(Study Material) Zoology Study Material For AIPMT and State PMT Examination (Geological Time Scale)
Posted March 4th, 2009 by guru
Study Material : Zoology Study Material For AIPMT and State PMT Examination (Geological Time Scale)
THE TERTIARY ERA
We have already traversed nearly nine-tenths of the story of terrestrial life,
without counting the long and obscure Archaean period, and still find ourselves
in a strange and unfamiliar earth. With the close of the Chalk period, however,
we take a long stride in the direction of the modern world. The Tertiary Era
will, in the main, prove a fresh period of genial warmth and fertile low-lying
regions. During its course our deciduous trees and grasses will mingle with the
palms and pines over the land, our flowers will begin to brighten the landscape,
and the forms of our familiar birds and mammals, even the form of man, will be
discernible in the crowds of animals. At its close another mighty period of
selection will clear the stage for its modern actors.
A curious reflection is prompted in connection with this division of the earth's
story into periods of relative prosperity and quiescence, separated by periods
of disturbance. There was--on the most modest estimate--a stretch of some
fifteen million years between the Cambrian and the Permian upheavals. On the
same chronological scale the interval between the Permian and Cretaceous
revolutions was only about seven million years, and the Tertiary Era will
comprise only about three million years. One wonders if the Fourth (Quaternary)
Era in which we live will be similarly shortened. Further, whereas the earth
returned after each of the earlier upheavals to what seems to have been its
primitive condition of equable and warm climate, it has now entirely departed
from that condition, and exhibits very different zones of climate and a
succession of seasons in the year. One wonders what the climate of the earth
will become long before the expiration of those ten million years which are
usually assigned as the minimum period during which the globe will remain
habitable.
It is premature to glance at the future, when we are still some millions of
years from the present, but it will be useful to look more closely at the facts
which inspire this reflection. From what we have seen, and shall further see, it
is clear that, in spite of all the recent controversy about climate among our
geologists, there has undeniably been a progressive refrigeration of the globe.
Every geologist, indeed, admits "oscillations of climate," as
Professor Chamberlin puts it. But amidst all these oscillations we trace a
steady lowering of the temperature. Unless we put a strained and somewhat
arbitrary interpretation on the facts of the geological record, earlier ages
knew nothing of our division of the year into pronounced seasons and of the
globe into very different climatic zones. It might plausibly be suggested that
we are still living in the last days of the Ice-Age, and that the earth may be
slowly returning to a warmer condition. Shackleton, it might be observed, found
that there has been a considerable shrinkage of the south polar ice within the
period of exploration. But we shall find that a difference of climate, as
compared with earlier ages, was already evident in the middle of the Tertiary
Era, and it is far more noticeable to-day.
Climatic Evolution
We do not know the causes of this climatic evolution-- the point will be
considered more closely in connection with the last Ice-Age--but we see that it
throws a flood of light on the evolution of organisms. It is one of the chief
incarnations of natural selection. Changes in the distribution of land and water
and in the nature of the land-surface, the coming of powerful carnivores, and
other agencies which we have seen, have had their share in the onward impulsion
of life, but the most drastic agency seems to have been the supervention of
cold. The higher types of both animals and plants appear plainly in response to
a lowering of temperature. This is the chief advantage of studying the story of
evolution in strict connection with the geological record. We shall find that
the record will continue to throw light on our path to the end, but, as we are
now about to approach the most important era of evolution, and as we have now
seen so much of the concrete story of evolution, it will be interesting to
examine briefly some other ways of conceiving that story.
We need not return to the consideration of the leading schools of evolution, as
described in a former chapter. Nothing that we have seen will enable us to
choose between the Lamarckian and the Weismannist hypothesis; and I doubt if
anything we are yet to see will prove more decisive. The dispute is somewhat
academic, and not vital to a conception of evolution. We shall, for instance,
presently follow the evolution of the horse, and see four of its toes shrink and
disappear, while the fifth toe is enormously strengthened. In the facts
themselves there is nothing whatever to decide whether this evolution took place
on the lines suggested by Weismann, or on the lines suggested by Lamarck and
accepted by Darwin. It will be enough for us merely to establish the fact that
the one-toed horse is an evolved descendant of a primitive five-toed mammal,
through the adaptation of its foot to running on firm ground, its teeth and neck
to feeding on grasses, and so on.
