SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Geological Time Scale
What is the Earth’s time scale?
• The Geological time scale is a record of the life
forms and geological events in Earth’s history.
• Geologic time scale provides a system of
chronologic measurement relating Stratigraphy to
time that is used by geologist, paleontologist and
other earth scientists.
• Used to describe the timing and relationship b/w
events that have occurred during the history of
earth.
• Scientists developed the time scale by studying
rock layers and fossils world wide.
• Radioactive dating helped determine the
absolute divisions in the time scale.
• Geologist qualify the units as early, middle and
late when referring to time, and lower, mid and
upper when referring to the corresponding rocks.
Division of Geologic Time Scale
• Earth history is subdivided into time units based on:
– The fossil record
– Extinctions
Four Eons
• Pre-Archean or Hadean (4.6 to 3.8 Billion years)
~4.6 BYA -- Formation of Earth and Moon
~4 BYA -- Likely origin of life
• Archean (3.8 to 2.5 Billion years)
The eon of first life
~3.8 BYA -- Oldest known rocks
~3.5 BYA -- Oldest known fossils (single celled organisms resembling bacteria)
3.2 BYA -- First known plants (algae)
• Proterozoic (2.5 Billion to 570 Million years)
The eon of the first multicelled life
1.2 BYA -- First known animal (jellyfish)
• Phanerozoic (570 Million years to the Present)
• The eon of complex life
Divisions of Geologic Time
• Geological time begins with Precambrian
Time. Precambrian time covers approximately
88% of Earth’s history.
FOUR Eras…
• PRE-CAMBRIAN – 88% of earth’s history
• Paleozoic (ancient life)
– 544 million years ago…lasted 300 million yrs
• Mesozoic (middle life)
– 245 million years ago…lasted 180 million yrs
• Cenozoic (recent life)
– 65 million years ago…continues through present day
Today…
• Today we are in the Holocene Epoch of the
Quaternary Period of the Cenozoic Era.
Which unit is the largest?
Which unit is the smallest?
Geological time scale
Geological time scale
Paleozoic Era (Ancient Life)
• 542MYA ------- 250MYA
• The Paleozoic Era is broken up into six periods.
• The Cambrian period is the 1st period of the Paleozoic Era. “Age of the
Trilobites”.
• Ordovician Period: The only life on Earth was found in the seas.
However, by the end of the Ordovician Period, life moved to land.
Plants began to colonize out of the water paving the way in later
periods for animals to follow.
• The Silurian Period saw various invertebrates move on to land.
• The following period, the Devonian Period, saw vertebrates join the
other types of animals on land. The first ones to leave the water were
similar to amphibians and they eventually evolved into reptiles
Paleozoic Era
• The Carboniferous Period, is sometimes broken into
two separate periods called the Mississippian Period
and the Pennsylvanian Period.
• It is named the Carboniferous Period because much
of the coal we use today was made during the later
stages of this time period.
• The final period of the Paleozoic Era is the Permian
Period, the largest mass extinction ever on Earth
happened. This mass extinction, known as the
Permian Extinction, completely wiped out about 95%
of all life in the oceans on Earth.
Trilobites
• Lived in Earth’s ancient seas
• Extinct before the dinosaurs came
into existence
• Cambrian Period is know as the
“Age of the Trilobites” (put in on
table)
Brachiopods
• Marine animals that resemble clams.
Early Fish
Early fish did not have jaws.
Some species of sharks were
in existence at this time.
Frilled Shark that was found in Japan in January 2007. This shark was considered a
“living fossil”
Early Land Plants
Cone bearing plants
Ferns
Mosses
Mesozoic Era – Middle Life
• The Mesozoic Era is sometimes called "age of the dinosaurs“
• Began 250MYA.
• The Triassic Period: First small dinosaurs appeared in this
period.
• On land, the amphibians and small reptiles like turtles were
dominant during the early Triassic Period.
• The Jurassic Period: Larger and more abundant dinosaurs
appeared in this period.
• Land animals during the Jurassic Period had more diversity
• At the end of the Jurassic Period, birds evolved from
dinosaurs.
Mesozoic Era
• The Cretaceous Period:
• Flowering plants appeared during the END of
this era.
• On land, the first small mammals started to
appear during the Cretaceous Period
– The mammals were small, warm-blooded animals.
Hair covering their bodies.
Mesozoic Era
• The main plant life of this time were Gymnosperms
or plants that produce seeds, but no flowers.
• This era ended with a mass extinction event about 65
million years ago.
– Many groups of animals, including the dinosaurs
disappeared suddenly at this time.
• Many scientists believe that this event was caused by
a comet or asteroid colliding with the Earth.
Dinosaurs Mesozoic Reptiles
Mesozoic Mammals Mesozoic Plants
Cenozoic Era – Recent Life
• Began about 65 million years ago and continues
today!!!!!
– Climate was warm and mild.
– Marine animals such as whales and dolphins evolved.
• Tertiary period:
– Paleogene
– Neogene
• Quaternary Period
• Mammals began to increase and evolve adaptations that
allowed them to live in many different environments –
land, air and the sea.
– Grasses increased and provided a food source for animals
Cenozoic Era
• Growth of mountains may have helped to cool down
the climate
– Ice Ages occurred late in the Cenozoic Era (Quaternary
Period).
• As the climate changed, the animals had to adapt to
the rise and fall of the oceans caused by melting
glaciers.
• This era is sometimes called the “Age of Mammals”
Cenozoic Era
• Marine animal examples:
– Algae, Mollusks, Fish and Mammals
• Land animal examples:
– Bats, Cats, Dogs, Cattle and Humans
– Humans are thought to have appeared around 3.5 million
years ago (during the most recent period – Quaternary).
• Flowering plants were now the most common plant
life.
Cenozoic Mammals
Flowering Plants were common during the Cenozoic Era
Phanerozoic

