PAPER 59
- THE MARINE-LIFE ERA ON URANTIA
We reckon the
history of Urantia as beginning about one
billion years ago and extending through five
major eras:
1. The
prelife era extends over the initial four
hundred and fifty million years, from about the
time the planet attained its present size to the
time of life establishment. Your students have
designated this period as the Archeozoic.
2. The
life-dawn era extends over the next one
hundred and fifty million years. This epoch
intervenes between the preceding prelife or
cataclysmic age and the following period of more
highly developed marine life. This era is known
to your researchers as the Proterozoic.
3. The
marine-life era covers the next two hundred
and fifty million years and is best known to you
as the Paleozoic.
4. The
early land-life era extends over the next
one hundred million years and is known as the
Mesozoic.
5. The
mammalian era occupies the last fifty
million years. This recent-times era is known as
the Cenozoic.
The
marine-life era thus covers about one quarter of
your planetary history. It may be subdivided
into six long periods, each characterized by
certain well-defined developments in both the
geologic realms and the biologic domains.
As this era
begins, the sea bottoms, the extensive
continental shelves, and the numerous shallow
near-shore basins are covered with prolific
vegetation. The more simple and primitive forms
of animal life have already developed from
preceding vegetable organisms, and the early
animal organisms have gradually made their way
along the extensive coast lines of the various
land masses until the many inland seas are
teeming with primitive marine life. Since so few
of these early organisms had shells, not many
have been preserved as fossils. Nevertheless the
stage is set for the opening chapters of that
great "stone book" of the life-record
preservation which was so methodically laid down
during the succeeding ages.
The continent
of North America is wonderfully rich in the
fossil-bearing deposits of the entire
marine-life era. The very first and oldest
layers are separated from the later strata of
the preceding period by extensive erosion
deposits which clearly segregate these two
stages of planetary development.
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By the dawn of
this period of relative quiet on the earth's
surface, life is confined to the various inland
seas and the oceanic shore line; as yet no form
of land organism has evolved. Primitive marine
animals are well established and are prepared
for the next evolutionary development. Ameba are
typical survivors of this initial stage of
animal life, having made their appearance toward
the close of the preceding transition period.
400,000,000
years ago marine life, both vegetable and
animal, is fairly well distributed over the
whole world. The world climate grows slightly
warmer and becomes more equable. There is a
general inundation of the seashores of the
various continents, particularly of North and
South America. New oceans appear, and the older
bodies of water are greatly enlarged.
Vegetation now
for the first time crawls out upon the land and
soon makes considerable progress in adaptation
to a nonmarine habitat.
Suddenly
and without gradation ancestry the first
multicellular animals make their appearance. The
trilobites have evolved, and for ages they
dominate the seas. From the standpoint of marine
life this is the trilobite age.
In the later
portion of this time segment much of North
America and Europe emerged from the sea. The
crust of the earth was temporarily stabilized;
mountains, or rather high elevations of land,
rose along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts, over
the West Indies, and in southern Europe. The
entire Caribbean region was highly elevated.
390,000,000
years ago the land was still elevated. Over
parts of eastern and western America and western
Europe may be found the stone strata laid down
during these times, and these are the oldest
rocks which contain trilobite fossils. There
were many long fingerlike gulfs projecting into
the land masses in which were deposited these
fossil-bearing rocks.
Within a few
million years the Pacific Ocean began to invade
the American continents. The sinking of the land
was principally due to crustal adjustment,
although the lateral land spread, or continental
creep, was also a factor.
380,000,000
years ago Asia was subsiding, and all other
continents were experiencing a short-lived
emergence. But as this epoch progressed, the
newly appearing Atlantic Ocean made extensive
inroads on all adjacent coast lines. The
northern Atlantic or Arctic seas were then
connected with the southern Gulf waters. When
this southern sea entered the Appalachian
trough, its waves broke upon the east against
mountains as high as the Alps, but in general
the continents were uninteresting lowlands,
utterly devoid of scenic beauty.
