Timeline of natural history

This timeline of natural history summarizes significant cosmological, geological and biological events from the formation of the Universe to the rise of modern humans.

Contents

Formation of the Universe

The earliest Solar System

In the earliest solar system history, the sun, the planetesimals and the jovian planets were formed. The inner solar system aggregated slower than the outer, so the terrestrial planets were not yet formed, including Earth and Moon.

Hadean Eon

Archaean Eon

Eoarchaean

Paleoarchaean

Mesoarchaean

Neoarchaean

Proterozoic Eon

Paleoproterozoic

Mesoproterozoic

Neoproterozoic

Phanerozoic Eon

Paleozoic

Mesozoic

Cenozoic

Etymology of period names

Period Started Root word Meaning Reason for name
Siderian 2500 Ma Greek sidēros iron ref. the banded iron formations
Rhyacian 2300 Ma Gk. rhyax lava flow much lava flowed
Orosirian 2050 Ma Gk. oroseira mountain range much orogeny in this period's latter half
Statherian 1800 Ma Gk. statheros steady continents became stable cratons
Calymmian 1600 Ma Gk. calymma cover platform covers developed or expanded
Ectasian 1400 Ma Gk. ectasis stretch platform covers expanded
Stenian 1200 Ma Gk. stenos narrow much orogeny, which survives as narrow metamorphic belts
Tonian 1000 Ma Gk. tonos stretch The continental crust stretched as Rodinia broke up
Cryogenian 850 Ma Gk. cryogenicos cold-making In this period all the Earth froze over
Ediacaran 635 Ma Ediacara Hills place in Australia where the Ediacaran biota fossils were found
Cambrian 542 Ma Latin Cambria Wales ref. to the place in Great Britain where Cambrian rocks are best exposed
Ordovician 488 Ma Celtic Ordovices Tribe in north Wales, where the rocks were first identified
Silurian 444 Ma Ctc. Silures Tribe in south Wales, where the rocks were first identified
Devonian 416 Ma Devon County in England in which rocks from this period were first identified
Carboniferous 359 Ma Lt. carbo coal Global coal beds were laid in this period
Permian 299 Ma Perm Krai Region in Russia where rocks from this period were first identified
Triassic 250 Ma Lt. trias triad In Germany this period forms three distinct layers
Jurassic 200 Ma Jura Mountains Mountain range in the Alps in which rocks from this period were first identified
Cretaceous 146 Ma Lt. creta chalk More chalk formed in this period than any other
Paleogene 65 Ma Gk. palaiogenos "ancient born"
Neogene 23 Ma Gk. neogenos "new born"
Quaternary 2.6 Ma Lt. quaternarius "fourth" This was initially deemed the "fourth" period after the now-obsolete "primary", "secondary" and "tertiary" periods.

References

  1. ^ Amelin,Yuri, Alexander N. Krot, Ian D. Hutcheon, & Alexander A. Ulyanov (Sept 2002), "Lead Isotopic Ages of Chondrules and Calcium-Aluminum-Rich Inclusions" (Science, 6 September 2002: Vol. 297. no. 5587, pp. 1678 - 1683)
  2. ^ According to isotopicAges, the Ca-Al-I's (= Ca-Al-rich inclusions) here formed in a proplyd (= protoplanetary disk]).
  3. ^ Taylor, G. Jeffrey (2006), "Wandering Gas Giants and Lunar Bombardment: Outward migration of Saturn might have triggered a dramatic increase in the bombardment rate on the Moon 3.9 billion years ago, an idea testable with lunar samples" [1]
  4. ^ Mojzis, S, et al. (1996), Evidence for Life on Earth before 3800 million years ago", (Nature, 384)
  5. ^ a b c d Eriksson, P.G.; Catuneanu, Octavian; Nelson, D.R.; Mueller, W.U.; Altermann, Wladyslaw (2004), "Towards a Synthesis (Chapter 5)", in Eriksson, P.G.; Altermann, Wladyslaw; Nelson, D.R. et al., The Precambrian Earth: Tempos and Events, Developments in Precambrian Geology 12, Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier, pp. 739–769, ISBN 978-0-444-51506-3 
  6. ^ Brocks et al. (1999), "Archaean molecular fossils and the early rise of eukaryotes", (Science 285)
  7. ^ Canfield, D (1999), "A Breath of Fresh Air" (Nature 400)
  8. ^ Rye, E. and Holland, H. (1998), "Paleosols and the evolution of atmospheric oxygen", (Amer. Journ. of Science, 289)
  9. ^ Cowan, G (1976), A natural fission reactor (Scientific American, 235)

See also