More Related Content

PPT
The geological time scale
PDF
Geologic time scale and extinction
PPTX
Geological time Scale
PPT
The Geological Time Scale
PPT
Geologic time scale_1
PDF
Geological time scale.
PPT
The geological time scale
PPT
The geologic time scale
The geological time scale
Geologic time scale and extinction
Geological time Scale
The Geological Time Scale
Geologic time scale_1
Geological time scale.
The geological time scale
The geologic time scale

What's hot (20)

PPT
Geological Time Scale
PPTX
Geological Time Scale
PPT
The geological time scale
PPTX
Fossilization ppt
PPTX
The Geologic Time Scale (Chronological Order)
PPT
Fossils and fossilization
PPTX
Mass extinction
PPTX
Speciation
PPTX
Continental Drift Theory
PPT
PPT
Studying Fossils
PPT
The Fossil Record
PPTX
Types of fossils and uses
PPTX
Origin of life
PPT
Origins of Life on Earth
PPTX
Biomes
PPTX
Paleontological Techniques
PDF
The significance of the fossil record
PPT
Fossils ppt
PDF
The Origin of Vertebrates
Geological Time Scale
Geological Time Scale
The geological time scale
Fossilization ppt
The Geologic Time Scale (Chronological Order)
Fossils and fossilization
Mass extinction
Speciation
Continental Drift Theory
Studying Fossils
The Fossil Record
Types of fossils and uses
Origin of life
Origins of Life on Earth
Biomes
Paleontological Techniques
The significance of the fossil record
Fossils ppt
The Origin of Vertebrates
Ad

Similar to Geological time scale (20)

PPTX
geologic time scale_gen bio 2.pptx
PPTX
geological scale geological scale powerpoint
PPTX
geologic time scale.pptx
PPT
The geological time scale
PPT
the_geological_timescale and history.ppt
PPTX
the-geological-time scale.pptx ........,
PPTX
Prehistory 1: Geologic Timeline- Notes on the geologic & life history of Ear...
PPTX
GEOLOGICAL TIMELINE EARTH AND LIFE SCIENCES.pptx
PPTX
GEOLOGIC-TIME-SCALE.pptx
PPTX
AngelAñon_Biology.pptx itgskzndjakzbdjkadbksnxjdlsndbdjdksnxnjfkeoeufchxnmskdkf
PPTX
geological time scale
PPTX
Geological Time Scale
PPTX
EARTH AND SCIENCE GEOLOGIC SCALE OF EARTH
PPTX
Prehistory 1 new
PPT
DOC-20221113-WA0080..ppt
PPTX
Geologic time.pptx
PPTX
05 geologic timeline (1)
PPT
GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE powerpoint presentationppt
PDF
geologictimescale-100620233836-phpapp01-161007091843 (1).pdf
geologic time scale_gen bio 2.pptx
geological scale geological scale powerpoint
geologic time scale.pptx
The geological time scale
the_geological_timescale and history.ppt
the-geological-time scale.pptx ........,
Prehistory 1: Geologic Timeline- Notes on the geologic & life history of Ear...
GEOLOGICAL TIMELINE EARTH AND LIFE SCIENCES.pptx
GEOLOGIC-TIME-SCALE.pptx
AngelAñon_Biology.pptx itgskzndjakzbdjkadbksnxjdlsndbdjdksnxnjfkeoeufchxnmskdkf
geological time scale
Geological Time Scale
EARTH AND SCIENCE GEOLOGIC SCALE OF EARTH
Prehistory 1 new
DOC-20221113-WA0080..ppt
Geologic time.pptx
05 geologic timeline (1)
GEOLOGIC TIME SCALE powerpoint presentationppt
geologictimescale-100620233836-phpapp01-161007091843 (1).pdf
Ad