The
sedimentary deposits of these ages are of four
sorts:
1.
Conglomerates--matter deposited near the shore
lines.
2.
Sandstones--deposits made in shallow water but
where the waves were sufficient to prevent mud
settling.
3.
Shales--deposits made in the deeper and more
quiet water.
4.
Limestone--including the deposits of trilobite
shells in deep water.
The trilobite
fossils of these times present certain basic
uniformities coupled with certain well-marked
variations. The early animals developing from
the
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three
original life implantations were characteristic;
those appearing in the Western Hemisphere were
slightly different from those of the Eurasian
group and from the Australasian or
Australian-Antarctic type.
370,000,000
years ago the great and almost total submergence
of North and South America occurred, followed by
the sinking of Africa and Australia. Only
certain parts of North America remained above
these shallow Cambrian seas. Five million years
later the seas were retreating before the rising
land. And all of these phenomena of land sinking
and land rising were undramatic, taking place
slowly over millions of years.
The trilobite
fossil-bearing strata of this epoch outcrop here
and there throughout all the continents except
in central Asia. In many regions these rocks are
horizontal, but in the mountains they are tilted
and distorted because of pressure and folding.
And such pressure has, in many places, changed
the original character of these deposits.
Sandstone has been turned into quartz, shale has
been changed to slate, while limestone has been
converted into marble.
360,000,000
years ago the land was still rising. North and
South America were well up. Western Europe and
the British Isles were emerging, except parts of
Wales, which were deeply submerged. There were
no great ice sheets during these ages. The
supposed glacial deposits appearing in
connection with these strata in Europe, Africa,
China, and Australia are due to isolated
mountain glaciers or to the displacement of
glacial debris of later origin. The world
climate was oceanic, not continental. The
southern seas were warmer then than now, and
they extended northward over North America up to
the polar regions. The Gulf Stream coursed over
the central portion of North America, being
deflected eastward to bathe and warm the shores
of Greenland, making that now ice-mantled
continent a veritable tropic Paradise.
The marine
life was much alike the world over and consisted
of the seaweeds, one-celled organisms, simple
sponges, trilobites, and other
crustaceans--shrimps, crabs, and lobsters. Three
thousand varieties of brachiopods appeared at
the close of this period, only two hundred of
which have survived. These animals represent a
variety of early life which has come down to the
present time practically unchanged.
But the
trilobites were the dominant living creatures.
They were sexed animals and existed in many
forms; being poor swimmers, they sluggishly
floated in the water or crawled along the sea
bottoms, curling up in self-protection when
attacked by their later appearing enemies. They
grew in length from two inches to one foot and
developed into four distinct groups:
carnivorous, herbivorous, omnivorous, and "mud
eaters." The ability of the latter group largely
to subsist on inorganic matter--being the last
multicelled animal that could--explains their
great increase and long survival.
This was the
biogeologic picture of Urantia at the end of
that long period of the world's history,
embracing fifty million years, designated by
your geologists as the Cambrian.
The periodic
phenomena of land elevation and land sinking
characteristic of these times were all gradual
and nonspectacular, being accompanied by little
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or no
volcanic action. Throughout all of these
successive land elevations and depressions the
Asiatic mother continent did not fully share the
history of the other land bodies. It experienced
many inundations, dipping first in one direction
and then another, more particularly in its
earlier history, but it does not present the
uniform rock deposits which may be discovered on
the other continents. In recent ages Asia has
been the most stable of all the land masses.
350,000,000
years ago saw the beginning of the great flood
period of all the continents except central
Asia. The land masses were repeatedly covered
with water; only the coastal highlands remained
above these shallow but widespread oscillatory
inland seas. Three major inundations
characterized this period, but before it ended,
the continents again arose, the total land
emergence being fifteen per cent greater than
now exists. The Caribbean region was highly
elevated. This period is not well marked off in
Europe because the land fluctuations were less,
while the volcanic action was more persistent.
