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Timeline of the evolutionary history of life

The timeline of the evolutionary history of life represents the current scientific theory outlining the major events during the development of life on planet Earth. Dates in this article are consensus estimates based on scientific evidence, mainly fossils.

In biology, evolution is any change across successive generations in the heritable characteristics of biological populations. Evolutionary processes give rise to diversity at every level of biological organization, from kingdoms to species, and individual organisms and molecules, such as DNA and proteins. The similarities between all present day organisms imply a common ancestor from which all known species, living and extinct, have diverged. More than 99 percent of all species that ever lived (over five billion)[1] are estimated to be extinct.[2][3] Estimates on the number of Earth's current species range from 10 million to 14 million,[4] with about 1.2 million or 14% documented, the rest not yet described.[5] However, a 2016 report estimates an additional 1 trillion microbial species, with only 0.001% described.[6]

There has been controversy between more traditional views of steadily increasing biodiversity, and a newer view of cycles of annihilation and diversification, so that certain past times, such as the Cambrian explosion, experienced maximums of diversity followed by sharp winnowing.[7][8]

Extinction edit

 
Visual representation of the history of life on Earth as a spiral

Species go extinct constantly as environments change, as organisms compete for environmental niches, and as genetic mutation leads to the rise of new species from older ones. At long irregular intervals, Earth's biosphere suffers a catastrophic die-off, a mass extinction,[9] often comprising an accumulation of smaller extinction events over a relatively brief period.[10]

The first known mass extinction was the Great Oxidation Event 2.4 billion years ago, which killed most of the planet's obligate anaerobes. Researchers have identified five other major extinction events in Earth's history, with estimated losses below:[11]

Smaller extinction events have occurred in the periods between, with some dividing geologic time periods and epochs. The Holocene extinction event is currently under way.[12]

Factors in mass extinctions include continental drift, changes in atmospheric and marine chemistry, volcanism and other aspects of mountain formation, changes in glaciation, changes in sea level, and impact events.[10]

Detailed timeline edit

In this timeline, Ma (for megaannum) means "million years ago," ka (for kiloannum) means "thousand years ago," and ya means "years ago."

Hadean Eon edit

 
Moon

4540 Ma – 4000 Ma

Date Event
4540 Ma Planet Earth forms from the accretion disc revolving around the young Sun, perhaps preceded by formation of organic compounds necessary for life in the surrounding protoplanetary disk of cosmic dust.[13][14]
4510 Ma According to the giant-impact hypothesis, the Moon originated when Earth and the hypothesized planet Theia collided, sending into orbit myriad moonlets which eventually coalesced into our single Moon.[15][16] The Moon's gravitational pull stabilised Earth's fluctuating axis of rotation, setting up regular climatic conditions favoring abiogenesis.[17]
4404 Ma Evidence of the first liquid water on Earth which were found in the oldest known zircon crystals.[18]
4280–3770 Ma Earliest possible appearance of life on Earth.[19][20][21][22]

Archean Eon edit

 
Fragment of the Acasta Gneiss exhibited at the Museum of Natural History in Vienna
 
The cyanobacterial-algal mat, salty lake on the White Sea seaside
 
Halobacterium sp. strain NRC-1

4000 Ma – 2500 Ma

Date Event
4100 Ma Earliest possible preservation of biogenic carbon.[23][24]
4100–3800 Ma Late Heavy Bombardment (LHB): extended barrage by meteoroids impacting the inner planets. Thermal flux from widespread hydrothermal activity during the LHB may have aided abiogenesis and life's early diversification.[25] Possible remains of biotic life were found in 4.1 billion-year-old rocks in Western Australia.[26][27] Probable origin of life.
4000 Ma Formation of a greenstone belt of the Acasta Gneiss of the Slave craton in northwest Canada - the oldest known rock belt.[28]
3900–2500 Ma Cells resembling prokaryotes appear.[29] These first organisms are believed[by whom?] to have been chemoautotrophs, using carbon dioxide as a carbon source and oxidizing inorganic materials to extract energy.
3800 Ma Formation of a greenstone belt of the Isua complex in western Greenland, whose isotope frequencies suggest the presence of life.[28] The earliest evidence for life on Earth includes: 3.8 billion-year-old biogenic hematite in a banded iron formation of the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt in Canada;[30] graphite in 3.7 billion-year-old metasedimentary rocks in western Greenland;[31] and microbial mat fossils in 3.48 billion-year-old sandstone in Western Australia.[32][33]
3800–3500 Ma Last universal common ancestor (LUCA):[34][35] split between bacteria and archaea.[36]

Bacteria develop primitive photosynthesis, which at first did not produce oxygen.[37] These organisms exploit a proton gradient to generate adenosine triphosphate (ATP), a mechanism used by virtually all subsequent organisms.[38][39][40]

3000 Ma Photosynthesizing cyanobacteria using water as a reducing agent and producing oxygen as a waste product.[41] Free oxygen initially oxidizes dissolved iron in the oceans, creating iron ore. Oxygen concentration in the atmosphere slowly rises, poisoning many bacteria and eventually triggering the Great Oxygenation Event.
2800 Ma Oldest evidence for microbial life on land in the form of organic matter-rich paleosols, ephemeral ponds and alluvial sequences, some bearing microfossils.[42]

Proterozoic Eon edit

 
Detail of the eukaryote endomembrane system and its components
 
Dinoflagellate Ceratium furca
 
Blepharisma japonicum, a free-living ciliated protozoan
 
Dickinsonia costata, an iconic Ediacaran organism, displays the characteristic quilted appearance of Ediacaran enigmata.