More from madan lal (9)

PPTX
Air pollution
PPTX
Petroleum processing
PPTX
Modes of deformation of rocks presentation
PPTX
Joints, parts, varieties and clssification
PPTX
Isostasy and continental_drift
PPTX
Geological mapping
PPTX
rock cycle and metamorphic rock
DOCX
petroleum refinery's in pakistan
PPTX
Organizational behavior
Air pollution
Petroleum processing
Modes of deformation of rocks presentation
Joints, parts, varieties and clssification
Isostasy and continental_drift
Geological mapping
rock cycle and metamorphic rock
petroleum refinery's in pakistan
Organizational behavior

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Well-logging-methods_new................
PPTX
UNIT-1 - COAL BASED THERMAL POWER PLANTS
PPTX
CH1 Production IntroductoryConcepts.pptx
PPTX
Geodesy 1.pptx...............................................
PPTX
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
PPTX
Lesson 3_Tessellation.pptx finite Mathematics
PPTX
Engineering Ethics, Safety and Environment [Autosaved] (1).pptx
PPTX
Strings in CPP - Strings in C++ are sequences of characters used to store and...
PDF
Digital Logic Computer Design lecture notes
PPTX
CYBER-CRIMES AND SECURITY A guide to understanding
PDF
Model Code of Practice - Construction Work - 21102022 .pdf
PDF
Structs to JSON How Go Powers REST APIs.pdf
PPTX
MCN 401 KTU-2019-PPE KITS-MODULE 2.pptx
PPTX
Recipes for Real Time Voice AI WebRTC, SLMs and Open Source Software.pptx
PPT
Project quality management in manufacturing
PPTX
Lecture Notes Electrical Wiring System Components
PDF
composite construction of structures.pdf
PDF
The CXO Playbook 2025 – Future-Ready Strategies for C-Suite Leaders Cerebrai...
PPTX
Foundation to blockchain - A guide to Blockchain Tech
PPTX
IOT PPTs Week 10 Lecture Material.pptx of NPTEL Smart Cities contd
Well-logging-methods_new................
UNIT-1 - COAL BASED THERMAL POWER PLANTS
CH1 Production IntroductoryConcepts.pptx
Geodesy 1.pptx...............................................
FINAL REVIEW FOR COPD DIANOSIS FOR PULMONARY DISEASE.pptx
Lesson 3_Tessellation.pptx finite Mathematics
Engineering Ethics, Safety and Environment [Autosaved] (1).pptx
Strings in CPP - Strings in C++ are sequences of characters used to store and...
Digital Logic Computer Design lecture notes
CYBER-CRIMES AND SECURITY A guide to understanding
Model Code of Practice - Construction Work - 21102022 .pdf
Structs to JSON How Go Powers REST APIs.pdf
MCN 401 KTU-2019-PPE KITS-MODULE 2.pptx
Recipes for Real Time Voice AI WebRTC, SLMs and Open Source Software.pptx
Project quality management in manufacturing
Lecture Notes Electrical Wiring System Components
composite construction of structures.pdf
The CXO Playbook 2025 – Future-Ready Strategies for C-Suite Leaders Cerebrai...
Foundation to blockchain - A guide to Blockchain Tech
IOT PPTs Week 10 Lecture Material.pptx of NPTEL Smart Cities contd