340,000,000
years ago there occurred another extensive land
sinking except in Asia and Australia. The waters
of the world's oceans were generally commingled.
This was a great limestone age, much of its
stone being laid down by lime-secreting algae.
A few million
years later large portions of the American
continents and Europe began to emerge from the
water. In the Western Hemisphere only an arm of
the Pacific Ocean remained over Mexico and the
present Rocky Mountain regions, but near the
close of this epoch the Atlantic and Pacific
coasts again began to sink.
330,000,000
years ago marks the beginning of a time sector
of comparative quiet all over the world, with
much land again above water. The only exception
to this reign of terrestrial quiet was the
eruption of the great North American volcano of
eastern Kentucky, one of the greatest single
volcanic activities the world has ever known.
The ashes of this volcano covered five hundred
square miles to a depth of from fifteen to
twenty feet.
320,000,000
years ago the third major flood of this period
occurred. The waters of this inundation covered
all the land submerged by the preceding deluge,
while extending farther in many directions all
over the Americas and Europe. Eastern North
America and western Europe were from 10,000 to
15,000 feet under water.
310,000,000
years ago the land masses of the world were
again well up excepting the southern parts of
North America. Mexico emerged, thus creating the
Gulf Sea, which has ever since maintained its
identity.
The life of
this period continues to evolve. The world is
once again quiet and relatively peaceful; the
climate remains mild and equable; the land
plants are migrating farther and farther from
the seashores. The life patterns are well
developed, although few plant fossils of these
times are to be found.
This was the
great age of individual animal organismal
evolution, though many of the basic changes,
such as the transition from plant to animal, had
previously occurred. The marine fauna developed
to the point where every type of life below the
vertebrate scale was represented in the fossils
of those rocks which were laid down during these
times. But all of these animals were marine
organisms. No land animals had yet appeared
except a few types of worms
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which
burrowed along the seashores, nor had the land
plants yet overspread the continents; there was
still too much carbon dioxide in the air to
permit of the existence of air breathers.
Primarily, all animals except certain of the
more primitive ones are directly or indirectly
dependent on plant life for their existence.
The trilobites
were still prominent. These little animals
existed in tens of thousands of patterns and
were the predecessors of modern crustaceans.
Some of the trilobites had from twenty-five to
four thousand tiny eyelets; others had aborted
eyes. As this period closed, the trilobites
shared domination of the seas with several other
forms of invertebrate life. But they utterly
perished during the beginning of the next
period.
Lime-secreting
algae were widespread. There existed thousands
of species of the early ancestors of the corals.
Sea worms were abundant, and there were many
varieties of jellyfish which have since become
extinct. Corals and the later types of sponges
evolved. The cephalopods were well developed,
and they have survived as the modern pearly
nautilus, octopus, cuttlefish, and squid.
There were
many varieties of shell animals, but their
shells were not then so much needed for
defensive purposes as in subsequent ages. The
gastropods were present in the waters of the
ancient seas, and they included single-shelled
drills, periwinkles, and snails. The bivalve
gastropods have come on down through the
intervening millions of years much as they then
existed and embrace the muscles, clams, oysters,
and scallops. The valve-shelled organisms also
evolved, and these brachiopods lived in those
ancient waters much as they exist today; they
even had hinged, notched, and other sorts of
protective arrangements of their valves.
So ends the
evolutionary story of the second great period of
marine life, which is known to your geologists
as the Ordovician.
300,000,000
years ago another great period of land
submergence began. The southward and northward
encroachment of the ancient Silurian seas made
ready to engulf most of Europe and North
America. The land was not elevated far above the
sea so that not much deposition occurred about
the shore lines. The seas teemed with
lime-shelled life, and the falling of these
shells to the sea bottom gradually built up very
thick layers of limestone. This is the first
widespread limestone deposit, and it covers
practically all of Europe and North America but
only appears at the earth's surface in a few
places. The thickness of this ancient rock layer
averages about one thousand feet, but many of
these deposits have since been greatly deformed
by tilting, upheavals, and faulting, and many
have been changed to quartz, shale, and marble.
