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Earth’s History Origin of the Earth • Nebular Hypothesis – Bodies of our solar system condensed from an enormous cloud – Cloud began contracting, spinning, and flattening • Earth – Density sorted material and eventually, gases escaped from the interior to form an atmosphere Earth’s Atmosphere Evolves • Outgassing – Gases that are in molten rock are gradually released • Water vapor condensed to form clouds – Rain cooled Earth’s crust until the rains slowly filled low areas, forming the oceans – Reduced CO2 because it became trapped in water • Plants evolved and released oxygen Precambrian Time • 4.6 billion to 570 million years ago • Precambrian Rocks – Shields • Areas shaped like shields that have been extensively eroded to reveal Precambrian rock • Mostly deformed metamorphic rock • Ore deposits Precambrian Time • Precambrian Fossils – Stromatolites • Calcium carbonate deposited by algae • Indirect evidence of algae – Tiny organisms • Life 3.5 billion years ago • Most preserved in chert, a hard, dense chemical sedimentary rock – Prokaryotes found (blue-green algae & bacteria) • Southern Africa—3.1 billion years • Lake Superior—1.7 billion years Precambrian Time – Eukaryotes found (green algae) • Bitter Springs, Australia—1 billion years – Plant fossils date from the middle Precambrian – Trace fossils of animals • Trails and worm holes • Fossil impressions – Animal fossils date from the late Precambrian – Diverse and multicelled organisms exist by the close of the Precambrian Paleozoic Era—Life Explodes • 570-245 million years ago • Hard parts appeared on organisms • Early Paleozoic History – Mountain building affected eastern North America—long since eroded Paleozoic Era—Life Explodes • Early Paleozoic Life: “Age of Invertebrates” • Restricted to seas – Cambrian • Trilobites – Mud-burrowing scavengers – More than 600 genera – Ordovician—shallow seas • Organisms with hard parts • Brachiopods – Adults attached to the sea floor, larvae free-swimming • Cephalopods – Mobile, highly developed mollusks; predators Paleozoic Era—Life Explodes • Late Paleozoic History – Devonian, Mississippian, Pennsylvanian, and Permian periods – Pangaea • Extreme seasons that caused one of the most dramatic biological declines in history Paleozoic Era—Life Explodes • Late Paleozoic Life – Land plants developed – Fishes continued to adapt – Devonian period: “Age of Fishes” – Lobe-finned fish evolved into amphibians – Insects – Extensive coal swamps develop Paleozoic Extinction • Climates changed because of the formation of Pangaea • 75% of amphibians disappeared • Up to 95% of marine life disappeared • 1 of 5 mass extinctions • Cause is uncertain Mesozoic Era—Age of the Dinosaurs • 245 to 66 million years ago • Mesozoic History – Much of world’s land above sea level – Breakup of Pangaea – Mountains of western North America begin forming Mesozoic Era—Age of the Dinosaurs • Mesozoic Life – Survivors of the great Paleozoic extinction – Gymnosperms became dominant – Reptiles adapt to dry climate – Reptiles have shell-covered eggs that can be laid on the land – One group of reptiles led to the birds – Many reptile groups and other animal groups became extinct at the close of the Mesozoic Cenozoic Era—Age of Mammals • 66 million years ago to present • North America – Most was above sea level – Mountain building, volcanism, and earthquakes in the West – In the East: stable with abundant marine sedimentation; eroded Appalachians were raised by isostatic adjustments Cenozoic Era—Age of Mammals – Western North America • • • • Rivers erode and form gorges (Grand Canyon) Volcanic activity common Coast ranges form Sierra Nevada become fault-block mountains Cenozoic Era—Age of Mammals • Cenozoic life – Mammals replace reptiles as dominant land animals – Angiosperms dominate the plant world – Mammals evolve after the reptilian extinctions of the Mesozoic • Marsupials • Placentals Cenozoic Era—Age of Mammals – Mammals diversify rapidly and some groups become very large • Hornless rhinoceros—nearly 16 feet high • Many large animals became extinct • Humans evolve