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Precambrian Time

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Animals without backbones, called invertebrates, appeared toward ... Many of the life-forms scientists know about were marine, meaning they lived in the ocean. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Precambrian Time


1
Early Earth History
2
Precambrian Time
  • Precambrian time is the longest part of Earths
    history and includes the Hadean, Archean, and
    Proterozoic Eons.

2
Early Earth History
2
Precambrian Time
  • Precambrian time lasted from about 4.5 billion
    years ago to about 544 million years ago.

3
Early Earth History
2
Precambrian Time
  • Although the Precambrian was the longest interval
    of geologic time, relatively little is known
    about the organisms that lived during this time.
  • One reason is that many Precambrian rocks have
    been so deeply buried that they have been changed
    by heat and pressure.

4
Early Earth History
2
Precambrian Time
  • Most Precambrian organisms didnt have hard parts
    that otherwise would have increased their chances
    to be preserved as fossils. (JQ1).

5
Early Earth History
2
Early Life
  • Many studies of the early history of life involve
    ancient stromatolites.
  • Stromatolites are layered mats formed by
    cyanobacteria colonies.

6
Early Earth History
2
Early Life
  • Cyanobactreia are blue-green algae thought to be
    one of the earliest forms of life on Earth. They
    contained chlorophyll and used photosynthesis
    (JQ1).
  • During photosynthesis they produced oxygen, which
    helped oxygen become a major atmospheric gas.

7
Early Earth History
2
Early Life
  • Animals without backbones, called invertebrates,
    appeared toward the end of Precambrian time.
  • Because these early invertebrates were
    soft-bodied, they werent often preserved as
    fossils. Because of this, many Precambrian
    fossils are trace fossils.

8
Early Earth History
2
Unusual Life-Forms
  • A group of animals with shapes similar to modern
    jellyfish, worms, and soft corals was living late
    in Precambrian time.
  • This group of organisms has become known as the
    Ediacaran fauna.
  • Ediacaran animals were bottom dwellers and might
    have had tough outer covering like air mattresses.

9
Early Earth History
2
The Paleozoic Era
  • An abundance of organisms with hard parts, such
    as shells, marks the beginning of the Paleozoic
    Era. Vertebrates, reptiles and amphibians also
    appeared. (JQ1).
  • The Paleozoic Era, or era of ancient life, began
    about 544 million years ago and ended about 248
    million years ago.

10
Early Earth History
2
Paleozoic Life
  • Many of the life-forms scientists know about were
    marine, meaning they lived in the ocean.
  • Trilobites were common, especially early in the
    Paleozoic.
  • Other organisms developed shells that were easily
    preserved as fossils.
  • Vertebrates, or animals with backbones, also
    evolved during this era.

11
Early Earth History
2
Paleozoic Life
  • Armored fish with jaws lived during the Devonian
    Period.
  • By the Devonian Period, forests had appeared and
    vertebrates began to adapt to land environments,
    as well.

12
Early Earth History
2
Life on Land
  • Paleontologists know that many ancient fish had
    lungs as well as gills.
  • Lungs enabled these fish to live in water with
    low oxygen levelswhen needed they could swim to
    the surface and breathe air.
  • One kind of ancient fish had lungs and leglike
    fins, which were used to swim and crawl around on
    the ocean bottom.

13
Early Earth History
2
Life on Land
  • Paleontologists hypothesize that amphibians might
    have evolved from this kind of fish.

14
Early Earth History
2
Life on Land
  • Today amphibians live in a variety of habitats in
    water and on land.
  • They all have at least one thing in common,
    though. They must lay their eggs in water or
    moist places.

15
Early Earth History
2
Life on Land
  • By the Pennsylvanian Period, some amphibians
    evolved an egg with a membrane that protected it
    from drying out.
  • These animals, called reptiles, no longer needed
    to lay eggs in water.
  • Reptiles also have skin with hard scales that
    prevent loss of body fluids.
  • This adaptation enables them to survive farther
    from water in relatively dry climates.

16
Early Earth History
2
Mountain Building
  • Several mountain-building episodes occurred
    during the Paleozoic Era.
  • The Appalachian Mountains, for example, formed
    during this time.

17
Early Earth History
2
Mountain Building
  • The first mountain-building episode occurred as
    the ocean separating North America from Europe
    and Africa closed.
  • Several volcanic island chains that had formed in
    the ocean collided with the North American Plate.
  • The collision of the island chains generated high
    mountains.

18
Early Earth History
2
Mountain Building
  • The next mountain-building episode was a result
    of the African Plate colliding with the North
    American Plate.
  • When Africa and North America collided, rock
    layers were folded and faulted.
  • Sediments were uplifted to form an immense
    mountain belt, part of which still remains today.

19
Early Earth History
2
End of an Era
  • At the end of the Paleozoic Era, more than 90
    percent of all marine species, and 70 percent of
    all land species died off.

20
Early Earth History
2
End of an Era
  • Near the end of the Permian Period, the
    continental plates came together and formed the
    supercontinent Pangaea.
  • Mountain-building processes caused seas to close
    and deserts to spread over North America and
    Europe.
  • Many species, especially marine organisms,
    couldnt adapt to these changes, and became
    extinct. (JQ2).

21
Early Earth History
2
Other Hypotheses
  • During the late Paleozoic Era, volcanoes were
    extremely active. If the volcanic activity was
    great enough, it could have affected the entire
    globe.
  • Perhaps a large asteroid or comet collided with
    Earth some 248 million years ago.
  • Perhaps the extinction was caused by several or
    all of these events happening at about the same
    time.
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