No fire rocks
or lava are found in the stone layers of this
period except those of the great volcanoes of
southern Europe and eastern Maine and the lava
flows of Quebec. Volcanic action was largely
past. This was the height of great water
deposition; there was little or no mountain
building.
290,000,000
years ago the sea had largely withdrawn from the
continents, and the bottoms of the surrounding
oceans were sinking. The land masses were little
changed until they were again submerged. The
early mountain movements
Page 677
of all
the continents were beginning, and the greatest
of these crustal upheavals were the Himalayas of
Asia and the great Caledonian Mountains,
extending from Ireland through Scotland and on
to Spitzbergen.
It is in the
deposits of this age that much of the gas, oil,
zinc, and lead are found, the gas and oil being
derived from the enormous collections of
vegetable and animal matter carried down at the
time of the previous land submergence, while the
mineral deposits represent the sedimentation of
sluggish bodies of water. Many of the rock salt
deposits belong to this period.
The trilobites
rapidly declined, and the center of the stage
was occupied by the larger mollusks, or
cephalopods. These animals grew to be fifteen
feet long and one foot in diameter and became
masters of the seas. This species of animal
appeared suddenly and assumed dominance
of sea life.
The great
volcanic activity of this age was in the
European sector. Not in millions upon millions
of years had such violent and extensive volcanic
eruptions occurred as now took place around the
Mediterranean trough and especially in the
neighborhood of the British Isles. This lava
flow over the British Isles region today appears
as alternate layers of lava and rock 25,000 feet
thick. These rocks were laid down by the
intermittent lava flows which spread out over a
shallow sea bed, thus interspersing the rock
deposits, and all of this was subsequently
elevated high above the sea. Violent earthquakes
took place in northern Europe, notably in
Scotland.
The oceanic
climate remained mild and uniform, and the warm
seas bathed the shores of the polar lands.
Brachiopod and other marine-life fossils may be
found in these deposits right up to the North
Pole. Gastropods, brachiopods, sponges, and
reef-making corals continued to increase.
The close of
this epoch witnesses the second advance of the
Silurian seas with another commingling of the
waters of the southern and northern oceans. The
cephalopods dominate marine life, while
associated forms of life progressively develop
and differentiate.
280,000,000
years ago the continents had largely emerged
from the second Silurian inundation. The rock
deposits of this submergence are known in North
America as Niagara limestone because this is the
stratum of rock over which Niagara Falls now
flows. This layer of rock extends from the
eastern mountains to the Mississippi valley
region but not farther west except to the south.
Several layers extend over Canada, portions of
South America, Australia, and most of Europe,
the average thickness of this Niagara series
being about six hundred feet. Immediately
overlying the Niagara deposit, in many regions
may be found a collection of conglomerate,
shale, and rock salt. This is the accumulation
of secondary subsidences. This salt settled in
great lagoons which were alternately opened up
to the sea and then cut off so that evaporation
occurred with deposition of salt along with
other matter held in solution. In some regions
these rock salt beds are seventy feet thick.
The climate is
even and mild, and marine fossils are laid down
in the arctic regions. But by the end of this
epoch the seas are so excessively salty that
little life survives.
Toward the
close of the final Silurian submergence there is
a great increase in the echinoderms--the stone
lilies--as is evidenced by the crinoid limestone
deposits. The trilobites have nearly
disappeared, and the mollusks continue monarchs
of the seas; coral-reef formation increases
greatly. During this age,
Page 678
in the
more favorable locations the primitive water
scorpions first evolve. Soon thereafter, and
suddenly, the true scorpions--actual air
breathers--make their appearance.
These
developments terminate the third marine-life
period, covering twenty-five million years and
known to your researchers as the Silurian.
In the agelong
struggle between land and water, for long
periods the sea has been comparatively
victorious, but times of land victory are just
ahead. And the continental drifts have not
proceeded so far but that, at times, practically
all of the land of the world is connected by
slender isthmuses and narrow land bridges.
