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Cenozoic Life

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Title: Cenozoic Life


1
Cenozoic Life
www.geo.ucalgary.ca/macrae/timescale/time_scale.g
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2
Cenozoic Life History
  • The Cenozoic was the time during which
  • Earths present-day fauna and flora evolved
  • trends established millions of years earlier
    continued
  • Fewer skull and jaw bones during the transition
  • from fish to amphibians
  • and then to reptiles
  • and finally to mammals

3
Good Fossil Records
  • Cenozoic rocks are especially common
  • in western North America
  • also found along the Gulf and Atlantic coasts
  • horses, rhinoceroses, rodents, rabbits, and
    camels have very good fossil records

4
Changing Climatic Patterns
  • Changing climatic patterns
  • accompanied by shifting plant distributions
    characterize the Tertiary
  • During the Paleocene and Eocene
  • mean annual temperatures were high
  • abundant precipitation fell
  • tropical to semitropical forests covered much of
    North America

5
Leaf Structure
  • Leaf structure can give information about
  • Paleoprecipitation
  • Paleotemperature
  • Precipitation drip tips
  • Reduces fungal infections
  • Reduces parasitic plant infections
  • Temperature degree of leaf serration
  • Correlation between big smooth leaves (entire
    margin) and warm climates
  • Not clear why

6
Plant leaves as Climatic Indicators
  • Climatic trends for four areas in North America
  • based on the percentages of plant species with
    entire margin leaves

7
Major Climatic Change
  • A major climatic change took place at the end of
    the Eocene
  • when mean annual temperatures dropped 7 degrees C
    in 3 million years

8
Climatic Change
  • Since the Oligocene
  • mean annual temperatures have varied somewhat
    worldwide
  • overall have not changed much in the middle
    latitudes except during the Pleistocene

9
Decrease in Precipitation
  • A general decrease in precipitation
  • over the last 25 million years
  • in the midcontinent region of North America
  • As the climate became drier vast forests of the
    Oligocene
  • gave way first to savanna conditions
  • grasslands with scattered trees
  • and finally to steppe environments
  • short-grass prairie of the desert margin

10
Mammal Diversification
  • With the demise of dinosaurs and their relatives
  • mammals adaptively radiated
  • remarkable diversification continued throughout
    the Cenozoic Era
  • The Age of Mammals had begun

11
Marsupial Mammals
  • Marsupial mammals give birth to live young
  • born in a very immature, almost embryonic
    condition
  • undergo further development in the mother's pouch
  • Marsupials probably migrated to Australia,
  • the only area in which they are common today,
  • via Antarctica before Pangaea fragmented
    completely

12
South American Marsupials
  • Quite widespread in South America until a few
    millions of years ago
  • Most South American marsupials died out
  • when a land connection was established between
    the Americas
  • and placental mammals migrated south
  • Now the only marsupials
  • outside Australia and some nearby islands are
    species of opossums

13
Placenta
  • Like marsupials, placental mammals give birth to
    live young,
  • but their reproductive method
  • differs in important details
  • In placentals, the amnion of the amniote
  • has fused with the walls of the uterus
  • forming a placenta

14
Marsupial Placenta Less Efficient
  • Nutrients and oxygen flow
  • from mother to embryo through the placenta
  • permitting the young to develop much more fully
    before birth
  • marsupials also have a placenta
  • but it is less efficient
  • explaining why their newborn are not as fully
    developed

15
Success of Placental Mammals
  • A measure of the success of placental mammals
  • is partially related to their method of
    reproduction
  • More than 90 of all mammals
  • fossil and extinct, are placentals

16
Fossil Record of Horses
  • With the possible exception of camels,
  • no group of mammals has a better fossil record
  • horse fossils are so common,
  • especially in North America
  • where most of their evolution took place
  • that their overall history and evolutionary
    trends are quite well known

17
Horse Evolution
  • Some evolutionary trends in horses
  • an increase in size
  • lengthening of the limbs
  • reduction in the number of toes
  • development of high-crowned teeth with complex
    chewing surfaces

