations above 500 m. - A combination of factors resulted in the greatest
mass extinction in Earths history.
7221.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- At the start of the Mesozoic era, the surviving
organisms inhabited a relatively empty world. - The continents began to drift apart, sea levels
rose, and flooded the continents forming large
shallow seas. - Three groups of phytoplankton became ecologically
important dinoflagellates, coccolithophores, and
diatoms.
7321.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- New seed plants replaced the trees of the Permian
forests. - Earths biota became increasingly
provincializeddistinct biotas evolved on each
continent.
7421.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Triassic Period
- Pangaea began to break apart.
- On land, conifers and pteridosperms became
dominant. - A great radiation of reptiles began, which gave
rise to crocodilians, dinosaurs, and birds. - A mass extinction at the end may have been caused
by a meteorite impact in present-day Quebec.
7521.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Jurassic Period
- Land once again in two continents, Laurasia and
Gondwana. - Ray-finned fishes began a great radiation.
- First salamanders, lizards, and flying reptiles
(pterosaurs).
7621.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Dinosaur lineages evolved into predators on two
legs, and large herbivores on four legs. - Several groups of mammals appeared.
- Flowering plants appeared.
77Figure 21.16 Jurassic Parkland
7821.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Cretaceous Period
- A continuous sea encircled the tropics. Earth
was warm and humid. - Dinosaurs continued to diversify.
- Flowering plants began the radiation that led to
their current dominance.
79Figure 21.17 Positions of the Continents during
the Cretaceous Period
80Figure 21.18 Flowering Plants of the Cretaceous
8121.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- By the end of the period, many mammal groups had
evolved. - Another mass extinction at the end of the
Cretaceous was caused by a meteorite. - On land, all animals larger than about 25 kg
became extinct. - Many insects went extinct, perhaps because of
lack of food plants.
8221.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- The Cenozoic Era
- Characterized by an extensive radiation of
mammals. - Flowering plants came to dominate forests except
in cool regions. - Mutations in one group of plants allowed them to
form symbiotic associations with N-fixing
bacteria. This dramatically increased N available
for terrestrial plants.
83Table 21.3
8421.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Tertiary Period
- Climate was hot and humid at the beginning, but
became cooler and drier about half way through. - Many flowering plants evolved herbaceous forms.
Grasslands spread. - Snakes, lizards, birds, and mammals underwent
extensive radiations.
8521.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Three waves of mammals dispersed from Asia to
North America across the Bering land bridge. - Rodents, marsupials, primates, and hoofed mammals
appeared in North America for the first time.
8621.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Quaternary Period
- Divided into Pleistocene and Holocene epochs.
- Pleistocene was a time of drastic cooling and
climate fluctuation. - During four major and 20 minor ice ages,
continental glaciers spread, shifting the ranges
of plants and animals towards the equator.
8721.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- The last glaciers retreated from temperate
latitudes about 15,000 years ago. - The Pleistocene was also the time of hominid
evolution and radiation. - Many large mammal species became extinct in
Australia and the Americas when Homo sapiens
arrivedpossibly due to hunting pressure.
8821.3 What Are the Major Events in Lifes History?
- Three great evolutionary radiations occurred that
resulted in major new faunas. - The Cambrian explosion
- 60 million years later, the radiation that
resulted in the Paleozoic fauna - After the Permian extinction, in the Triassic
89Figure 21.19 Evolutionary Faunas
9021.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
- The rate of evolutionary change has varied
greatly at different times and in different
lineages. - Changes in the physical and biological
environment are likely to stimulate evolutionary
change. - Climate change can shift ranges of organisms,
bringing them into contact with previously
unknown competitors or predators.
9121.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
- Species whose morphology has changed little over
millions of years are called living fossils. - Examples horseshoe crabs, chambered nautilus,
Gingko trees
92Figure 21.20 Living Fossils
9321.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
- On average, rates of evolutionary change are very
slow. - There are many series of fossils that show
gradual change. - Example Eight lineages of trilobites show
gradual change in the number of rear dorsal ribs
on the exoskeleton.
94Figure 21.21 Rib Number Evolved Gradually in
Trilobites (Part 1)
95Figure 21.21 Rib Number Evolved Gradually in
Trilobites (Part 2)
9621.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
- Gradual change appears to dominate the fossil
record. - One explanation is that climate change is usually
slow. - Ranges of organisms shift accordingly, so the
environment in which an individual lived actually
changed very little. - As the climate warmed after the last glaciers,
plants and animals shifted their ranges northward.
97Figure 21.22 Some Species Expanded Their Ranges
as Continental Glaciers Retreated (Part 1)
9821.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differ among
Groups of Organisms?
- If the environment changes rapidly, some lineages
may change rapidly. - Example The house finch lived in semiarid
regions of western North America. - It was released in New York City in 1939 and
formed a small population there. - Now birds in the eastern populations have already
evolved distinct differences.
99Figure 21.23 House Finches Changed Rapidly as
Their Range Expanded (Part 1)
100Figure 21.23 House Finches Changed Rapidly as
Their Range Expanded (Part 2)
10121.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differamong
Groups of Organisms?
- Rates of extinction have also varied.
- The five major extinction events reduced the
biota, and were followed by high rates of
evolution. - But some groups have had high rates of extinction
while others are proliferating.
10221.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differamong
Groups of Organisms?
- At the end of the Cretaceous, groups of related
mollusk species with large geographic ranges
survived better than groups with small ranges,
even if individual species in the group had small
ranges.
10321.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differamong
Groups of Organisms?
- An organisms diet can also affect extinction
rates. - Animals with specialized diets are more
vulnerable to loss of their food supply. - Large, specialized carnivores may be more likely
to go extinct than small carnivores with
generalized diets. - This hypothesis has been tested using canid
fossils.
104Figure 21.24 Large, Specialized Canids Survived
Shorter Times (Part 1)
105Figure 21.24 Large, Specialized Canids Survived
Shorter Times (Part 2)
10621.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differamong
Groups of Organisms?
- Although agents of evolutionary change are
operating today as they have in the past, the
dramatic increase in human population is driving
major changes. - Hunting has caused extinction of many species.
- Humans drastically alter the vegetation of
Earthconverting forests and grasslands to
agricultural land.
10721.4 Why Do Evolutionary Rates Differamong
Groups of Organisms?
- Humans move thousands of species around the
globe, deliberately and accidentally changing the
ranges of species. - Humans practice artificial selection and
biotechnology that influences the evolution of
some species. - Humans have become a dominant agent of
evolutionary change.