As the land
emerges from the last Silurian inundation, an
important period in world development and life
evolution comes to an end. It is the dawn of a
new age on earth. The naked and unattractive
landscape of former times is becoming clothed
with luxuriant verdure, and the first
magnificent forests will soon appear.
The marine
life of this age was very diverse due to the
early species segregation, but later on there
was free commingling and association of all
these different types. The brachiopods early
reached their climax, being succeeded by the
arthropods, and barnacles made their first
appearance. But the greatest event of all was
the sudden appearance of the fish family. This
became the age of fishes, that period of the
world's history characterized by the
vertebrate type of animal.
270,000,000
years ago the continents were all above water.
In millions upon millions of years not so much
land had been above water at one time; it was
one of the greatest land-emergence epochs in all
world history.
Five million
years later the land areas of North and South
America, Europe, Africa, northern Asia, and
Australia were briefly inundated, in North
America the submergence at one time or another
being almost complete; and the resulting
limestone layers run from 500 to 5,000 feet in
thickness. These various Devonian seas extended
first in one direction and then in another so
that the immense arctic North American inland
sea found an outlet to the Pacific Ocean through
northern California.
260,000,000
years ago, toward the end of this
land-depression epoch, North America was
partially overspread by seas having simultaneous
connection with the Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic,
and Gulf waters. The deposits of these later
stages of the first Devonian flood average about
one thousand feet in thickness. The coral reefs
characterizing these times indicate that the
inland seas were clear and shallow. Such coral
deposits are exposed in the banks of the Ohio
River near Louisville, Kentucky, and are about
one hundred feet thick, embracing more than two
hundred varieties. These coral formations extend
through Canada and northern Europe to the arctic
regions.
Following
these submergences, many of the shore lines were
considerably elevated so that the earlier
deposits were covered by mud or shale. There is
also
Page 679
a red
sandstone stratum which characterizes one of the
Devonian sedimentations, and this red layer
extends over much of the earth's surface, being
found in North and South America, Europe,
Russia, China, Africa, and Australia. Such red
deposits are suggestive of arid or semiarid
conditions, but the climate of this epoch was
still mild and even.
Throughout all
of this period the land southeast of the
Cincinnati Island remained well above water. But
very much of western Europe, including the
British Isles, was submerged. In Wales, Germany,
and other places in Europe the Devonian rocks
are 20,000 feet thick.
250,000,000
years ago witnessed the appearance of the fish
family, the vertebrates, one of the most
important steps in all prehuman evolution.
The
arthropods, or crustaceans, were the ancestors
of the first vertebrates. The forerunners of the
fish family were two modified arthropod
ancestors; one had a long body connecting a head
and tail, while the other was a backboneless,
jawless prefish. But these preliminary types
were quickly destroyed when the fishes, the
first vertebrates of the animal world, made
their sudden appearance from the north.
Many of the
largest true fish belong to this age, some of
the teeth-bearing varieties being twenty-five to
thirty feet long; the present-day sharks are the
survivors of these ancient fishes. The lung and
armored fishes reached their evolutionary apex,
and before this epoch had ended, fishes had
adapted to both fresh and salt waters.
Veritable bone
beds of fish teeth and skeletons may be found in
the deposits laid down toward the close of this
period, and rich fossil beds are situated along
the coast of California since many sheltered
bays of the Pacific Ocean extended into the land
of that region.
The earth was
being rapidly overrun by the new orders of land
vegetation. Heretofore few plants grew on land
except about the water's edge. Now, and
suddenly, the prolific fern family
appeared and quickly spread over the face of the
rapidly rising land in all parts of the world.
Tree types, two feet thick and forty feet high,
soon developed; later on, leaves evolved, but
these early varieties had only rudimentary
foliage. There were many smaller plants, but
their fossils are not found since they were
usually destroyed by the still earlier appearing
bacteria.
As the land
rose, North America became connected with Europe
by land bridges extending to Greenland. And
today Greenland holds the remains of these early
land plants beneath its mantle of ice.