18
Trends in Horses
  • Size increase
  • Legs and feet become longer for running
  • Lateral toes reduced to vestiges
  • Straightening and stiffening of the back
  • Adaptations for grinding abrasive grasses
  • Larger, more complex brain

19
Horse Evolution Branched
  • Horse evolution proceeded along two distinct
    branches
  • One led to three-toed browsing horses
  • all now extinct
  • The other led to three-toed grazing horses
  • and finally to one-toed grazers
  • The appearance of grazing horses
  • with high-crowned chewing teeth
  • coincided with the evolution and spread of
    grasses during the Miocene

20
Low- and High-Crowned Teeth
  • Once grasses had evolved
  • many hoofed mammals became grazers
  • developed high-crowned, abrasion-resistant teeth
  • Low-crowned teeth
  • typical of many mammals with varied diets
  • High-crowned, cement-covered chewing teeth
  • are adapted for grazing

21
Mammals of the Ice Age
  • The most remarkable aspect
  • of the Pleistocene mammalian fauna
  • is that so many very large species existed
  • Mastodons, mammoths, giant bison,
  • huge ground sloths, immense camels, beavers 2 m
    tall
  • present in North America

22
Cooler ConditionsLarger Sizes
  • Many smaller mammal species also existed
  • but obvious trend among Pleistocene mammals was
    large body size
  • Perhaps this was an adaptation
  • to the cooler conditions
  • Large animals have less surface area
  • compared to their volume
  • thus retain heat more effectively than do smaller
    animals
  • (but what about big dinosaurs?)

23
Frozen Mammals
  • Some of the world's best-known fossils
  • come from Pleistocene deposits
  • frozen mammals found in Siberia and Alaska,
  • such as mammoths, bison, and a few others
  • These extraordinary fossils,
  • although very rare,
  • provide much more information than most fossils do

24
Frozen Baby Mammoth
  • Frozen baby mammoth found
  • in Siberia in 1971
  • 1.15 m long and 1.0 m tall
  • had a hairy coat
  • Recovered from permafrost

25
Pleistocene Extinctions
  • Extinctions have occurred continually
  • at times of mass extinctions, Earth's biotic
    diversity sharply declined
  • as at the ends of the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras
  • In marked contrast,
  • the Pleistocene extinctions were rather modest
  • did have a profound effect on genera of large
    terrestrial mammals

26
Extinctions
  • (1) What caused these extinctions?
  • (2) Why did these extinctions eliminate mostly
    large mammals?
  • (3) Why were extinctions more severe in Australia
    and the Americas?
  • No completely satisfactory explanation exists
  • but two competing hypotheses are currently being
    debated

27
Extinction Hypotheses
  • Rapid climatic changes at the end of the
    Pleistocene
  • Prehistoric overkill
  • holds that human hunters were responsible

28
Climate and Vegetation Changes
  • Rapid changes in climate and vegetation
  • occurred over much of Earth's surface during the
    Late Pleistocene
  • as glaciers began retreating
  • In North America and northern Eurasia
  • conifer and broadleaf forests replaced
    open-steppe tundras
  • warmer and wetter conditions prevailed

29
Climate and Vegetation Changes
  • The southwestern U.S. region changed
  • from a moist area with numerous lakes
  • where saber-toothed cats, giant ground sloths,
    and mammoths roamed
  • to a semiarid environment unable to support a
    diverse large mammalian fauna

30
Why Didn't Large Mammals Migrate?
  • Rapid changes in climate and vegetation
  • can certainly affect animal populations
  • but the climate hypothesis presents several
    problems
  • First, why didn't the large mammals migrate to
    more suitable habitats as the climate and
    vegetation changed?
  • many other animal species did

31
Mammal Migration in Europe
  • For example, reindeer and the Arctic fox
  • lived in southern France during the last
    glaciation
  • migrated to the Arctic when the climate became
    warmer