2500 Ma – 539 Ma. Contains the Palaeoproterozoic, Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic eras.

Date Event
2500 Ma Great Oxidation Event led by cyanobacteria's oxygenic photosynthesis.[41] Commencement of plate tectonics with old marine crust dense enough to subduct.[28]
2023 Ma Formation of the Vredefort impact structure, one of the largest and oldest verified impact structures on Earth. The crater is estimated to have been between 170–300 kilometres (110–190 mi) across when it first formed.[43]
By 1850 Ma Eukaryotic cells, containing membrane-bound organelles with diverse functions, probably derived from prokaryotes engulfing each other via phagocytosis. (See Symbiogenesis and Endosymbiont). Bacterial viruses (bacteriophages) emerge before or soon after the divergence of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic lineages.[44] Red beds show an oxidising atmosphere, favouring the spread of eukaryotic life.[45][46][47]
1500 Ma Volyn biota, a collection of exceptionally well-preserved microfossils with varying morphologies.[48]
1300 Ma Earliest land fungi.[49]
By 1200 Ma Meiosis and sexual reproduction in single-celled eukaryotes, possibly even in the common ancestor of all eukaryotes[50] or in the RNA world.[51] Sexual reproduction may have increased the rate of evolution.[52]
By 1000 Ma First non-marine eukaryotes move onto land. They were photosynthetic and multicellular, indicating that plants evolved much earlier than originally thought.[53]
750 Ma Beginning of animal evolution.[54][55]
720–630 Ma Possible global glaciation[56][57] which increased the atmospheric oxygen and decreased carbon dioxide, and was either caused by land plant evolution[58] or resulted in it.[59] Opinion is divided on whether it increased or decreased biodiversity or the rate of evolution.[60][61][62]
600 Ma Accumulation of atmospheric oxygen allows the formation of an ozone layer.[63] Previous land-based life would probably have required other chemicals to attenuate ultraviolet radiation.[42]
580–542 Ma Ediacaran biota, the first large, complex aquatic multicellular organisms.[64]
580–500 Ma Cambrian explosion: most modern animal phyla appear.[65][66]
550–540 Ma Ctenophora (comb jellies),[67] Porifera (sponges),[68] Anthozoa (corals and sea anemones),[69] Ikaria wariootia (an early Bilaterian).[70]

Phanerozoic Eon edit

539 Ma – present

The Phanerozoic Eon (Greek: period of well-displayed life) marks the appearance in the fossil record of abundant, shell-forming and/or trace-making organisms. It is subdivided into three eras, the Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic, with major mass extinctions at division points.

Palaeozoic Era edit

538.8 Ma – 251.9 Ma and contains the Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous and Permian periods.

 
With only a handful of species surviving today, the Nautiloids flourished during the early Paleozoic era, from the Late Cambrian, where they constituted the main predatory animals.[71]
 
Haikouichthys, a jawless fish, is popularized as one of the earliest fishes and probably a basal chordate or a basal craniate.[72]
 
Ferns first appear in the fossil record about 360 million years ago in the late Devonian period.[73]
 
Synapsids such as Dimetrodon were the largest terrestrial vertebrates in the Permian period, 299 to 251 million years ago.
Date Event
535 Ma Major diversification of living things in the oceans: arthropods (e.g. trilobites, crustaceans), chordates, echinoderms, molluscs, brachiopods, foraminifers and radiolarians, etc.
530 Ma The first known footprints on land date to 530 Ma.[74]
520 Ma Earliest graptolites.[75]
511 Ma Earliest crustaceans.[76]
505 Ma Fossilization of the Burgess Shale
500 Ma Jellyfish have existed since at least this time.
485 Ma First vertebrates with true bones (jawless fishes).
450 Ma First complete conodonts and echinoids appear.
440 Ma First agnathan fishes: Heterostraci, Galeaspida, and Pituriaspida.
420 Ma Earliest ray-finned fishes, trigonotarbid arachnids, and land scorpions.[77]
410 Ma First signs of teeth in fish. Earliest Nautilida, lycophytes, and trimerophytes.
488–400 Ma First cephalopods (nautiloids)[78] and chitons.[79]
395 Ma First lichens, stoneworts. Earliest harvestmen, mites, hexapods (springtails) and ammonoids. The earliest known tracks on land named the Zachelmie trackways which are possibly related to icthyostegalians.[80]
375 Ma Tiktaalik, a lobe-finned fish with some anatomical features similar to early tetrapods. It has been suggested to be a transitional species between fish and tetrapods.[81]
365 Ma Acanthostega is one of the earliest vertebrates capable of walking.[82]
363 Ma By the start of the Carboniferous Period, the Earth begins to resemble its present state. Insects roamed the land and would soon take to the skies; sharks swam the oceans as top predators,[83] and vegetation covered the land, with seed-bearing plants and forests soon to flourish.

Four-limbed tetrapods gradually gain adaptations which will help them occupy a terrestrial life-habit.

360 Ma First crabs and ferns. Land flora dominated by seed ferns. The Xinhang forest grows around this time.[84]
350 Ma First large sharks, ratfishes, and hagfish; first crown tetrapods (with five digits and no fins and scales).
350 Ma Diversification of amphibians.[85]
325-335 Ma First Reptiliomorpha.[86]
330-320 Ma First amniote vertebrates (Paleothyris).[87]
320 Ma Synapsids (precursors to mammals) separate from sauropsids (reptiles) in late Carboniferous.[88]
305 Ma The Carboniferous rainforest collapse occurs, causing a minor extinction event, as well as paving the way for amniotes to become dominant over amphibians and seed plants over ferns and lycophytes.

First diapsid reptiles (e.g. Petrolacosaurus).

280 Ma Earliest beetles, seed plants and conifers diversify while lepidodendrids and sphenopsids decrease. Terrestrial temnospondyl amphibians and pelycosaurs (e.g. Dimetrodon) diversify in species.
275 Ma Therapsid synapsids separate from pelycosaur synapsids.
265 Ma Gorgonopsians appear in the fossil record.[89]
251.9–251.4 Ma The Permian–Triassic extinction event eliminates over 90-95% of marine species. Terrestrial organisms were not as seriously affected as the marine biota. This "clearing of the slate" may have led to an ensuing diversification, but life on land took 30 million years to completely recover.[90]

Mesozoic Era edit

 
Utatsusaurus is the earliest-known ichthyopterygian.
 
Plateosaurus engelhardti
 
Cycas circinalis
 
For about 150 million years, dinosaurs were the dominant land animals on Earth.

From 251.9 Ma to 66 Ma and containing the Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous periods.

Date Event
250 Ma Mesozoic marine revolution begins: increasingly well adapted and diverse predators stress sessile marine groups; the "balance of power" in the oceans shifts dramatically as some groups of prey adapt more rapidly and effectively than others.
250 Ma Triadobatrachus massinoti is the earliest known frog.
248 Ma Sturgeon and paddlefish (Acipenseridae) first appear.
245 Ma Earliest ichthyosaurs
240 Ma Increase in diversity of cynodonts and rhynchosaurs
225 Ma Earliest dinosaurs (prosauropods), first cardiid bivalves, diversity in cycads, bennettitaleans, and conifers. First teleost fishes. First mammals (Adelobasileus).
220 Ma Seed-producing Gymnosperm forests dominate the land; herbivores grow to huge sizes to accommodate the large guts necessary to digest the nutrient-poor plants.[citation needed] First flies and turtles (Odontochelys). First coelophysoid dinosaurs. First mammals from small-sized cynodonts, which transitioned towards a nocturnal, insectivorous, and endothermic lifestyle.
205 Ma Massive Triassic/Jurassic extinction. It wipes out all pseudosuchians except crocodylomorphs, who transitioned to an aquatic habitat, while dinosaurs took over the land and pterosaurs filled the air.
200 Ma First accepted evidence for viruses infecting eukaryotic cells (the group Geminiviridae).[91] However, viruses are still poorly understood and may have arisen before "life" itself, or may be a more recent phenomenon.