On the other hand, the facts we have already seen seem to justify the attitude
of compromise I adopted in regard to the Mutationist theory. It would be an
advantage in many ways if we could believe that new species arose by sudden and
large variations (mutations) of the young from the parental type. In the case of
many organs and habits it is extremely difficult to see how a gradual
development, by a slow accentuation of small variations, is possible. When we
further find that experimenters on living species can bring about such
mutations, and when we reflect that there must have been acute disturbances in
the surroundings of animals and plants sometimes, we are disposed to think that
many a new species may have arisen in this way. On the other hand, while the
palaeontological record can never prove that a species arose by mutations, it
does sometimes show that species arise by very gradual modification. The Chalk
period, which we have just traversed, affords a very clear instance. One of our
chief investigators of the English Chalk, Dr. Rowe, paid particular attention to
the sea-urchins it contains, as they serve well to identify different levels of
chalk. He discovered, not merely that they vary from level to level, but that in
at least one genus (Micraster) he could trace the organism very gradually
passing from one species to another, without any leap or abruptness. It is
certainly significant that we find such cases as this precisely where the
conditions of preservation are exceptionally good. We must conclude that species
arise, probably, both by mutations and small variations, and that it is
impossible to say which class of species has been the more numerous.
Conceptions of Evolution
There remain one or two conceptions of evolution which we have not hitherto
noticed, as it was advisable to see the facts first. One of these is the
view--chiefly represented in this country by Professor Henslow--that natural
selection has had no part in the creation of species; that the only two factors
are the environment and the organism which responds to its changes. This is true
enough in the sense that, as we saw, natural selection is not an action of
nature on the "fit," but on the unfit or less fit. But this does not
in the least lessen the importance of natural selection. If there were not in
nature this body of destructive agencies, to which we apply the name natural
selection, there would be little--we cannot say no--evolution. But the rising
carnivores, the falls of temperature, etc., that we have studied, have had so
real, if indirect, an influence on the development of life that we need not
dwell on this.
Another school, or several schools, while admitting the action of natural
selection, maintain that earlier evolutionists have made nature much too red in
tooth and claw. Dr. Russel Wallace from one motive, and Prince Krapotkin from
another, have insisted that the triumphs of war have been exaggerated, and the
triumphs of peace, or of social co-operation, far too little appreciated. It
will be found that such writers usually base their theory on life as we find it
in nature to-day, where the social principle is highly developed in many groups
of animals. This is most misleading, since social co-operation among animals, as
an instrument of progress, is (geologically speaking) quite a recent phenomenon.
Nearly every group of animals in which it is found belongs, to put it
moderately, to the last tenth of the story of life, and in some of the chief
instances the animals have only gradually developed social life.* The first
nine-tenths of the chronicle of evolution contain no indication of social life,
except--curiously enough--in such groups as the Sponges, Corals, and Bryozoa,
which are amongst the least progressive in nature. We have seen plainly that
during the overwhelmingly greater part of the story of life the predominant
agencies of evolution were struggle against adverse conditions and devouring
carnivores; and we shall find them the predominant agencies throughout the
Tertiary Era.
* Thus the social nature of man is sometimes quoted as one of the chief causes
of his development. It is true that it has much to do with his later
development, but we shall see that the statement that man was from the start a
social being is not at all warranted by the facts. On the other hand, it may be
pointed out that the ants and termites had appeared in the Mesozoic. We shall
see some evidence that the remarkable division of labour which now characterises
their life did not begin until a much later period, so that we have no evidence
of social life in the early stages.
Yet we must protest against the exaggerated estimate of the conscious pain which
so many read into these millions of years of struggle. Probably there was no
consciousness at all during the greater part of the time. The wriggling of the
worm on which you have accidentally trodden is no proof whatever that you have
caused conscious pain. The nervous system of an animal has been so evolved as to
respond with great disturbance of its tissue to any dangerous
or injurious assault. It is the selection of a certain means of
self-preservation. But at what level of life the animal becomes conscious of
this disturbance, and "feels pain," it is very difficult to determine.
The subject is too vast to be opened here. In a special investigation of it* I
concluded that there is no proof of the presence of any degree of consciousness
in the invertebrate world even in the higher insects; that there is probably
only a dull, blurred, imperfect consciousness below the level of the higher
mammals and birds; and that even the consciousness of an ape is something very
different from what educated Europeans, on the ground of their own experience,
call consciousness. It is too often forgotten that pain is in proportion to
consciousness. We must beware of such fallacies as transferring our experience
of pain to a Mesozoic reptile, with an ounce or two of cerebrum to twenty tons
of muscle and bone.
One other view of evolution, which we find in some recent and reputable works
(such as Professor Geddes and Thomson's "Evolution," 1911), calls for
consideration. In the ordinary Darwinian view the variations of the young from
their parents are indefinite, and spread in all directions. They may continue to
occur for ages without any of them proving an advantage to their possessors.
Then the environment may change, and a certain variation may prove an advantage,
and be continuously and increasingly selected. Thus these indefinite variations
may be so controlled by the environment during millions of years that the fish
at last becomes an elephant or a man. The alternative view, urged by a few
writers, is that the variations were "definitely directed." The phrase
seems merely to complicate the story of evolution with a fresh and superfluous
mystery. The nature and precise action of this "definite direction"
within the organism are quite unintelligible, and the facts seem explainable
just as well--or not less imperfectly--without as with this mystic agency.