32
Argument Against the Climatic Hypothesis
  • The second argument against the climatic
    hypothesis
  • is the lack of correlation between extinctions
    and the earlier glacial advances and retreats
    throughout the Pleistocene Epoch
  • Previous changes in climate
  • were not marked by episodes of mass extinctions

33
Arrival of Humans
  • Proponents of the prehistoric overkill hypothesis
  • argue that the mass extinctions in North and
    South America and Australia coincided closely
    with the arrival of humans
  • Perhaps hunters had a tremendous impact
  • on the faunas of North and South America
  • about 11,000 years ago because the animals had no
    previous experience with humans

34
Arrival of Humans
  • The same thing happened much earlier in
    Australia soon after people arrived about 40,000
    years ago
  • No large-scale extinctions in Africa and most of
    Europe
  • because animals in those regions had long been
    familiar with humans

35
Extinctions on Oceanic Islands
  • How could a few hunters decimate so many
    species of large mammals?
  • Humans have caused major extinctions on oceanic
    islands
  • in a period of about 600 years after arriving in
    New Zealand, humans exterminated several species
    of the large, flightless birds called moas

36
Hunters Concentrate on Small Animals
  • A problem is that present-day hunters concentrate
    on smaller, abundant, and less dangerous animals
  • remains of horses, reindeer, and other small
    animals are found in many prehistoric sites in
    Europe
  • whereas mammoth and woolly rhinoceros remains are
    scarce

37
Other Arguments
  • Few human artifacts are found among the remains
    of extinct animals in North and South America
  • and there is usually little evidence that the
    animals were hunted
  • Countering this argument
  • is the assertion that the impact on the
    previously unhunted fauna
  • was so swift as to leave little evidence

38
Multiple Reasons
  • The reason for the extinctions
  • of large Pleistocene mammals is still unresolved
  • It may turn out that the extinctions
  • resulted from a combination of different
    circumstances
  • Populations that were already under stress from
    climatic changes
  • were perhaps more vulnerable to hunting
  • especially if smaller females and young animals
    were the preferred targets

39
How do we know we had ice ages?
  • Geologic evidence
  • Moraines
  • Poorly sorted sediments
  • Scratched rocks

40
Moraines
  • Most important glacial deposits
  • chaotic mixtures of poorly sorted sediment
    deposited directly by glacial ice
  • An end moraine is deposited
  • when a glaciers terminus remains stationary for
    some time

Mt. Cook, 1999
41
Recessional Moraine
  • If the glaciers terminus
  • should recede and then stabilize once again
  • another end moraine forms
  • known as a recessional moraine

42
Glacial Features
  • Features seen in areas once covered by glaciers
  • glacial polish
  • the sheen
  • striations
  • scratches?

Devils Postpile National Monument, California
43
Glacial Sediment
  • Glaciers typically deposit poorly sorted
    nonstratified sediment

44
How do we know how cold it got?
  • Isotopes of oxygen!
  • Oxygen
  • All isotopes have 8 protons
  • Most common isotope has 8 neutrons
  • Extremely rare 9 neutrons
  • Rare but detectable 10 neutrons
  • (why are 10 and 8 more common than 9?)

45
Oxygen Isotope Ratio
18O
16O
16O
http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ctl/about.html
18O
46
Oxygen Isotope Ratio
16O
18O
16O
http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ctl/about.html
18O
47
Oxygen Isotope Ratio
16O
18O
16O
http//www.ngdc.noaa.gov/paleo/ctl/about.html
18O
48
Onset of the Ice Age
Cenozoic Glaciations
49
Why the Icehouse?
  • Long-term climate drivers
  • Plate tectonics
  • Opening/closing of seaways
  • Ocean currents are our heat and AC
  • Uplift and erosion of mountains
  • Weathering reduces atmospheric CO2
  • Life catastrophic evolution of new capabilities
  • O2
  • Astronomical drivers
  • Other bodies (moon, sun) pull on the Earth,
    changing its distance to the sun

50
Milutin Milankovic
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