Major extinctions in terrestrial vertebrates and large amphibians. Earliest examples of armoured dinosaurs.

195 Ma First pterosaurs with specialized feeding (Dorygnathus). First sauropod dinosaurs. Diversification in small, ornithischian dinosaurs: heterodontosaurids, fabrosaurids, and scelidosaurids.
190 Ma Pliosauroids appear in the fossil record. First lepidopteran insects (Archaeolepis), hermit crabs, modern starfish, irregular echinoids, corbulid bivalves, and tubulipore bryozoans. Extensive development of sponge reefs.
176 Ma First Stegosaurian dinosaurs.
170 Ma Earliest salamanders, newts, cryptoclidids, elasmosaurid plesiosaurs, and cladotherian mammals. Sauropod dinosaurs diversify.
168 Ma First lizards.
165 Ma First rays and glycymeridid bivalves. First vampire squids.[92]
163 Ma Pterodactyloid pterosaurs first appear.[93]
161 Ma Ceratopsian dinosaurs appear in the fossil record (Yinlong) and the oldest known eutherian mammal: Juramaia.
160 Ma Multituberculate mammals (genus Rugosodon) appear in eastern China.
155 Ma First blood-sucking insects (ceratopogonids), rudist bivalves, and cheilostome bryozoans. Archaeopteryx, a possible ancestor to the birds, appears in the fossil record, along with triconodontid and symmetrodont mammals. Diversity in stegosaurian and theropod dinosaurs.
131 Ma First pine trees.
140 Ma Orb-weaver spiders appear.
135 Ma Rise of the angiosperms. Some of these flowering plants bear structures that attract insects and other animals to spread pollen; other angiosperms are pollinated by wind or water. This innovation causes a major burst of animal coevolution. First freshwater pelomedusid turtles. Earliest krill.
120 Ma Oldest fossils of heterokonts, including both marine diatoms and silicoflagellates.
115 Ma First monotreme mammals.
114 Ma Earliest bees.[94]
112 Ma Xiphactinus, a large predatory fish, appears in the fossil record.
110 Ma First hesperornithes, toothed diving birds. Earliest limopsid, verticordiid, and thyasirid bivalves.
100 Ma First ants.[95]
100–95 Ma Spinosaurus, the largest theropod dinosaur, appears in the fossil record.[96]
95 Ma First crocodilians evolve.[97]
90 Ma Extinction of ichthyosaurs. Earliest snakes and nuculanid bivalves. Large diversification in angiosperms: magnoliids, rosids, hamamelidids, monocots, and ginger. Earliest examples of ticks. Probable origins of placental mammals (earliest undisputed fossil evidence is 66 Ma).
86–76 Ma Diversification of therian mammals.[98][99]
70 Ma Multituberculate mammals increase in diversity. First yoldiid bivalves. First possible ungulates (Protungulatum).
68–66 Ma Tyrannosaurus, the largest terrestrial predator of western North America, appears in the fossil record. First species of Triceratops.[100]

Cenozoic Era edit

66 Ma – present

 
Mount of oxyaenid Patriofelis from the American Museum of Natural History
 
The bat Icaronycteris appeared 52.2 million years ago
 
Grass flowers
 
Reconstructed skeletons of flightless terror bird and ground sloth at the Museu Nacional, Rio de Janeiro
 
Diprotodon went extinct about 40,000 years ago as part of the Quaternary extinction event, along with every other Australian creature over 100 kg (220 lb).
 
50,000 years ago several different human species coexisted on Earth including modern humans and Homo floresiensis (pictured).
 
