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Mid-Late Ordovicium: Ice age, orogenic movements, life colonizes land Jarðsaga 1 -Saga Lífs og Lands – Ólafur Ingólfsson Plants colonize land towards the end of the Ordovician Period Barren Lands before the colonization by plants and animals... 490-450 MY ago, during the Ordovician, the land was still desolate and empty. Barren, rocky grounds, empty sand and gravel- plains. In rivermouths, where the water regularly flooded the land, it was probably green with algae. Deltas and tidal flats provide environment for life to enter land from the sea... First life on land One of the most imortant developments of the Ordovician was the colonization of land. Microssils of cells and spores of bryophyte-like (bryophyte= mosi) early land plants are known from this time. The earliest terrestrial arthropod (liðdýr) tracks are also known from the Ordovician. Plants and green algae – common ancestor – plants evolve from algae Plants & the Colonization of Land Plants first appeared on land towards the end of the Ordovician Period. Liverwort-like (Bryophytes - mosar) may have been first. Major step in plant development, as terrestrial and aquatic environments are very different. Terrestrial Advantages. z Greater access to CO2. Gases diffuse 10,000 x faster in air than water. Photosynthesis much faster. More CO2 probably the most crucial advantage. z More light. Water decreases light supply. z Less mechanical damage (Air less dense). z Initially no predators (herbivores). Plants invaded land first. Plants & the Colonization of Land Terrestrial Disadvantages - quite a few! z Desiccation. Plants/animals need constant access to water. Perhaps the most crucial disadvantage. z Temperature of air fluctuates substantially over daily and seasonal cicles . Water buffers temperature changes. z Plants encounter gravity - no buoyancy, because air less dense than water. z Too much light for shade plants, especially UV. z Restricted access to water for sperm to swim to egg. z Not bathed in water and minerals, so must “search” for them. Plants & the Colonization of Land Many new features needed to adapt higher plants (and animals!) to terrestrial life: z Multicellularity enables development of specialized cells, tissues, and organs to reduce disadvantages. z Epidermal (yfirborðs-) & cork cells, & cuticle (wax layer) reduce water loss. z Stomata (- loftauga - leaf pores) regulate gas exchange to reduce water loss. z Roots “mine” soil for water and minerals to transport to the shoots. z Vascular tissues (æðavefur) in roots, stems and leaves transport water and minerals from root to shoot. PLANT LEAF performs photosynthesis CUTICLE (yfirborð) reduces water loss; STOMATA allow gas exchange STEM supports plant (and may perform photosynthesis) Surrounding water supports the alga ROOTS anchor plant; absorb water and minerals from the soil (aided by mycorrhizal fungi) WHOLE ALGAE performs photosynthesis; absorbs water, CO2, and minerals from the water HOLDFAST anchors the alga ALGAE There seem to be many disadvantages to life on land - the aquatic environment seems much more attractive. So why are the vast majority of today’s plant species terrestrial? – Plant colonization of land began ~ 475 MY ago – Animals followed plants on land ~75 MY later, around 400 MY ago Late Ordovician continental configuration The drift of Gondwana towards the south pole caused a continental glaciation towards the end of the Ordovician... The impacts of the Ordovician glaciation The late Ordovician glaciation was a global phenomenon that affected the biosphere, hydrosphere and atmosphere. The ice-sheet was centred on West Gondwana and resulted in sealevel falls of ca. 50-100m. An Ordovician esker in Tunisia Large glaciations are one major control on global sea level Sea level fluctuations through time Factors influencing sea level in time and space: 1. Changes in the Hydrological Cycle 2. Changes in the volume of the Ocean basins 3. Tectonic and isostatic movements 4. Thermal state of the Oceans 5. Geoidal changes Development of the Late Ordovician ecosystem • In the later part of the Ordovician, genera of families previously limited to one faunal province appear in another, indicating a tendency towards migration and cosmopolitism. Development of the Late Ordovician ecosystem • Changes in oceanic circulation (distribution of planktonic larvae etc) along with approaching continental masses would have made possible migrations of shallow water benthos. •Among the losers of the Ordovician are trilobites, which begin their decline in the middle Ordovician, and stromatolites, whose decline would seem to be due to pressure by grazing herbivores (gastropods, echinoids, etc). Water depth history Distribution of Ordovician species in Mohawk Valley, New York Species are not found randomly, but in groups. If species reflect the environment, then the abundance of the species should be a measure of the environment. There is a set of mathematical techniques called "ordination methods", which attempt to do just that. The gradients could be many things – salinity, temperature, depth, turbidity etc. Used to reveal patterns in time and space. Some Late Ordovician fossils Isotelus maximus Prasopora bryozoa Fossils