240,000,000
years ago the land over parts of both Europe and
North and South America began to sink. This
subsidence marked the appearance of the last and
least extensive of the Devonian floods. The
arctic seas again moved southward over much of
North America, the Atlantic inundated a large
part of Europe and western Asia, while the
southern Pacific covered most of India. This
inundation was slow in appearing and equally
slow in retreating. The Catskill Mountains along
the west bank of the Hudson River are one of the
largest geologic monuments of this epoch to be
found on the surface of North America.
230,000,000
years ago the seas were continuing their
retreat. Much of North America was above water,
and great volcanic activity occurred in the St.
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Lawrence region. Mount Royal, at Montreal, is
the eroded neck of one of these volcanoes. The
deposits of this entire epoch are well shown in
the Appalachian Mountains of North America where
the Susquehanna River has cut a valley exposing
these successive layers, which attained a
thickness of over 13,000 feet.
The elevation
of the continents proceeded, and the atmosphere
was becoming enriched with oxygen. The earth was
overspread by vast forests of ferns one hundred
feet high and by the peculiar trees of those
days, silent forests; not a sound was heard, not
even the rustle of a leaf, for such trees had no
leaves.
And thus drew
to a close one of the longest periods of
marine-life evolution, the age of fishes.
This period of the world's history lasted almost
fifty million years; it has become known to your
researchers as the Devonian.
The appearance
of fish during the preceding period marks the
apex of marine-life evolution. From this point
onward the evolution of land life becomes
increasingly important. And this period opens
with the stage almost ideally set for the
appearance of the first land animals.
220,000,000
years ago many of the continental land areas,
including most of North America, were above
water. The land was overrun by luxurious
vegetation; this was indeed the age of ferns.
Carbon dioxide was still present in the
atmosphere but in lessening degree.
Shortly
thereafter the central portion of North America
was inundated, creating two great inland seas.
Both the Atlantic and Pacific coastal highlands
were situated just beyond the present shore
lines. These two seas presently united,
commingling their different forms of life, and
the union of these marine fauna marked the
beginning of the rapid and world-wide decline in
marine life and the opening of the subsequent
land-life period.
210,000,000
years ago the warm-water arctic seas covered
most of North America and Europe. The south
polar waters inundated South America and
Australia, while both Africa and Asia were
highly elevated.
When the seas
were at their height, a new evolutionary
development suddenly occurred. Abruptly,
the first of the land animals appeared. There
were numerous species of these animals that were
able to live on land or in water. These
air-breathing amphibians developed from the
arthropods, whose swim bladders had evolved into
lungs.
From the briny
waters of the seas there crawled out upon the
land snails, scorpions, and frogs. Today frogs
still lay their eggs in water, and their young
first exist as little fishes, tadpoles. This
period could well be known as the age of
frogs.
Very soon
thereafter the insects first appeared and,
together with spiders, scorpions, cockroaches,
crickets, and locusts, soon overspread the
continents of the world. Dragon flies measured
thirty inches across. One thousand species of
cockroaches developed, and some grew to be four
inches long.
Two groups of
echinoderms became especially well developed,
and they are in reality the guide fossils of
this epoch. The large shell-feeding sharks were
also
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highly
evolved, and for more than five million years
they dominated the oceans. The climate was still
mild and equable; the marine life was little
changed. Fresh-water fish were developing and
the trilobites were nearing extinction. Corals
were scarce, and much of the limestone was being
made by the crinoids. The finer building
limestones were laid down during this epoch.
The waters of
many of the inland seas were so heavily charged
with lime and other minerals as greatly to
interfere with the progress and development of
many marine species. Eventually the seas cleared
up as the result of an extensive stone deposit,
in some places containing zinc and lead.
The deposits
of this early Carboniferous age are from 500 to
2,000 feet thick, consisting of sandstone,
shale, and limestone. The oldest strata yield
the fossils of both land and marine animals and
plants, along with much gravel and basin
sediments. Little workable coal is found in
these older strata. These depositions throughout
Europe are very similar to those laid down over
North America.