American lions exceeded extant lions in size and ranged over much of North America until 11,000 BP.
Date Event
66 Ma The Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event eradicates about half of all animal species, including mosasaurs, pterosaurs, plesiosaurs, ammonites, belemnites, rudist and inoceramid bivalves, most planktic foraminifers, and all of the dinosaurs excluding the birds.[101]
66 Ma- Rapid dominance of conifers and ginkgos in high latitudes, along with mammals becoming the dominant species. First psammobiid bivalves. Earliest rodents. Rapid diversification in ants.
63 Ma Evolution of the creodonts, an important group of meat-eating (carnivorous) mammals.
62 Ma Evolution of the first penguins.
60 Ma Diversification of large, flightless birds. Earliest true primates,[who?] along with the first semelid bivalves, edentate, carnivoran and lipotyphlan mammals, and owls. The ancestors of the carnivorous mammals (miacids) were alive.[citation needed]
59 Ma Earliest sailfish appear.
56 Ma Gastornis, a large flightless bird, appears in the fossil record.
55 Ma Modern bird groups diversify (first song birds, parrots, loons, swifts, woodpeckers), first whale (Himalayacetus), earliest lagomorphs, armadillos, appearance of sirenian, proboscidean mammals in the fossil record. Flowering plants continue to diversify. The ancestor (according to theory) of the species in the genus Carcharodon, the early mako shark Isurus hastalis, is alive. Ungulates split into artiodactyla and perissodactyla, with some members of the former returning to the sea.
52 Ma First bats appear (Onychonycteris).
50 Ma Peak diversity of dinoflagellates and nannofossils, increase in diversity of anomalodesmatan and heteroconch bivalves, brontotheres, tapirs, rhinoceroses, and camels appear in the fossil record, diversification of primates.
40 Ma Modern-type butterflies and moths appear. Extinction of Gastornis. Basilosaurus, one of the first of the giant whales, appeared in the fossil record.
38 Ma Earliest bears.
37 Ma First nimravid ("false saber-toothed cats") carnivores — these species are unrelated to modern-type felines. First alligators and ruminants.
35 Ma Grasses diversify from among the monocot angiosperms; grasslands begin to expand. Slight increase in diversity of cold-tolerant ostracods and foraminifers, along with major extinctions of gastropods, reptiles, amphibians, and multituberculate mammals. Many modern mammal groups begin to appear: first glyptodonts, ground sloths, canids, peccaries, and the first eagles and hawks. Diversity in toothed and baleen whales.
33 Ma Evolution of the thylacinid marsupials (Badjcinus).
30 Ma First balanids and eucalypts, extinction of embrithopod and brontothere mammals, earliest pigs and cats.
28 Ma Paraceratherium appears in the fossil record, the largest terrestrial mammal that ever lived. First pelicans.
25 Ma Pelagornis sandersi appears in the fossil record, the largest flying bird that ever lived.
25 Ma First deer.
24 Ma First pinnipeds.
23 Ma Earliest ostriches, trees representative of most major groups of oaks have appeared by now.[102]
20 Ma First giraffes, hyenas, and giant anteaters, increase in bird diversity.
17 Ma First birds of the genus Corvus (crows).
15 Ma Genus Mammut appears in the fossil record, first bovids and kangaroos, diversity in Australian megafauna.
10 Ma Grasslands and savannas are established, diversity in insects, especially ants and termites, horses increase in body size and develop high-crowned teeth, major diversification in grassland mammals and snakes.
9.5 Ma[dubious ] Great American Interchange, where various land and freshwater faunas migrated between North and South America. Armadillos, opossums, hummingbirds Phorusrhacids, Ground Sloths, Glyptodonts, and Meridiungulates traveled to North America, while horses, tapirs, saber-toothed cats, jaguars, bears, coaties, ferrets, otters, skunks and deer entered South America.
9 Ma First platypuses.
6.5 Ma First hominins (Sahelanthropus).
6 Ma Australopithecines diversify (Orrorin, Ardipithecus).
5 Ma First tree sloths and hippopotami, diversification of grazing herbivores like zebras and elephants, large carnivorous mammals like lions and the genus Canis, burrowing rodents, kangaroos, birds, and small carnivores, vultures increase in size, decrease in the number of perissodactyl mammals. Extinction of nimravid carnivores. First leopard seals.
4.8 Ma Mammoths appear in the fossil record.
4.5 Ma Marine iguanas diverge from land iguanas.
4 Ma Australopithecus evolves. Stupendemys appears in the fossil record as the largest freshwater turtle, first modern elephants, giraffes, zebras, lions, rhinoceros and gazelles appear in the fossil record
3.6 Ma Blue whales grow to modern size.
3 Ma Earliest swordfish.
2.7 Ma Paranthropus evolves.
2.5 Ma Earliest species of Arctodus and Smilodon evolve.
2 Ma First members of genus Homo, Homo Habilis, appear in the fossil record. Diversification of conifers in high latitudes. The eventual ancestor of cattle, aurochs (Bos primigenus), evolves in India.
1.7 Ma Australopithecines go extinct.
1.2 Ma Evolution of Homo antecessor. The last members of Paranthropus die out.
1 Ma First coyotes.
810 ka First wolves
600 ka Evolution of Homo heidelbergensis.
400 ka First polar bears.
350 ka Evolution of Neanderthals.
300 ka Gigantopithecus, a giant relative of the orangutan from Asia dies out.
250 ka Anatomically modern humans appear in Africa.[103][104][105] Around 50 ka they start colonising the other continents, replacing Neanderthals in Europe and other hominins in Asia.
70 ka Genetic bottleneck in humans (Toba catastrophe theory).
40 ka Last giant monitor lizards (Varanus priscus) die out.
35-25 ka Extinction of Neanderthals. Domestication of dogs.
15 ka Last woolly rhinoceros (Coelodonta antiquitatis) are believed to have gone extinct.
11 ka Short-faced bears vanish from North America, with the last giant ground sloths dying out. All Equidae become extinct in North America. Domestication of various ungulates.
10 ka Holocene epoch starts[106] after the Last Glacial Maximum. Last mainland species of woolly mammoth (Mammuthus primigenus) die out, as does the last Smilodon species.
8 ka The Giant Lemur dies out.

See also edit

References edit

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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • "Understanding Evolution: your one-stop resource for information on evolution". University of California, Berkeley. Retrieved 2015-03-18.
  • "Life on Earth". Tree of Life Web Project. University of Arizona. January 1, 1997. Retrieved 2015-03-18. Explore complete phylogenetic tree interactively
  • Brandt, Niel. "Evolutionary and Geological Timelines". TalkOrigins Archive. Houston, TX: The TalkOrigins Foundation, Inc. Retrieved 2015-03-18.
  • "Palaeos: Life Through Deep Time". Palaeos. Retrieved 2015-03-18.
  • Kyrk, John. "Evolution" (SWF). Cell Biology Animation. Retrieved 2015-03-18. Interactive timeline from Big Bang to present
  • "Plant Evolution". Plant and Animal Evolution. University of Waikato. Retrieved 2015-03-18. Sequence of Plant Evolution
  • "The History of Animal Evolution". Plant and Animal Evolution. University of Waikato. Retrieved 2015-03-18. Sequence of Animal Evolution
  • Yeo, Dannel; Drage, Thomas (2006). . Archived from the original on 2015-03-15. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
  • Exploring Time. The Science Channel. 2007. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
  • Roberts, Ben. . University of Cambridge. Archived from the original on 2015-03-13. Retrieved 2015-03-19.
  • Art of the Nature Timelines on Wikipedia