Radiolaria, Sponges, Corals, Sharks, Mudfishes, Duckbills, etc., do not change
(except within the limits of their family) during millions of years, because
they keep to an environment to which they are fitted. On the other hand, certain
fishes, reptiles, etc., remain in a changing environment, and they must change
with it. The process has its obscurities, but we make them darker, it seems to
me, with these semi-metaphysical phrases.
Rise of a new Era
It has seemed advisable to take this further glance at the general
principles and current theories of evolution before we extend our own procedure
into the Tertiary Era. The highest types of animals and plants are now about to
appear on the stage of the earth; the theatre itself is about to take on a
modern complexion. The Middle Ages are over; the new age is breaking upon the
planet. We will, as before, first survey the Tertiary Era as a whole, with the
momentous changes it introduces, and then examine, in separate chapters, the
more important phases of its life.
It opens, like the preceding and the following era, with "the area of land
large and its relief pronounced." This is the outcome of the Cretaceous
revolution. Southern Europe and Southern Asia have risen, and shaken the last
masses of the Chalk ocean from their faces; the whole western fringe of America
has similarly emerged from the sea that had flooded it. In many parts, as in
England (at that time a part of the Continent), there is so great a gap between
the latest Cretaceous and the earliest Tertiary strata that these newly elevated
lands must evidently have stood out of the waters for a prolonged period. On
their cooler plains the tragedy of the extinction of the great reptiles comes to
an end. The cyeads and ginkgoes have shrunk into thin survivors of the luxuriant
Mesozoic groves. The oak and beech and other deciduous trees spread slowly over
the successive lands, amid the glare and thunder of the numerous volcanoes which
the disturbance of the crust has brought into play. New forms of birds fly from
tree to tree, or linger by the waters; and strange patriarchal types of mammals
begin to move among the bones of the stricken reptiles.
But the seas and the rains and rivers are acting with renewed vigour on the
elevated lands, and the Eocene period closes in a fresh age of levelling. Let us
put the work of a million years or so in a sentence. The southern sea, which has
been confined almost to the limits of our Mediterranean by the Cretaceous
upheaval, gradually enlarges once more. It floods the north-west of Africa
almost as far as the equator; it covers most of Italy, Turkey, Austria, and
Southern Russia; it spreads over Asia Minor, Persia, and Southern Asia, until it
joins the Pacific; and it sends a long arm across the Franco-British region, and
up the great valley which is now the German Ocean.
From earlier chapters we now expect to find a warmer climate, and the record
gives abundant proof of it. To this period belongs the "London Clay,"
in whose thick and--to the unskilled eye--insignificant bed the geologist reads
the remarkable story of what London was two or three million years ago. It tells
us that a sea, some 500 or 600 feet deep, then lay over that part of England,
and fragments of the life of the period are preserved in its deposit. The sea
lay at the mouth of a sub-tropical river on whose banks grew palms, figs,
ginkgoes, eucalyptuses, almonds, and magnolias, with the more familiar oaks and
pines and laurels. Sword-fishes and monstrous sharks lived in the sea. Large
turtles and crocodiles and enormous "sea-serpents" lingered in this
last spell of warmth that Central Europe would experience. A primitive whale
appeared in the seas, and strange large tapir-like mammals--remote ancestors of
our horses and more familiar beasts--wandered heavily on the land. Gigantic
primitive birds, sometimes ten feet high, waded by the shore. Deposits of the
period at Bournemouth and in the Isle of Wight tell the same story of a land
that bore figs, vines, palms, araucarias, and aralias, and waters that sheltered
turtles and crocodiles. The Parisian region presented the same features.
Traces of Southern Sea
In fact, one of the most characteristic traces of the southern sea which then
stretched from England to Africa in the south and India in the east indicates a
warm climate. It will be remembered that the Cretaceous ocean over Southern
Europe had swarmed with the animalcules whose dead skeletons largely compose our
chalk-beds. In the new southern ocean another branch of these Thalamophores, the
Nummulites, spreads with such portentous abundance that its shells--sometimes
alone, generally with other material--make beds of solid limestone several
thousand feet in thickness. The pyramids are built of this nummulitic limestone.
The one-celled animal in its shell is, however, no longer a microscopic grain.
It sometimes forms wonderful shells, an inch or more in diameter, in which as
many as a thousand chambers succeed each other, in spiral order, from the centre.
The beds containing it are found from the Pyrenees to Japan.
That this vast warm ocean, stretching southward over a large part of what is now
the Sahara, should give a semitropical aspect even to Central Europe and Asia is
not surprising. But this genial climate was still very general over the earth.
