History of Life
History of Life
History of Life
The origin of life, followed by a whirlwind tour of the past 4.6 billion years of history. Starting from the beginning, as it is currently thought of: the Universe came into being about 15 billion years ago, with the sudden appearance of all the matter and energy in the Universe as a single very hot and dense point: the Big Bang. How this happened, and what came before, is a matter of complete speculation. Our history began then, and we have no scientific evidence of anything before then.
Geological Ages
1.
We can divide the history of life on Earth into six main stages:
Hadean Era: from the formation of the Earth about 4.6 billion years ago until about 4 billion years ago. The Earths surface is constantly bombarded by large objects which repeatedly melt the whole surface, making life impossible. Archean Era: from 4 to 2 billion years ago (very roughly). Origin of life, all life is single celled bacteria. No oxygen in the atmosphere. Proterozoic Era. 2 billion until 550 million years ago. Oxygen appears in the atmosphere and builds to approximately the present level of 21%. Eukaryotes appear. No hard parts: bone, teeth, shells, so very few fossils.
the first three eras are collectively called the Pre-Cambrian era
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Paleozoic Era. 550 to 250 million years ago. Fossils appear, complex multicellular organisms, invasion of the land by plants and animals. Mesozoic Era. 250 to 65 million years ago. Appearance of mammals and flowering plants, but the land is dominated by dinosaurs (reptiles). Cenozoic Era. 65 million years ago until present. Land dominated by mammals and flowering plants.
Origin of Life
We dont know how life originated. Probably arose on Earth, but an alternate theory suggests it arose elsewhere and drifted through space to seed the Earth. Note that it still had to originate somewhere. What does life need? A way of harnessing energy to do useful work, a way of storing and reproducing genetic information, a way to keep the inside separated from the outside. Which of these arose first is a matter of debate. Inheritance first or metabolism first? Or both simultaneously? However, once a genetic system is in place, natural selection will quickly improve the new life form.
Some Theories
Darwin thought life originated in a warm little pond. However, since his time we know that life can exist in a much larger range of environments, and many theories now focus on high temperature and pressure environments such as a the bottom of the ocean or deep underground. The RNA World: a theory that puts genetics at the center. Iron-sulfur world: puts metabolism first Clay minerals: life started as self-reproducing clay crystals
RNA World
One possible solution to needing both DNA to store genetic information and proteins to carry out activities is to use RNA for both. RNA can store information, and it can act as an enzyme. Perhaps there was a stage in the development of life with nothing but self-replicating RNA molecules. Proteins, DNA, and cell membranes added later in this scenario. No real evidence for it, but RNA works as an enzyme in some of the most basic life processes, such as making proteins.
Iron-Sulfur World
A metabolism first scenario involves naturally occurring iron sulfide (also called pyrite) crystals. These crystals can catalyze both oxidation-reduction reactions (producing energy) and polymerizations of amino acids. Works especially well at high temperatures and pressures, such as are found in deep ocean vents called black smokers. Very small pores in the rocks make good chambers that take the place of membranes. An active self-sustaining metabolic system in the absence of inheritance. Some nucleic acids randomly polymerized by the Fe-S crystals eventually colonized the pores and had the property of self-replication.
Edicarian Life
Also known as Vendian. A period late in the Proterozoic era, just before the Cambrian explosion. A worldwide proliferation of multicellular organisms whose form seems unlike anything alive after this period Flat, segmented. Maybe ancestral to jellyfish? Or soft-bodied arthropods? Or an extinct kingdom of life? Few or none survived into the Paleozoic era.
Snowball Earth
A theory, not accepted by all scientists: Near the end of the Proterozoic era, 550 million years ago, the Earth suffered a massive Ice Age. Glaciers covered all, or nearly all, the Earth, including tropical areas. The freeze lasted several million years. Ice reflects sunlight, keeping the Earth cold. It ended due to the greenhouse effect: carbon dioxide from volcanoes built up in the atmosphere, trapping the Suns warmth and slowly raising the Earths temperature. This caused a mass extinction, possibly killing off most Edicarian forms and leading to the Cambrian explosion of new life forms. Its still just a theory. Many dont believe it. But, it points out that conditions on Earth were much less stable and pleasant than they are now.
Cambrian Life
One prominent type: trilobites, which are extinct ancestors to the crustaceans and insects. Another: nautiloids: molluscs with straight shells that later curled into the nautilus.
Paleozoic Era
The Paleozoic starts with the Cambrian explosion around 540 million years ago, and ends with the Permian Mass Extinction, about 250 million years ago. Most of Illinois is covered with sedimentary rock laid down during this period, when the area was covered by shallow seas. Large amounts of swamp vegetation from this period were converted into coal after being buried and compressed. Several mass extinctions mark boundaries of eras within the Paleozoic. Early Paleozoic dominated by marine invertebrates. Appearance and evolution of fish during the middle period of the Paleozoic. Jaws developed, then bones. Major change in vertebrates: tetrapods (animals with 4 limbs) appear in the mid-Paleozoic. First as paired fins on fish, then later as legs. Amphibians and reptiles appeared. Reptiles were not common until the next era, the Mesozoic. Life evolved in the sea, but invaded the land during the late Paleozoic era. First plants (which needed to evolve the ability to stand upright and transport nutrients against gravity), then arthropods (insects, etc.) and vertebrates. At the end of the Paleozoic, the continents were joined into a single land mass, Pangea.
Permian Extinction
Permian extinction: The largest mass extinction event in Earths history. Large lava eruptions in Siberia followed by widespread glaciers. Volcanic dust in the atmosphere lowers temperature drastically. Possibly caused by an impact? May have triggered a buildup of hydrogen sulfide (produced by bacteria) in the atmosphere that displaced most of the oxygen. May have caused the release of vast quantities of methane from methane hydrate deposits on the ocean bottom. This greenhouse gas might have raised the Earths temperature enough to kill most life. 95% of all species die out.
Mesozoic Era
Lasted from 250 million years ago until 65 million years ago, ending with an asteroid impact in the Yucatan peninsula of Mexico. Age of the dinosaurs, reptiles that were the largest animals on land and in the sea during this period. Also major diversification of flowering plants late in the Mesozoic. Fragmentation of Pangea into many continents allowed speciation to occur in many different habitats. Birds and mammals appear but arent prominent.
Dinosaurs
Cenozoic Era
Started 65 million years ago, continues to present. Mammals become the dominant life form on land. An adaptive radiation that took advantage of the sudden loss of dinosaurs. Another large group evolves: the grasses. Adaptive radiation of birds and flowering plants. Fishes and reptiles dont change much during the Cenozoic. Geologically, continents that had been separated started to collide: Africa with Europe, North America with South America, India with Asia
Cenozoic Life
Summary
Earth forms 4.6 billion years ago Solid surface forms 4 billion years ago Life starts (?) 3.8 billion years ago Age of Bacteria: Archaean era Oxygen atmosphere develops 2 billion years ago. Eukaryotes develop. Proterozoic era Edicarian life: 650 million years ago. First multicellular life, forms unknown today Cambrian explosion: most current life forms appear 550 million years ago Paleozoic era: 550 250 million years ago. Marine invertebrates, fishes, amphibians, invasion of the land. Coal formation. Permian mass extinction: 250 million years ago. 95% of all life dies; end of Paleozoic Mesozoic: 250-65 million years ago. Age of the dinosaurs (reptiles). Mammals, birds, and flowering plants appear Cretaceous mass extinction: asteroid hits the Earth, killing much of life, including the dinosaurs. Cenozoic era: 65 million years ago till present. Mammals dominant