The Paleozoic Era! Time for BIG changes!. Geologists divided the later strata into 3 major groups...

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The Paleozoic Era!

Time for BIG changes!

Geologists divided the later strata into 3 major groups

Paleozoic Era

Mesozoic Era

Cenozoic Era

Remember this?

Ediacaran

4 billion years of Earth history!

We will explore the Paleozoic first…

Modern era

About 550 million years ago

Dinosaurs!

Ice Age

The more recent layers are subdivided into “PERIODS”

Paleozoic Era

Permian

Pennsylvanian

Mississippian

Devonian

Silurian

Ordovician

Cambrian

Ediacaran

Brachiopods, Molluscs

Bi-valves, Arthropods

Trilobites

A more diverse community is present!

The Early Paleozoic… Many new life forms with HARD SHELLS evolve…

A typical scene in the early Paleozoic Era.

Cephalopod

Trilobite

Crinoid

Brachiopod

Coral

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

From earlier animals with a “hint” of a backbone…

There evolved the first vertebrates!

By the early Cambrian…

…the first Fish swam the seas.

OrdovicianNew species continue to evolve… others become extinct…

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

SilurianNew species continue to evolve… others become extinct…

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

But…big changes are occurring!

Starting possibly as early as the later Ordovician…

(Probable SPORES have been found)

…land plants had been evolving!

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

By the middle Silurian…

Early land plants looked like this…

…but the REALLY big story is elsewhere.

By the start of the Devonian…

Near the shore, or in and along streams and coastal swamps, a major invasion is taking place…

The ocean is filled with life…

Early Devonian landscapeZ. Burian (In: Špinar & Burian, 1972);

Fossil stumps…

…and leaves…

…indicate that plant life had moved ashore!

And by the end of the Devonian…

…the first real forests grew.

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

Archaeopteris dominates

THAT produced major changes in the landscape!

Earlier vegetation lacked the root systems of present-day vegetation…

Those plants also produced little shade or leaf litter.

…plants were apparently restricted to being near water

The evolution of new types of trees lead to a richer environment, creating more organic material…

…and probably changed stream channel morphology, and altered erosion and deposition.

Braided Streams

Overwhelming amounts of eroded material

Meandering Streams

DevonianAs always, new species continue to evolve, and other species become extinct…

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

Which sometimes seems like you’re watching the same play over and over with different actors!

The first Fish evolved near the start of the Early Paleozoic…

Early Fish

…but these more minor changes are overshadowed by MAJOR developments!

Later…Armored Fish evolved! (Placoderms)

Some are small…

… Some reach AWESOME size!

I wish he’d be more careful!

Why would some fish evolve armor?

Why would they then become extinct?

And…perhaps, near those new forests…

Some fish evolve sturdy fins that may help them move through shallow water.

It proves to be a successful change

But what is this…?

This is a Fish…

They are part of a series of fossils that show the transition from a “water animal”: a fish…

…to animals that are at least partially terrestrial!

Eusthenopteron

Pandericthyes

Tiktaalik

Acanthostega

Icthyostega

The newest find: Tiktaalik!

Note Tiktaalik!

Obvious Fish!

Obvious Amphibian!

Transitional Forms

So…during the early Paleozoic…

The FIRST LAND PLANTS appear…

And at the end…a branch of fish evolve sturdy limbs and become the first AMPHIBIANS.

Hard shell animals evolve…

Trilobites, brachiopods, corals, cephalopods “rule the seas”

FISH EVOLVE…Armored fish evolve… …and then fade away.

…but before the end of the Paleozoic… new creatures evolved.

The late Paleozoic …

Amphibians had already moved ashore and taken over…

…and the first forests already existed…

In the oceans, new species continue to evolve…

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

Mississippian

PennsylvanianBut the action is NOT all in the ocean anymore!

Perm

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Miss

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…by the Pennsylvanian, a vast diversity of plant life had evolved…

Some of which now towered as much as 100 feet over the land…

the land was covered by new species of plants.

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

The Illinois Coal Forest: a great river delta where buried trees became coal.

…this is the time that great forests covered much of Illinois!

The “Tully Monster”!

It’s also the time of the Illinois State Fossil…

During the Later Paleozoic, amphibians evolved into reptiles…

With hard-shelled eggs, Reptiles were “freed” from water…

…and reptiles evolved into many different types.

This diagram shows the transitional change in the jawbones from ancient Reptiles to early Mammals.

Early Reptiles

Early Mammals

Near the end of the Paleozoic, as this evolutionary sequence continued…

…Mammal-like Reptiles appear.

Mammal-like Reptiles are reptiles with Mammal-like features.

(Obviously! : )

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

They do NOT look like “typical” reptiles.

They aren’t quite mammals, either…

…but one group WILL be!

But before this happens…

There is an enormous change: The “MOTHER of ALL EXTINCTIONS!”

For the Trilobites…

For Brachiopods…

it’s the end!

it’s never the same!

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

Sil

Ord

Cam

…almost a total wipeout!

For other groups: extinction of many species!

…and for the Mammal-Like Reptiles…

Perm

Penn

Miss

Dev

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In the later Paleozoic…

Amphibians “ruled”…for a while

Insects filled the land…

Great forests covered the land… the “Coal Age” in Illinois

Reptiles evolved from Amphibians

Mammal-like Reptiles evolved…

…and then much was lost in the

“Great Extinction” at the end of the Paleozoic.

On to…

(Watch out for Dinosaurs!)

The MESOZOIC!

Same color = same bones

Notice the transitional changes from Eusthenopteron to Ichthyostega

Eusthenopteron

Ichthyostega

…life had moved from the ocean to the land…

Remember: in the Early Paleozoic…

The first land plants had evolved…

The first insects roamed the land…

And the first amphibians were evolving…

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