Evergreens which now need the warmth of Italy or the Riviera then flourished in
Lapland and Spitzbergen. The flora of Greenland--a flora that includes
magnolias, figs, and bamboos--shows us that its temperature in the Eocene period
must have been about 30 degrees higher than it is to-day.* The temperature of
the cool Tyrol of modern Europe is calculated to have then been between 74 and
81 degrees F. Palms, cactuses, aloes, gum-trees, cinnamon trees, etc.,
flourished in the latitude of Northern France. The forests that covered parts of
Switzerland which are now buried in snow during a great part of the year were
like the forests one finds in parts of India and Australia to-day. The climate
of North America, and of the land which still connected it with Europe, was
correspondingly genial.
This indulgent period (the Oligocene, or later part of the Eocene), scattering a
rich and nutritious vegetation with great profusion over the land, led to a
notable expansion of animal life. Insects, birds, and mammals spread into vast
and varied groups in every land. Had any of the great Mesozoic reptiles
survived, the warmer age might have enabled them to dispute the sovereignty of
the advancing mammals. But nothing more formidable than the turtle, the snake,
and the crocodile (confined to the waters) had crossed the threshold of the
Tertiary Era, and the mammals and birds had the full advantage of the new golden
age. The fruits of the new trees, the grasses which now covered the plains, and
the insects which multiplied with the flowers afforded a magnificent diet. The
herbivorous mammals became a populous world, branching into numerous different
types according to their different environments. The horse, the elephant, the
camel, the pig, the deer, the rhinoceros gradually emerge out of the chaos of
evolving forms. Behind them, hastening the course of their evolution, improving
their speed, arms, and armour, is the inevitable carnivore. He, too, in the
abundance of food, grows into a vast population, and branches out toward
familiar types. We will devote a chapter presently to this remarkable phase of
the story of evolution.
Periods of Tertiary Era
The Tertiary Era is divided by geologists into four periods: the Eocene,
Oligocene, Miocene, and Pliocene. "Cene" is our barbaric way of
expressing the Greek word for "new," and the classification is meant
to mark the increase of new (or modern and actual) types of life in the course
of the Tertiary Era. Many geologists, however, distrust the classification, and
are disposed to divide the Tertiary into two periods. From our point of view, at
least, it is advisable to do this. The first and longer half of the Tertiary is
the period in which the temperature rises until Central Europe enjoys the
climate of South Africa; the second half is the period in which the land
gradually rises, and the temperature falls, until glaciers and sheets of ice
cover regions where the palm and fig had flourished.
The rise of the land had begun in the first half of the Tertiary, but had been
suspended. The Pyrenees and Apennines had begun to rise at the end of the
Eocene, straining the crust until it spluttered with volcanoes, casting the
nummulitic sea off large areas of Southern Europe. The Nummulites become smaller
and less abundant. There is also some upheaval in North America, and a bridge of
land begins to connect the north and south, and permit an effective mingling of
their populations. But the advance is, as I said, suspended, and the Oligocene
period maintains the golden age. With the Miocene period the land resumes its
rise.
A chill is felt along the American coast, showing a fall in the temperature of
the Atlantic. In Europe there is a similar chill, and a more obvious reason for
it. There is an ascending movement of the whole series of mountains from Morocco
and the Pyrenees, through the Alps, the Caucasus, and the Carpathians, to India
and China. Large lakes still lie over Western Europe, but nearly the whole of it
emerges from the ocean. The Mediterranean still sends an arm up France, and with
another arm encircles the Alpine mass; but the upheaval continues, and the great
nummulitic sea is reduced to a series of extensive lakes, cut off both from the
Atlantic and Pacific. The climate of Southern Europe is probably still as genial
as that of the Canaries to-day. Palms still linger in the landscape in reduced
numbers.
The last part of the Tertiary, the Pliocene, opens with a slight return of the
sea. The upheaval is once more suspended, and the waters are eating into the
land. There is some foundering of land at the south-western tip of Europe; the
"Straits of Gibraltar" begin to connect the Mediterranean with the
Atlantic, and the Balearic Islands, Corsica, and Sardinia remain as the mountain
summits of a submerged land. Then the upheaval is resumed, in nearly every part
of the earth.
See Also : -
- Geological Time Scale Part 1
- Geological Time Scale Part 2
- Geological Time Scale Part 3
- Geological Time Scale Part 4
- Geological Time Scale Part 5
- Geological Time Scale Part 6
- Geological Time Scale Part 7
- Geological Time Scale Part 8
- Geological Time Scale Part 9
- Geological Time Scale Part 10
- Geological Time Scale Part 11
- Geological Time Scale Part 12
- Geological Time Scale Part 13