timeline, evolutionary, history, life, confused, with, history, evolutionary, thought, this, article, about, evolution, life, earth, more, detailed, comprehensive, coverage, history, life, been, suggested, that, portions, geologic, time, scale, table, geologic. Not to be confused with History of evolutionary thought This article is about the evolution of all life on Earth For more detailed and comprehensive coverage see History of life It has been suggested that portions of Geologic time scale Table of geologic time be split from it and merged into this article Discuss November 2023 The timeline of the evolutionary history of life represents the current scientific theory outlining the major events during the development of life on planet Earth Dates in this article are consensus estimates based on scientific evidence mainly fossils In biology evolution is any change across successive generations in the heritable characteristics of biological populations Evolutionary processes give rise to diversity at every level of biological organization from kingdoms to species and individual organisms and molecules such as DNA and proteins The similarities between all present day organisms imply a common ancestor from which all known species living and extinct have diverged More than 99 percent of all species that ever lived over five billion 1 are estimated to be extinct 2 3 Estimates on the number of Earth s current species range from 10 million to 14 million 4 with about 1 2 million or 14 documented the rest not yet described 5 However a 2016 report estimates an additional 1 trillion microbial species with only 0 001 described 6 There has been controversy between more traditional views of steadily increasing biodiversity and a newer view of cycles of annihilation and diversification so that certain past times such as the Cambrian explosion experienced maximums of diversity followed by sharp winnowing 7 8 Contents 1 Extinction 2 Detailed timeline 2 1 Hadean Eon 2 2 Archean Eon 2 3 Proterozoic Eon 2 4 Phanerozoic Eon 2 4 1 Palaeozoic Era 2 4 2 Mesozoic Era 2 4 3 Cenozoic Era 3 See also 4 References 4 1 Bibliography 5 Further reading 6 External linksExtinction editMain article Extinction event nbsp Visual representation of the history of life on Earth as a spiralSpecies go extinct constantly as environments change as organisms compete for environmental niches and as genetic mutation leads to the rise of new species from older ones At long irregular intervals Earth s biosphere suffers a catastrophic die off a mass extinction 9 often comprising an accumulation of smaller extinction events over a relatively brief period 10 The first known mass extinction was the Great Oxidation Event 2 4 billion years ago which killed most of the planet s obligate anaerobes Researchers have identified five other major extinction events in Earth s history with estimated losses below 11 End Ordovician 440 million years ago 86 of all species lost including graptolites Late Devonian 375 million years ago 75 of species lost including most trilobites End Permian The Great Dying 251 million years ago 96 of species lost including tabulate corals and most trees and synapsids End Triassic 200 million years ago 80 of species lost including all conodonts End Cretaceous 66 million years ago 76 of species lost including all ammonites mosasaurs plesiosaurs pterosaurs and nonavian dinosaursSmaller extinction events have occurred in the periods between with some dividing geologic time periods and epochs The Holocene extinction event is currently under way 12 Factors in mass extinctions include continental drift changes in atmospheric and marine chemistry volcanism and other aspects of mountain formation changes in glaciation changes in sea level and impact events 10 Detailed timeline editSee also List of bilaterian orders In this timeline Ma for megaannum means million years ago ka for kiloannum means thousand years ago and ya means years ago Hadean Eon edit nbsp MoonMain article Hadean 4540 Ma 4000 Ma Date Event4540 Ma Planet Earth forms from the accretion disc revolving around the young Sun perhaps preceded by formation of organic compounds necessary for life in the surrounding protoplanetary disk of cosmic dust 13 14 4510 Ma According to the giant impact hypothesis the Moon originated when Earth and the hypothesized planet Theia collided sending into orbit myriad moonlets which eventually coalesced into our single Moon 15 16 The Moon s gravitational pull stabilised Earth s fluctuating axis of rotation setting up regular climatic conditions favoring abiogenesis 17 4404 Ma Evidence of the first liquid water on Earth which were found in the oldest known zircon crystals 18 4280 3770 Ma Earliest possible appearance of life on Earth 19 20 21 22 Archean Eon edit Main article Archean nbsp Fragment of the Acasta Gneiss exhibited at the Museum of Natural History in Vienna nbsp The cyanobacterial algal mat salty lake on the White Sea seaside nbsp Halobacterium sp strain NRC 14000 Ma 2500 Ma Date Event4100 Ma Earliest possible preservation of biogenic carbon 23 24 4100 3800 Ma Late Heavy Bombardment LHB extended barrage by meteoroids impacting the inner planets Thermal flux from widespread hydrothermal activity during the LHB may have aided abiogenesis and life s early diversification 25 Possible remains of biotic life were found in 4 1 billion year old rocks in Western Australia 26 27 Probable origin of life 4000 Ma Formation of a greenstone belt of the Acasta Gneiss of the Slave craton in northwest Canada the oldest known rock belt 28 3900 2500 Ma Cells resembling prokaryotes appear 29 These first organisms are believed by whom to have been chemoautotrophs using carbon dioxide as a carbon source and oxidizing inorganic materials to extract energy 3800 Ma Formation of a greenstone belt of the Isua complex in western Greenland whose isotope frequencies suggest the presence of life 28 The earliest evidence for life on Earth includes 3 8 billion year old biogenic hematite in a banded iron formation of the Nuvvuagittuq Greenstone Belt in Canada 30 graphite in 3 7 billion year old metasedimentary rocks in western Greenland 31 and microbial mat fossils in 3 48 billion year old sandstone in Western Australia 32 33 3800 3500 Ma Last universal common ancestor LUCA 34 35 split between bacteria and archaea 36 Bacteria develop primitive photosynthesis which at first did not produce oxygen 37 These organisms exploit a proton gradient to generate adenosine triphosphate ATP a mechanism used by virtually all subsequent organisms 38 39 40 3000 Ma Photosynthesizing cyanobacteria using water as a reducing agent and producing oxygen as a waste product 41 Free oxygen initially oxidizes dissolved iron in the oceans creating iron ore Oxygen concentration in the atmosphere slowly rises poisoning many bacteria and eventually triggering the Great Oxygenation Event 2800 Ma Oldest evidence for microbial life on land in the form of organic matter rich paleosols ephemeral ponds and alluvial sequences some bearing microfossils 42 Proterozoic Eon edit nbsp Detail of the eukaryote endomembrane system and its components nbsp Dinoflagellate Ceratium furca nbsp Blepharisma japonicum a free living ciliated protozoan nbsp