from Winnepeg Fossil Macroalgae : On the left, a fossil of Winnipegia cuneata, the most common alga in the Lake Winnipeg flora. At center, Manitobia patula, a putative member of the Floridean red algae, a group found today in warm seas. On the right, Kinwowia articulata, a feathery algae that may belong to the green algae. Ordovician sedimentary rocks Calcilutite, a rock composed of calcareous mud deposited as turbidite flows. “Dinosaur Leather“, an Ordovician siltstone. The surface carries "flute casts". These form as a result of turbulent sedimentladen current scouring a muddy bottom. Stromatolite reef Ordovicium in Scandinavia Ordovician slates and limestone, Fornebu, Oslo Ordovician fossils from Norway Graptholith Bryozoa Asaphus sp. Discoceras sp. Brachyopod The Taconic Orogeny 1. During Cambrian, Laurentia, (North American Craton ) is on it's way to a chain of volcanic islands. NA is rotated about 90o on its axis relative to its present position. 2. The subducting NA plate, in Ordovician time collides with the island arc to form the Taconic Orogeny. Several thrust sheets are shoved westward. Avalonia, another volcanic arc, is also on its way. Continents in Late Ordovician The Taconic Orogeny took place about 450 million years ago. As the two plates collided an extensive amount of uplifting and fracturing occurred within the edges of the continents which now make up the Taconic Mountains in eastern New York. At the time of formation these mountains were as high as the Himalayas but have since undergone extensive erosion. – a collision between N. America and a volcanic arc – sequence of events • subduction initiating to the west, arc develops • thrust loading from arc warps shelf – shales, turbites deposited in the basin • collision of arc produces thrusting, mountain belts • terrestrial clastics prograde out over basin – red oxidized shales and sandstones The Taconic Orogeny Cross section and rocks Ordovician pillow lavas Cambrian slates overriding Ordovician limestone A view of the Taconic Mts, SE-NY Once like the Himalayas, now heavily eroded, reaching about 1100 m a.s.l. The Ordovician mass extinction Mass extinctions of tropical marine faunas occurred at the end of the Ordovician when 100 or more families became extinct, including more than half of the bryozoan and brachiopod species. 60% of all marine invertebrate genera went extinct. One of the greatest mass extinctions recorded in Earths history. Causes of the mass extinction Possible causes which have been suggested include: • climatic cooling in connection with the glaciation on Gondwana • global sea level drop • Tectonic plate movements closing the Iapetus Ocean (proto-Atlantic), eliminating habitats • The Taconic Orogeny Even so, life in the Ordovician did not seem as precarious as in the Cambrian (perhaps ecosystems being now more complex), and enough Ordovician biota survived to radiate to even greater diversity during the Silurian Is there a pattern to mass extinctions? Detailed analysis of the number of different marine organisms over time may suggest that there is a cycle of extinctions, with an extinction occurring every 26-30 MY Is there really a cycle? The problem lies not only with an incomplete fossil record, but also with problems of dating fossils accurately enough to produce a reliable result. It may be that the cyclicity is the result of poor information. If there is a pattern to mass extinctions, it has important implications: it suggests that there may be a single cause for all the extinctions. Why do some animals become extinct and others not? Graptolith Eoblattus When habitats disappear or change drastically some species will survive. We don't know what determines 'winning' species. Luck may play an important part in deciding who makes it through a mass extinction. It helps to be an opportunist and a generalist, able to survive in a wide variety of conditions and to quickly take advantage of any favourable changes, and it helps to be able to reproduce quickly. A summary of major Early Paleozoic events References, web resources etc • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Stanley, Earth System History, chapter 12 Fortey, R. Life – A natural History of the first four billion years of life on Earth. New York, Vintage Books, 346 pp. Fortey, R. Trilobate – Eywitness to Evolution. London, Flamingo, 246 pp. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/cambrian/camb.html http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~rcb7/global_history.html http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~devans/iitpw/science.html http://www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Cambrian/Cambrian.htm http://www.palaeos.com/Paleozoic/Ordovician/Ordovician.htm http://www.ic.sunysb.edu/Stu/ckramer/TaconicOrogeny.htm http://www.peripatus.gen.nz/Books/WonLif.html http://www.toyen.uio.no/palmus/galleri/blader/blad_x03.htm http://www.fossilmuseum.net/Paleobiology/Paleozoic_paleobiology.htm#Ordovici an http://www.jamestown-ri.info/acadian.htm http://greenfield.fortunecity.com/shell/89/ http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/LivingWith/ VolcanicPast/Notes/taconic_orogeny.html http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/ordovician/ ordovician.html