Toward the
close of this epoch the land of North America
began to rise. There was a short interruption,
and the sea returned to cover about half of its
previous beds. This was a short inundation, and
most of the land was soon well above water.
South America was still connected with Europe by
way of Africa.
This epoch
witnessed the beginning of the Vosges, Black
Forest, and Ural mountains. Stumps of other and
older mountains are to be found all over Great
Britain and Europe.
200,000,000
years ago the really active stages of the
Carboniferous period began. For twenty million
years prior to this time the earlier coal
deposits were being laid down, but now the more
extensive coal-formation activities were in
process. The length of the actual
coal-deposition epoch was a little over
twenty-five million years.
The land was
periodically going up and down due to the
shifting sea level occasioned by activities on
the ocean bottoms. This crustal uneasiness--the
settling and rising of the land--in connection
with the prolific vegetation of the coastal
swamps, contributed to the production of
extensive coal deposits, which have caused this
period to be known as the Carboniferous.
And the climate was still mild the world over.
The coal
layers alternate with shale, stone, and
conglomerate. These coal beds over central and
eastern United States vary in thickness from
forty to fifty feet. But many of these deposits
were washed away during subsequent land
elevations. In some parts of North America and
Europe the coal-bearing strata are 18,000 feet
in thickness.
The presence
of roots of trees as they grew in the clay
underlying the present coal beds demonstrates
that coal was formed exactly where it is now
found. Coal is the water-preserved and
pressure-modified remains of the rank vegetation
growing in the bogs and on the swamp shores of
this faraway age. Coal layers often hold both
gas and oil. Peat beds, the remains of past
vegetable growth, would be converted into a type
of coal if subjected to proper pressure and
heat. Anthracite has been subjected to more
pressure and heat than other coal.
In North
America the layers of coal in the various beds,
which indicate the number of times the land fell
and rose, vary from ten in Illinois, twenty in
Pennsylvania, thirty-five in Alabama, to
seventy-five in Canada. Both fresh- and
salt-water fossils are found in the coal beds.
Page 682
Throughout this epoch the mountains of North and
South America were active, both the Andes and
the southern ancestral Rocky Mountains rising.
The great Atlantic and Pacific high coastal
regions began to sink, eventually becoming so
eroded and submerged that the coast lines of
both oceans withdrew to approximately their
present positions. The deposits of this
inundation average about one thousand feet in
thickness.
190,000,000
years ago witnessed a westward extension of the
North American Carboniferous sea over the
present Rocky Mountain region, with an outlet to
the Pacific Ocean through northern California.
Coal continued to be laid down throughout the
Americas and Europe, layer upon layer, as the
coastlands rose and fell during these ages of
seashore oscillations.
180,000,000
years ago brought the close of the Carboniferous
period, during which coal had been formed all
over the world--in Europe, India, China, North
Africa, and the Americas. At the close of the
coal-formation period North America east of the
Mississippi valley rose, and most of this
section has ever since remained above the sea.
This land-elevation period marks the beginning
of the modern mountains of North America, both
in the Appalachian regions and in the west.
Volcanoes were active in Alaska and California
and in the mountain-forming regions of Europe
and Asia. Eastern America and western Europe
were connected by the continent of Greenland.
Land elevation
began to modify the marine climate of the
preceding ages and to substitute therefor the
beginnings of the less mild and more variable
continental climate.
The plants of
these times were spore bearing, and the wind was
able to spread them far and wide. The trunks of
the Carboniferous trees were commonly seven feet
in diameter and often one hundred and
twenty-five feet high. The modern ferns are
truly relics of these bygone ages.
In general,
these were the epochs of development for
fresh-water organisms; little change occurred in
the previous marine life. But the important
characteristic of this period was the sudden
appearance of the frogs and their many cousins.
The life features of the coal age were ferns
and frogs.
