Geologic Time Scale Notes
Geologic Time Scale Notes
Life on earth started about 44 billion years ago and humans were one of the last
organisms to evolve. We wrack our brains just trying to imagine what would have
happened a few hundred years ago. To help us comprehend the full expense of
time, scientists have turned to the rocks.
Geologists are now able to describe crucial events in life’s history- from its origin to
disastrous extinction events. There was no idea what happened in what order. To
know when and how life originated, how it looked, Geological Time Scale was
made by geologists.
3. Finally, in 1819, English geologist William Smith figured out the solution to
this problem- Fossils. Smith could match the ages of ancient organisms by
comparing their remains present in the rocks regardless of how far apart they
were. For example, Smith realized that fossils of many early species of
trilobites are found below ammonite fossils, which are in turn below certain
species of shellfish. So, anyplace in the world where we find these first
trilobites, we know that we are looking at a rock that is older than ammonites
lived.
4. Steno, Arduino and Smith, modern scientists have used these and other clues
to create what we call the Geological Time Scale or GTSGTS. The First
Geological Time Scale was published in 1913 by the British geologist Arthur
Holmes.
A. Eons
I. The Phanerozoic Eon is divided into three Eras, as, Paleozoic era, Mesozoic era
and Cenozoic era.
II. 541 million years ago the Paleozoic era came.
III. Here diversification of visible life occurred.
IV. This rapid growth and diversity in the ocean were so huge that all the eons
that came before it- Hadean, Archaean, Proterozoic are collectively known as the
Precambrian.
V. Fossil record of 25 MYA reveals the appearance of complex animals which had
shells, exoskeletons, etc.
VI. Of all these complex animals, Trilobites evolved first.
vii. The Mesozoic era is the age of reptiles, where dinosaurs, pterosaurs and a
variety of marine species evolved and many of them including dinosaurs became
extinct.
viii. Mammals, modern birds, and flowering plants also evolved during this era.
ix. 66 MYA, this Mesozoic era came to an end with another episode of
devastation and the Cenozoic era came.
x. The Cenozoic era is our era. It is the era that we are in today and marks the
rise of bmammals.
xi. By 40 million years ago, mammal’s groups like whales, bats, rodents and
primates came.
xii. But 34 MYA, the climate began to change again during which ice started to
grow at the poles taking up much of the planet’s water.
xiii. These drier conditions created a new habitat, the grassland, where ancestral
horses and antelope were hunted by the earliest cats and dogs.
xiv. 77 million years ago species of apes evolved.
xv. 2.62.6 MYA, ice expanded even more, and earth entered a glacial period
called Ice Age.
xvi. During this age, mammoth, ground sloths evolved.
xvii. Then 15000 years ago the climate started warming up.
xviii. By 11,700 years ago, modern humans inhabited nearly all the corners of
the globe.
xix. This is the era during which mammals, birds, and flowering plants are
dominant.
C. Periods- Periods in geological time scale refers to the unit which is smaller than
eras but bigger than epochs. All the eras are divided into smaller units called
periods. The Paleozoic era is divided into periods- Permian, Carboniferous,
Devonian, Silurian, Cambrian, Ordovician. All the other periods are given in the
table below.
D. Epochs- Periods are further divided into epochs like the Quaternary period of
Cenozoic era is divided into 33 epochs, i.e., Holocene, Pleistocene and Pliocene.
E. Ages- Epochs are divided into even smaller subunits called ages. It is the
smallest division of the Geological Time Scale
The
Geological
Time Scale:
Chart
Q.1. What are the 5 major divisions of geologic time?
Ans: 5 major divisions of geologic time are- eons, eras, periods, epochs, and ages.