Dickinsonia costata an iconic Ediacaran organism displays the characteristic quilted appearance of Ediacaran enigmata Main article Proterozoic 2500 Ma 539 Ma Contains the Palaeoproterozoic Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic eras Date Event2500 Ma Great Oxidation Event led by cyanobacteria s oxygenic photosynthesis 41 Commencement of plate tectonics with old marine crust dense enough to subduct 28 2023 Ma Formation of the Vredefort impact structure one of the largest and oldest verified impact structures on Earth The crater is estimated to have been between 170 300 kilometres 110 190 mi across when it first formed 43 By 1850 Ma Eukaryotic cells containing membrane bound organelles with diverse functions probably derived from prokaryotes engulfing each other via phagocytosis See Symbiogenesis and Endosymbiont Bacterial viruses bacteriophages emerge before or soon after the divergence of the prokaryotic and eukaryotic lineages 44 Red beds show an oxidising atmosphere favouring the spread of eukaryotic life 45 46 47 1500 Ma Volyn biota a collection of exceptionally well preserved microfossils with varying morphologies 48 1300 Ma Earliest land fungi 49 By 1200 Ma Meiosis and sexual reproduction in single celled eukaryotes possibly even in the common ancestor of all eukaryotes 50 or in the RNA world 51 Sexual reproduction may have increased the rate of evolution 52 By 1000 Ma First non marine eukaryotes move onto land They were photosynthetic and multicellular indicating that plants evolved much earlier than originally thought 53 750 Ma Beginning of animal evolution 54 55 720 630 Ma Possible global glaciation 56 57 which increased the atmospheric oxygen and decreased carbon dioxide and was either caused by land plant evolution 58 or resulted in it 59 Opinion is divided on whether it increased or decreased biodiversity or the rate of evolution 60 61 62 600 Ma Accumulation of atmospheric oxygen allows the formation of an ozone layer 63 Previous land based life would probably have required other chemicals to attenuate ultraviolet radiation 42 580 542 Ma Ediacaran biota the first large complex aquatic multicellular organisms 64 580 500 Ma Cambrian explosion most modern animal phyla appear 65 66 550 540 Ma Ctenophora comb jellies 67 Porifera sponges 68 Anthozoa corals and sea anemones 69 Ikaria wariootia an early Bilaterian 70 Phanerozoic Eon edit Main article Phanerozoic 539 Ma presentThe Phanerozoic Eon Greek period of well displayed life marks the appearance in the fossil record of abundant shell forming and or trace making organisms It is subdivided into three eras the Paleozoic Mesozoic and Cenozoic with major mass extinctions at division points Palaeozoic Era edit Main article Paleozoic This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timeline of the evolutionary history of life news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message 538 8 Ma 251 9 Ma and contains the Cambrian Ordovician Silurian Devonian Carboniferous and Permian periods nbsp With only a handful of species surviving today the Nautiloids flourished during the early Paleozoic era from the Late Cambrian where they constituted the main predatory animals 71 nbsp Haikouichthys a jawless fish is popularized as one of the earliest fishes and probably a basal chordate or a basal craniate 72 nbsp Ferns first appear in the fossil record about 360 million years ago in the late Devonian period 73 nbsp Synapsids such as Dimetrodon were the largest terrestrial vertebrates in the Permian period 299 to 251 million years ago Date Event535 Ma Major diversification of living things in the oceans arthropods e g trilobites crustaceans chordates echinoderms molluscs brachiopods foraminifers and radiolarians etc 530 Ma The first known footprints on land date to 530 Ma 74 520 Ma Earliest graptolites 75 511 Ma Earliest crustaceans 76 505 Ma Fossilization of the Burgess Shale500 Ma Jellyfish have existed since at least this time 485 Ma First vertebrates with true bones jawless fishes 450 Ma First complete conodonts and echinoids appear 440 Ma First agnathan fishes Heterostraci Galeaspida and Pituriaspida 420 Ma Earliest ray finned fishes trigonotarbid arachnids and land scorpions 77 410 Ma First signs of teeth in fish Earliest Nautilida lycophytes and trimerophytes 488 400 Ma First cephalopods nautiloids 78 and chitons 79 395 Ma First lichens stoneworts Earliest harvestmen mites hexapods springtails and ammonoids The earliest known tracks on land named the Zachelmie trackways which are possibly related to icthyostegalians 80 375 Ma Tiktaalik a lobe finned fish with some anatomical features similar to early tetrapods It has been suggested to be a transitional species between fish and tetrapods 81 365 Ma Acanthostega is one of the earliest vertebrates capable of walking 82 363 Ma By the start of the Carboniferous Period the Earth begins to resemble its present state Insects roamed the land and would soon take to the skies sharks swam the oceans as top predators 83 and vegetation covered the land with seed bearing plants and forests soon to flourish Four limbed tetrapods gradually gain adaptations which will help them occupy a terrestrial life habit 360 Ma First crabs and ferns Land flora dominated by seed ferns The Xinhang forest grows around this time 84 350 Ma First large sharks ratfishes and hagfish first crown tetrapods with five digits and no fins and scales 350 Ma Diversification of amphibians 85 325 335 Ma First Reptiliomorpha 86 330 320 Ma First amniote vertebrates Paleothyris 87 320 Ma Synapsids precursors to mammals separate from sauropsids reptiles in late Carboniferous 88 305 Ma The Carboniferous rainforest collapse occurs causing a minor extinction event as well as paving the way for amniotes to become dominant over amphibians and seed plants over ferns and lycophytes First diapsid reptiles e g Petrolacosaurus 280 Ma Earliest beetles seed plants and conifers diversify while lepidodendrids and sphenopsids decrease Terrestrial temnospondyl amphibians and pelycosaurs e g Dimetrodon diversify in species 275 Ma Therapsid synapsids separate from pelycosaur synapsids 265 Ma Gorgonopsians appear in the fossil record 89 251 9 251 4 Ma The Permian Triassic extinction event eliminates over 90 95 of marine species Terrestrial organisms were not as seriously affected as the marine biota This clearing of the slate may have led to an ensuing diversification but life on land took 30 million years to completely recover 90 Mesozoic Era edit Main article Mesozoic This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timeline of the evolutionary history of life news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Utatsusaurus is the earliest known ichthyopterygian nbsp Plateosaurus engelhardti nbsp Cycas circinalis nbsp For about 150 million years dinosaurs were the dominant land animals on Earth From 251 9 Ma to 66 Ma and containing the Triassic Jurassic and Cretaceous periods Date Event250 Ma Mesozoic marine revolution begins increasingly well adapted and diverse predators stress sessile marine groups the balance of power in the oceans shifts dramatically as some groups of prey adapt more rapidly and effectively than others 250 Ma Triadobatrachus massinoti is the