Life on earth through time

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Life on earth through time

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Life on earth through time. Let’s start at the beginning. How did the solar system (and earth) form from a rotating cloud of dust, particles and gases?. 4.6 By. Half-a-billion years later. Lava plains and moon craters date back to ~3.9 By How did the moon form?. Life, maybe. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Life on earth through time

Page 1: Life on earth through time

Life on earth through time

Page 2: Life on earth through time

Let’s start at the beginning...

• How did the solar system (and earth) form from a rotating cloud of dust, particles and gases?

4.6 By

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Half-a-billion years later...• Lava plains and

moon craters date back to ~3.9 By

• How did the moon form?

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Life, maybe• Marine sediment by

3.8 By; evidence for liquid water on earth

• Oldest fossil in 3.5 By old rocks in Western Australia

• Debate continues… is this really evidence for life at 3.5 By?

3500 Ma

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Cyanobacteria

• Suggested to be an early form of cyanobacteria

• Stromatolites- layers formed by webs of filimentous cyanobacteria

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Prokaryotes to Eukaryotes

• About a billion years of evolution gave us membrane-bound organelles

• Endosymbiotic theory

2100 Ma

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O2 rich atmosphere• Photoautotrophs:

– 6 CO2 + 6 H2O-> C6H12O6 +6 O2

• Oxygenated atmosphere by 1.8 Ba• Aerobic organisms- use O2 to

covert food to energy is favorable relative to fermentation

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Complex multi-cellular life• See a surge in

diversity of multi-cellular life ~600 My…

• Improvement in fossil record

• First chordates

600 Ma

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Phanerozoic

• Apparent life

• Rich fossil record starts in middle age of the earth

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Early fish

• Appear in upper Cambrian (550 Ma)• Jawless, cartilagenous and eventually the

bony fishes• Importance of the bony lineage

440 Ma

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Land plants• A progression from

marine algae to freshwater algae to green algae

• Vascular land plants- have the ability to transport water and nutrients within plant

430 Ma

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Trees• What are the

benefits of a woody trunk?

• With plants and trees well established, what is next?

370 Ma

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Amphibians• Land dwellers• Return to water to lay eggs and for larvae to mature• Adaptations: 3-chambered heart, limbs and girdle

bones, sturdy but flexible spinal column, ear structure

360 Ma

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Insects• First insects were

wingless• Wings appear in

late Carboniferous• Extensive

radiation before the Permian

300 Ma

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Reptiles• Reproduce

without returning to water– Enclosed eggs– Pass through

larval stage– Born in essentially

adult form

290 Ma

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Dinosaurs• Dinosaurs: started off small with

light build (225 Ma)• Large carnivores Jurassic and

Cretaceous• Were they cold or warm-blooded?

– Vascular development of bones– Relation to birds

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210 Ma

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Early Mammals

• Tiny shrew-like creatures• Reliable temperature control• Co-existing with Dinosaurs through

Mesozoic

210 Ma

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Birds• Poor fossil record• Archaeopteryx: the

perfect evolutionary link between theropods and modern birds– Feathers on a reptile– Jaw bone with teeth– Wings retained claws

150 Ma

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IMPACT!

65 Ma

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K-T boundary• Bolide ~10 km in diameter crashed

into Earth sending up dust, ejecta into the atmosphere

• Cloud blocked sunlight and led to the demise of plants, base of food chain

• Marine and terrestrial animals perished

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Whales• From land to sea• Descendents of

carnivorous land mammals, the earliest of whom could walk and swim

• With increasing size, lost limbs

• Adapted feeding strategy

50 Ma

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Primates• Grasping, mobile

hand• Overlapping field

of vision• By 34 Ma-

anthropoids (apes, monkeys, humans)

34 Ma

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Genus Homo• 2.4 Ma: Homo

habilis• 1.8 Ma: Homo

erectus• Increased cranial

capacity; sloped forehead, jutting jaw, robust teeth

2.4 Ma

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Homo sapiens neaderthalensis• Heavy brow ridges,

chinless jaws, large brain cavity, short limbs, bulky torso

• Hunted, used fire for warmth, light, cooking, constructed shelters from the skins

• 34,000 yrs-replaced by Homo sapiens sapiens

320 ky

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K-T boundary

Permo-Triassic boundary

Mass Extinctions

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“Mother of all extinctions”• Late Permian: 90% of all marine species

lost or reduced; tropical marine invertebrates hardest hit

• On land, spore bearing ferns gave way to conifers, ginkoes and gymnosperms

• Amphibians, reptiles lost• Causes: Configuration of the continents,

loss of epeiric seas, ice on poles, volcanic activity

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• Late Ordivician (440 My) and late Devonian ME’s triggered by global cooling with the growth of the ice caps- due to compressed biomes, lowered sea level

• Impacted: marine invertebrates• Late Devonian: again cooling- reefs

communities hit hardest

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The influence of tectonics on climate

• Position of continents dictates:– Ocean circulation and heat transport– Sea level (freeboard)- Pangaea– Ability to form ice caps

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Example: Miocene grasslands and horse evolution

• Closure of Tethys (~35 Ma) with collision of Africa and Eurasia

• Cooling & drying with loss of forests, expansion of grasses

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Horse adaptations• Horses in Eocene (50

Ma): small, 4 toed, fed on shrubs and foliage

• Grasses expanded• Horses in Miocene

– Higher crowned teeth– Fewer toes– Bigger, stronger, faster

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Organisms effect on the environment?

• Examples: – Photosynthesis– Spread of land plants– Nutrient cycling

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The marine N cycle• Nitrogen is an essential nutrient the limiting nutrient• When there is more available

nitrogen in a useful form, primary productivity is higher, CO2 removed from atmosphere

“The biological pump”

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Sedimentary 15N• Use stable

isotopes of N to identify relative inputs/outputs in ocean in past

• Sediment and microfossil samples

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Peru-Chile Margin

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Goals• Changes in productivity through

time• Variability in denitrification (the

removal of nitrate) in the Eastern Tropical North Pacific

• Understanding the role of the N-cycle in glacial-interglacial CO2 cycles