Geological time scale

  • 2. What is the Earth’s time scale? • The Geological time scale is a record of the life forms and geological events in Earth’s history. • Geologic time scale provides a system of chronologic measurement relating Stratigraphy to time that is used by geologist, paleontologist and other earth scientists. • Used to describe the timing and relationship b/w events that have occurred during the history of earth.
  • 3. • Scientists developed the time scale by studying rock layers and fossils world wide. • Radioactive dating helped determine the absolute divisions in the time scale. • Geologist qualify the units as early, middle and late when referring to time, and lower, mid and upper when referring to the corresponding rocks.
  • 4. Division of Geologic Time Scale • Earth history is subdivided into time units based on: – The fossil record – Extinctions
  • 5. Four Eons • Pre-Archean or Hadean (4.6 to 3.8 Billion years) ~4.6 BYA -- Formation of Earth and Moon ~4 BYA -- Likely origin of life • Archean (3.8 to 2.5 Billion years) The eon of first life ~3.8 BYA -- Oldest known rocks ~3.5 BYA -- Oldest known fossils (single celled organisms resembling bacteria) 3.2 BYA -- First known plants (algae) • Proterozoic (2.5 Billion to 570 Million years) The eon of the first multicelled life 1.2 BYA -- First known animal (jellyfish) • Phanerozoic (570 Million years to the Present) • The eon of complex life
  • 6. Divisions of Geologic Time • Geological time begins with Precambrian Time. Precambrian time covers approximately 88% of Earth’s history.
  • 7. FOUR Eras… • PRE-CAMBRIAN – 88% of earth’s history • Paleozoic (ancient life) – 544 million years ago…lasted 300 million yrs • Mesozoic (middle life) – 245 million years ago…lasted 180 million yrs • Cenozoic (recent life) – 65 million years ago…continues through present day
  • 8. Today… • Today we are in the Holocene Epoch of the Quaternary Period of the Cenozoic Era. Which unit is the largest? Which unit is the smallest?
  • 11. Paleozoic Era (Ancient Life) • 542MYA ------- 250MYA • The Paleozoic Era is broken up into six periods. • The Cambrian period is the 1st period of the Paleozoic Era. “Age of the Trilobites”. • Ordovician Period: The only life on Earth was found in the seas. However, by the end of the Ordovician Period, life moved to land. Plants began to colonize out of the water paving the way in later periods for animals to follow. • The Silurian Period saw various invertebrates move on to land. • The following period, the Devonian Period, saw vertebrates join the other types of animals on land. The first ones to leave the water were similar to amphibians and they eventually evolved into reptiles
  • 12. Paleozoic Era • The Carboniferous Period, is sometimes broken into two separate periods called the Mississippian Period and the Pennsylvanian Period. • It is named the Carboniferous Period because much of the coal we use today was made during the later stages of this time period. • The final period of the Paleozoic Era is the Permian Period, the largest mass extinction ever on Earth happened. This mass extinction, known as the Permian Extinction, completely wiped out about 95% of all life in the oceans on Earth.
  • 13. Trilobites • Lived in Earth’s ancient seas • Extinct before the dinosaurs came into existence • Cambrian Period is know as the “Age of the Trilobites” (put in on table)
  • 14. Brachiopods • Marine animals that resemble clams.
  • 15. Early Fish Early fish did not have jaws. Some species of sharks were in existence at this time.
  • 16. Frilled Shark that was found in Japan in January 2007. This shark was considered a “living fossil”
  • 17. Early Land Plants Cone bearing plants Ferns Mosses
  • 18. Mesozoic Era – Middle Life • The Mesozoic Era is sometimes called "age of the dinosaurs“ • Began 250MYA. • The Triassic Period: First small dinosaurs appeared in this period. • On land, the amphibians and small reptiles like turtles were dominant during the early Triassic Period. • The Jurassic Period: Larger and more abundant dinosaurs appeared in this period. • Land animals during the Jurassic Period had more diversity • At the end of the Jurassic Period, birds evolved from dinosaurs.
  • 19. Mesozoic Era • The Cretaceous Period: • Flowering plants appeared during the END of this era. • On land, the first small mammals started to appear during the Cretaceous Period – The mammals were small, warm-blooded animals. Hair covering their bodies.
  • 20. Mesozoic Era • The main plant life of this time were Gymnosperms or plants that produce seeds, but no flowers. • This era ended with a mass extinction event about 65 million years ago. – Many groups of animals, including the dinosaurs disappeared suddenly at this time. • Many scientists believe that this event was caused by a comet or asteroid colliding with the Earth.
  • 21. Dinosaurs Mesozoic Reptiles Mesozoic Mammals Mesozoic Plants
  • 22. Cenozoic Era – Recent Life • Began about 65 million years ago and continues today!!!!! – Climate was warm and mild. – Marine animals such as whales and dolphins evolved. • Tertiary period: – Paleogene – Neogene • Quaternary Period • Mammals began to increase and evolve adaptations that allowed them to live in many different environments – land, air and the sea. – Grasses increased and provided a food source for animals
  • 23. Cenozoic Era • Growth of mountains may have helped to cool down the climate – Ice Ages occurred late in the Cenozoic Era (Quaternary Period). • As the climate changed, the animals had to adapt to the rise and fall of the oceans caused by melting glaciers. • This era is sometimes called the “Age of Mammals”
  • 24. Cenozoic Era • Marine animal examples: – Algae, Mollusks, Fish and Mammals • Land animal examples: – Bats, Cats, Dogs, Cattle and Humans – Humans are thought to have appeared around 3.5 million years ago (during the most recent period – Quaternary). • Flowering plants were now the most common plant life.
  • 25. Cenozoic Mammals Flowering Plants were common during the Cenozoic Era