This period
marks the end of pivotal evolutionary
development in marine life and the opening of
the transition period leading to the subsequent
ages of land animals.
This age was
one of great life impoverishment. Thousands of
marine species perished, and life was hardly yet
established on land. This was a time of biologic
tribulation, the age when life nearly vanished
from the face of the earth and from the depths
of the oceans. Toward the close of the long
marine-life era there were more than one hundred
thousand species of living things on earth. At
the close of this period of transition less than
five hundred had survived.
The
peculiarities of this new period were not due so
much to the cooling of the earth's crust or to
the long absence of volcanic action as to an
unusual combination of commonplace and
pre-existing influences--restrictions of the
Page 683
seas
and increasing elevation of enormous land
masses. The mild marine climate of former times
was disappearing, and the harsher continental
type of weather was fast developing.
170,000,000
years ago great evolutionary changes and
adjustments were taking place over the entire
face of the earth. Land was rising all over the
world as the ocean beds were sinking. Isolated
mountain ridges appeared. The eastern part of
North America was high above the sea; the west
was slowly rising. The continents were covered
by great and small salt lakes and numerous
inland seas which were connected with the oceans
by narrow straits. The strata of this transition
period vary in thickness from 1,000 to 7,000
feet.
The earth's
crust folded extensively during these land
elevations. This was a time of continental
emergence except for the disappearance of
certain land bridges, including the continents
which had so long connected South America with
Africa and North America with Europe.
Gradually the
inland lakes and seas were drying up all over
the world. Isolated mountain and regional
glaciers began to appear, especially over the
Southern Hemisphere, and in many regions the
glacial deposit of these local ice formations
may be found even among some of the upper and
later coal deposits. Two new climatic factors
appeared--glaciation and aridity. Many of the
earth's higher regions had become arid and
barren.
Throughout
these times of climatic change, great variations
also occurred in the land plants. The seed
plants first appeared, and they afforded a
better food supply for the subsequently
increased land-animal life. The insects
underwent a radical change. The resting
stages evolved to meet the demands of
suspended animation during winter and drought.
Among the land
animals the frogs reached their climax in the
preceding age and rapidly declined, but they
survived because they could long live even in
the drying-up pools and ponds of these
far-distant and extremely trying times. During
this declining frog age, in Africa, the first
step in the evolution of the frog into the
reptile occurred. And since the land masses were
still connected, this prereptilian creature, an
air breather, spread over all the world. By this
time the atmosphere had been so changed that it
served admirably to support animal respiration.
It was soon after the arrival of these
prereptilian frogs that North America was
temporarily isolated, cut off from Europe, Asia,
and South America.
The gradual
cooling of the ocean waters contributed much to
the destruction of oceanic life. The marine
animals of those ages took temporary refuge in
three favorable retreats: the present Gulf of
Mexico region, the Ganges Bay of India, and the
Sicilian Bay of the Mediterranean basin. And it
was from these three regions that the new marine
species, born to adversity, later went forth to
replenish the seas.
160,000,000
years ago the land was largely covered with
vegetation adapted to support land-animal life,
and the atmosphere had become ideal for animal
respiration. Thus ends the period of marine-life
curtailment and those testing times of biologic
adversity which eliminated all forms of life
except such as had survival value, and which
were therefore entitled to function as the
ancestors of the more rapidly developing and
highly differentiated life of the ensuing ages
of planetary evolution.
Page 684
The
ending of this period of biologic tribulation,
known to your students as the Permian,
also marks the end of the long Paleozoic
era, which covers one quarter of the planetary
history, two hundred and fifty million years.
The vast
oceanic nursery of life on Urantia has served
its purpose. During the long ages when the land
was unsuited to support life, before the
atmosphere contained sufficient oxygen to
sustain the higher land animals, the sea
mothered and nurtured the early life of the
realm. Now the biologic importance of the sea
progressively diminishes as the second stage of
evolution begins to unfold on the land.
[Presented by
a Life Carrier of Nebadon, one of the original
corps assigned to Urantia.] |