earliest known frog 248 Ma Sturgeon and paddlefish Acipenseridae first appear 245 Ma Earliest ichthyosaurs240 Ma Increase in diversity of cynodonts and rhynchosaurs225 Ma Earliest dinosaurs prosauropods first cardiid bivalves diversity in cycads bennettitaleans and conifers First teleost fishes First mammals Adelobasileus 220 Ma Seed producing Gymnosperm forests dominate the land herbivores grow to huge sizes to accommodate the large guts necessary to digest the nutrient poor plants citation needed First flies and turtles Odontochelys First coelophysoid dinosaurs First mammals from small sized cynodonts which transitioned towards a nocturnal insectivorous and endothermic lifestyle 205 Ma Massive Triassic Jurassic extinction It wipes out all pseudosuchians except crocodylomorphs who transitioned to an aquatic habitat while dinosaurs took over the land and pterosaurs filled the air 200 Ma First accepted evidence for viruses infecting eukaryotic cells the group Geminiviridae 91 However viruses are still poorly understood and may have arisen before life itself or may be a more recent phenomenon Major extinctions in terrestrial vertebrates and large amphibians Earliest examples of armoured dinosaurs 195 Ma First pterosaurs with specialized feeding Dorygnathus First sauropod dinosaurs Diversification in small ornithischian dinosaurs heterodontosaurids fabrosaurids and scelidosaurids 190 Ma Pliosauroids appear in the fossil record First lepidopteran insects Archaeolepis hermit crabs modern starfish irregular echinoids corbulid bivalves and tubulipore bryozoans Extensive development of sponge reefs 176 Ma First Stegosaurian dinosaurs 170 Ma Earliest salamanders newts cryptoclidids elasmosaurid plesiosaurs and cladotherian mammals Sauropod dinosaurs diversify 168 Ma First lizards 165 Ma First rays and glycymeridid bivalves First vampire squids 92 163 Ma Pterodactyloid pterosaurs first appear 93 161 Ma Ceratopsian dinosaurs appear in the fossil record Yinlong and the oldest known eutherian mammal Juramaia 160 Ma Multituberculate mammals genus Rugosodon appear in eastern China 155 Ma First blood sucking insects ceratopogonids rudist bivalves and cheilostome bryozoans Archaeopteryx a possible ancestor to the birds appears in the fossil record along with triconodontid and symmetrodont mammals Diversity in stegosaurian and theropod dinosaurs 131 Ma First pine trees 140 Ma Orb weaver spiders appear 135 Ma Rise of the angiosperms Some of these flowering plants bear structures that attract insects and other animals to spread pollen other angiosperms are pollinated by wind or water This innovation causes a major burst of animal coevolution First freshwater pelomedusid turtles Earliest krill 120 Ma Oldest fossils of heterokonts including both marine diatoms and silicoflagellates 115 Ma First monotreme mammals 114 Ma Earliest bees 94 112 Ma Xiphactinus a large predatory fish appears in the fossil record 110 Ma First hesperornithes toothed diving birds Earliest limopsid verticordiid and thyasirid bivalves 100 Ma First ants 95 100 95 Ma Spinosaurus the largest theropod dinosaur appears in the fossil record 96 95 Ma First crocodilians evolve 97 90 Ma Extinction of ichthyosaurs Earliest snakes and nuculanid bivalves Large diversification in angiosperms magnoliids rosids hamamelidids monocots and ginger Earliest examples of ticks Probable origins of placental mammals earliest undisputed fossil evidence is 66 Ma 86 76 Ma Diversification of therian mammals 98 99 70 Ma Multituberculate mammals increase in diversity First yoldiid bivalves First possible ungulates Protungulatum 68 66 Ma Tyrannosaurus the largest terrestrial predator of western North America appears in the fossil record First species of Triceratops 100 Cenozoic Era edit Main article Cenozoic This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timeline of the evolutionary history of life news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message 66 Ma present nbsp Mount of oxyaenid Patriofelis from the American Museum of Natural History nbsp The bat Icaronycteris appeared 52 2 million years ago nbsp Grass flowers nbsp Reconstructed skeletons of flightless terror bird and ground sloth at the Museu Nacional Rio de Janeiro nbsp Diprotodon went extinct about 40 000 years ago as part of the Quaternary extinction event along with every other Australian creature over 100 kg 220 lb nbsp 50 000 years ago several different human species coexisted on Earth including modern humans and Homo floresiensis pictured nbsp American lions exceeded extant lions in size and ranged over much of North America until 11 000 BP Date Event66 Ma The Cretaceous Paleogene extinction event eradicates about half of all animal species including mosasaurs pterosaurs plesiosaurs ammonites belemnites rudist and inoceramid bivalves most planktic foraminifers and all of the dinosaurs excluding the birds 101 66 Ma Rapid dominance of conifers and ginkgos in high latitudes along with mammals becoming the dominant species First psammobiid bivalves Earliest rodents Rapid diversification in ants 63 Ma Evolution of the creodonts an important group of meat eating carnivorous mammals 62 Ma Evolution of the first penguins 60 Ma Diversification of large flightless birds Earliest true primates who along with the first semelid bivalves edentate carnivoran and lipotyphlan mammals and owls The ancestors of the carnivorous mammals miacids were alive citation needed 59 Ma Earliest sailfish appear 56 Ma Gastornis a large flightless bird appears in the fossil record 55 Ma Modern bird groups diversify first song birds parrots loons swifts woodpeckers first whale Himalayacetus earliest lagomorphs armadillos appearance of sirenian proboscidean mammals in the fossil record Flowering plants continue to diversify The ancestor according to theory of the species in the genus Carcharodon the early mako shark Isurus hastalis is alive Ungulates split into artiodactyla and perissodactyla with some members of the former returning to the sea 52 Ma First bats appear Onychonycteris 50 Ma Peak diversity of dinoflagellates and nannofossils increase in diversity of anomalodesmatan and heteroconch bivalves brontotheres tapirs rhinoceroses and camels appear in the fossil record diversification of primates 40 Ma Modern type butterflies and moths appear Extinction of Gastornis Basilosaurus one of the first of the giant whales appeared in the fossil record 38 Ma Earliest bears 37 Ma First nimravid false saber toothed cats carnivores these species are unrelated to modern type felines First alligators and ruminants 35 Ma Grasses diversify from among the monocot angiosperms grasslands begin to expand Slight increase in diversity of cold tolerant ostracods and foraminifers along with major extinctions of gastropods reptiles amphibians and multituberculate mammals Many modern mammal groups begin to appear first glyptodonts ground sloths canids peccaries and the first eagles and hawks Diversity in toothed and baleen whales 33 Ma Evolution of the thylacinid marsupials Badjcinus 30 Ma First balanids and eucalypts extinction of embrithopod and brontothere mammals earliest pigs and cats 28 Ma Paraceratherium appears in the fossil record the largest terrestrial mammal that ever lived