Geologic Time science/Geologic Time...Geologic Time • The first geologic time scale was proposed...

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Geologic Time

Geologic Time

• The first geologic time scale was proposed in 1913 by the British geologist Arthur Holmes (1890 - 1965). This was soon after the discovery of radioactivity, and using it, Holmes estimated that the Earth was about 4 billion years old - this was much greater than previously believed.

The Divisions of Precambrian

Time

Precambrian Era• 4.6 billion years ago, the Earth was born.

• Nearly 4 billion years passed after the Earth's inception before the first animals. This stretch of time is called the Precambrian.

• It makes up roughly seven-eighths of the Earth's history

• During the Precambrian, the most important events in biological history took place.

Precambrian Era

• The Earth formed, life arose, the first

tectonic plates arose and began to

move, eukaryotic cells evolved, the

atmosphere became enriched in

oxygen -- and just before the end of

the Precambrian, complex multi-

cellular organisms, including the first

animals, evolved.

Precambrian Earth

Precambrian Era

• Also divided into different Eons:

–Hadean – Earths creation

–Archean – Earliest Rocks form

–Proterzoic - First organisms with

well-developed cells form.

Paleozoic – “Ancient Life”

The Paleozoic Era

• At its beginning, multi-celled animals underwent a dramatic explosion in diversity, and almost all living animal phylaappeared within a few millions of years.

• At the other end of the Paleozoic, the largest mass extinction in history wiped out approximately 90% of all marine animal species. The causes of both these events are still not fully understood

Paleozoic Era

• The Paleozoic took up over 300 million years.

• During the Paleozoic there were six major continental land masses.

• These Paleozoic continents experienced tremendous mountain building along their margins, and numerous incursions and retreats of shallow seas across their interiors.

Gondwana and the Continental

Landmasses During Paleozoic Period

Cambrian Period

• "Age of Trilobytes" -The Cambrian

Explosion of life occurs; all existent phyla

develop. Many marine invertebrates

• First vertebrates. Earliest primitive fish.

Mild climate.

• Mass Extinction of trilobites and nautiloids

at end of Cambrian (50% of all animal

families became extinct), probably due to

glaciation.

The Cambrian Sea

Ordovician Period

Ordovician Period

• First corals.

• Primitive fishes, seaweed and fungi.

Graptolites, bryozoans, gastropods,

bivalves, and echinoids.

• High sea levels at first, global cooling and

glaciation, and much volcanism.

• North America under shallow seas. Ends

in huge extinction, due to glaciation.

Silurian Period

Silurian Period

• Primitive plants appear on land.

• The first jawed fishes

• First vascular plants (plants with water-

conducting tissue) appear on land

• High seas worldwide. Brachiopods,

crinoids, corals.

• First insects appeared.

Devonian Period – Age of Fishes

Devonian

Devonian Period

"The Age of Fishes"

• Fish and land plants become abundant and diverse.

• First amphibians appear (evolved from the lungfish). First sharks, and bony fish.

• Many coral reefs, brachiopods, crinoids.

• New insects appeared.

• Mass Extinction (345 mya) wiped out 30% of all animal families) probably due to glaciation or meteorite impact

Carboniferous Period

Carboniferous Period

(Mississippian & Pennsylvanian)

• Wide-spread coal swamps and many

ferns.

• Appalachian Mountains form.

• Amphibians become more common.

• First true reptiles.

• The first cockroaches appear

• First winged insects

Model of a Pennsylvanian

Coal Swamp

Mountains formed during this

period

Amphibians of the Permian Period

Permian Period

"The Age of Amphibians"

• Amphibians and reptiles dominant.

• Gymnosperms dominant plant life.

• The continents merge into a single super-continent, Pangea.

• Phytoplankton and plants oxygenate the Earth's atmosphere to close to modern levels.

• The Permian ended with largest mass extinction. Trilobites go extinct, as do 50% of all animal families, 95% of all marine species, and many trees, perhaps caused by glaciation or volcanism

Late Paleozoic Plate Movements

Mesozoic Era

245 – 208 MYA

Mesozoic Era

• The Mesozoic is divided into three time periods:

– the Triassic (245-208 Million Years Ago),

– the Jurassic (208-146 Million Years Ago),

– and the Cretaceous (146-65 Million Years Ago).

• Mesozoic means "middle animals", and is the time during which the world fauna changed drastically from that which had been seen in the Paleozoic.

Mesozoic Era• Dinosarus, evolved in the Triassic, but were not

very diverse until the Jurassic.

• Except for birds, dinosaurs became extinct at the

end of the Cretaceous.

• The Mesozoic was also a time of great change

in the terrestrial vegetation. The early Mesozoic

was dominated by ferns, cycads

• Modern gymnosperms, such as conifers, first

appeared

• By the middle of the Cretaceous, the earliest

angiosperms had appeared

Mesozoic Plant Life

Dinosaurs of the Triassic Period

Triassic Period

• The first dinosaurs, mammals, and crocodiles appear.

• Mollusks are the dominant invertebrate.

• Many reptiles, for example, turtles.

• True flies appear.

• Triassic period ends with a minor extinction 213 mya (35% of all animal families die out, including marine reptiles). This allowed the dinosaurs to expand

Jurassic Period

Jurassic Period

• Many dinosaurs, including the giants.

• The first birds appear (Archaeopteryx).

• The first flowering plants evolve.

• Many ferns, cycads, gingkos, rushes,

conifers,

• Flying reptiles, pterosaurs.

• Minor extinctions at 190 and 160 mya.

Earth During the Jurassic Period

Life of the Cretaceous Period

Cretaceous Period

• The heyday of the dinosaurs.

• The earliest-known butterflies appear as well as

the earliest-known snakes, ants, and bees.

• High tectonic and volcanic activity.

• Primitive marsupials develop.

• Continents have a modern-day look.

• Ended with large extinction (the K-T extinction)

of dinosaurs, pterosaurs, ammonites, about 50

percent of marine invertebrate species, etc.,

probably caused by asteroid impact or volcanism.

What happened to the dinosaurs?

Asteroid?

Volcanoes?

Glaciers?

Cenozoic Era the Age of Mammals

Cenozoic Era

• The Cenozoic is the most recent of the

three major subdivisions of animal history.

• The Cenozoic is called the Age of

Mammals, because the largest land

animals have been mammals during that

time.

• The Cenozoic is divided into two main

sub-divisions: the Tertiary and the

Quaternary.

Tertiary Mammals

Tertiary Period

• First large mammals and primitive

primates,

• Mammals abound. Rodents appear.

Mammals return to the sea.

• Flower plants thrive.

• More mammals, including the horses,

dogs and bears. Modern birds.

• First hominids (australopithecines).

• Continental glaciers repeatedly cover NA

Quaternary Period

• The first humans (Homo Sapiens) evolve.

Mammoths, mastodons, saber-tooth

tigers, giant ground sloths.

• A mass extinction of large mammals and

many birds happened about 10,000 years

ago, probably caused by the end of the

last ice age.

• Human civilization

Early Man – Quaternary Period

Geologic Time Scale of Kentucky

Bluegrass Geology

The bedrock in the center (Bluegrass Region) of the State is composed of

limestones and shales from the Ordovician Period (510 to 440 million years ago).

The oldest rocks at the surface in Kentucky are limestones from the Late

Ordovician Period (approximately 450 million years ago), which are exposed

along the Palisades of the Kentucky River (for example, near Camp Nelson, in

Jessamine County, pictured above).

Ordovician fossils are abundant in many areas.