First pelicans 25 Ma Pelagornis sandersi appears in the fossil record the largest flying bird that ever lived 25 Ma First deer 24 Ma First pinnipeds 23 Ma Earliest ostriches trees representative of most major groups of oaks have appeared by now 102 20 Ma First giraffes hyenas and giant anteaters increase in bird diversity 17 Ma First birds of the genus Corvus crows 15 Ma Genus Mammut appears in the fossil record first bovids and kangaroos diversity in Australian megafauna 10 Ma Grasslands and savannas are established diversity in insects especially ants and termites horses increase in body size and develop high crowned teeth major diversification in grassland mammals and snakes 9 5 Ma dubious discuss Great American Interchange where various land and freshwater faunas migrated between North and South America Armadillos opossums hummingbirds Phorusrhacids Ground Sloths Glyptodonts and Meridiungulates traveled to North America while horses tapirs saber toothed cats jaguars bears coaties ferrets otters skunks and deer entered South America 9 Ma First platypuses 6 5 Ma First hominins Sahelanthropus 6 Ma Australopithecines diversify Orrorin Ardipithecus 5 Ma First tree sloths and hippopotami diversification of grazing herbivores like zebras and elephants large carnivorous mammals like lions and the genus Canis burrowing rodents kangaroos birds and small carnivores vultures increase in size decrease in the number of perissodactyl mammals Extinction of nimravid carnivores First leopard seals 4 8 Ma Mammoths appear in the fossil record 4 5 Ma Marine iguanas diverge from land iguanas 4 Ma Australopithecus evolves Stupendemys appears in the fossil record as the largest freshwater turtle first modern elephants giraffes zebras lions rhinoceros and gazelles appear in the fossil record3 6 Ma Blue whales grow to modern size 3 Ma Earliest swordfish 2 7 Ma Paranthropus evolves 2 5 Ma Earliest species of Arctodus and Smilodon evolve 2 Ma First members of genus Homo Homo Habilis appear in the fossil record Diversification of conifers in high latitudes The eventual ancestor of cattle aurochs Bos primigenus evolves in India 1 7 Ma Australopithecines go extinct 1 2 Ma Evolution of Homo antecessor The last members of Paranthropus die out 1 Ma First coyotes 810 ka First wolves600 ka Evolution of Homo heidelbergensis 400 ka First polar bears 350 ka Evolution of Neanderthals 300 ka Gigantopithecus a giant relative of the orangutan from Asia dies out 250 ka Anatomically modern humans appear in Africa 103 104 105 Around 50 ka they start colonising the other continents replacing Neanderthals in Europe and other hominins in Asia 70 ka Genetic bottleneck in humans Toba catastrophe theory 40 ka Last giant monitor lizards Varanus priscus die out 35 25 ka Extinction of Neanderthals Domestication of dogs 15 ka Last woolly rhinoceros Coelodonta antiquitatis are believed to have gone extinct 11 ka Short faced bears vanish from North America with the last giant ground sloths dying out All Equidae become extinct in North America Domestication of various ungulates 10 ka Holocene epoch starts 106 after the Last Glacial Maximum Last mainland species of woolly mammoth Mammuthus primigenus die out as does the last Smilodon species 8 ka The Giant Lemur dies out See also editEvolutionary history of plants timeline Geologic time scale History of Earth Sociocultural evolution Timeline of human evolutionReferences edit McKinney 1997 p 110 Stearns Beverly Peterson Stearns S C Stearns Stephen C 2000 Watching from the Edge of Extinction Yale University Press p preface x ISBN 978 0 300 08469 6 Retrieved 30 May 2017 Novacek Michael J November 8 2014 Prehistory s Brilliant Future The New York Times New York ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on 2022 01 01 Retrieved 2014 12 25 Miller amp Spoolman 2012 p 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Stratigraphic Chart v 2014 10 PDF Beijing China International Commission on Stratigraphy Retrieved 2015 03 11 Bibliography edit Barton Nicholas H Briggs Derek E G Eisen Jonathan A Goldstein David B Patel Nipam H 2007 Evolution Cold Spring Harbor NY Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press ISBN 978 0 87969 684 9 LCCN 2007010767 OCLC 86090399 Bernstein Harris Bernstein Carol Michod Richard E 2012 DNA Repair as the Primary Adaptive Function of Sex in Bacteria and Eukaryotes In Kimura Sakura Shimizu Sora eds DNA Repair New Research Hauppauge NY Nova Science Publishers ISBN 978 1 62100 808 8 LCCN 2011038504 OCLC 828424701 Bjornerud Marcia 2005 Reading the Rocks The Autobiography of the Earth Cambridge MA Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 42498 LCCN 2004022738 OCLC 56672295 Kirschvink Joseph L 1992 Late Proterozoic Low Latitude Global Glaciation the Snowball Earth PDF In Schopf J William Klein Cornelis eds The Proterozoic Biosphere A Multidisciplinary Study Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 36615 1 LCCN 91015085 OCLC 23583672 McKinney Michael L 1997 How do rare species avoid extinction A paleontological view In Kunin William E Gaston Kevin J eds The Biology of Rarity Causes and consequences of rare common differences 1st ed London New York Chapman amp Hall ISBN 978 0 412 63380 5 LCCN 96071014 OCLC 36442106 Miller G Tyler Spoolman Scott E 2012 Environmental Science 14th ed Belmont CA Brooks Cole ISBN 978 1 111 98893 7 LCCN 2011934330 OCLC 741539226 Stearns Beverly Peterson Stearns Stephen C 1999 Watching from the Edge of Extinction New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 07606 6 LCCN 98034087 OCLC 47011675 Further reading editDawkins Richard 2004 The Ancestor s Tale A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Life Boston Houghton Mifflin Company ISBN 978 0 618 00583 3 LCCN 2004059864 OCLC 56617123 External links edit Understanding Evolution your one stop resource for information on evolution University of California Berkeley Retrieved 2015 03 18 Life on Earth Tree of Life Web Project University of Arizona January 1 1997 Retrieved 2015 03 18 Explore complete phylogenetic tree interactively Brandt Niel Evolutionary and Geological Timelines TalkOrigins Archive Houston TX The TalkOrigins Foundation Inc Retrieved 2015 03 18 Palaeos Life Through Deep Time Palaeos Retrieved 2015 03 18 Kyrk John Evolution SWF Cell Biology Animation Retrieved 2015 03 18 Interactive timeline from Big Bang to present Plant Evolution Plant and Animal Evolution University of Waikato Retrieved 2015 03 18 Sequence of Plant Evolution The History of Animal Evolution Plant and Animal Evolution University of Waikato Retrieved 2015 03 18 Sequence of Animal Evolution Yeo Dannel Drage Thomas 2006 History of Life on Earth Archived from the original on 2015 03 15 Retrieved 2015 03 19 Exploring Time The Science Channel 2007 Retrieved 2015 03 19 Roberts Ben Plant evolution timeline University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 2015 03 13 Retrieved 2015 03 19 Art of the Nature Timelines on Wikipedia Portals nbsp Evolutionary biology nbsp Paleontology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timeline of the evolutionary history of life amp oldid 1205506479, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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