PAPER 60
- URANTIA DURING THE EARLY LAND-LIFE ERA
The era of
exclusive marine life has ended. Land elevation,
cooling crust and cooling oceans, sea restriction
and consequent deepening, together with a great
increase of land in northern latitudes, all
conspired greatly to change the world's climate in
all regions far removed from the equatorial zone.
The closing epochs
of the preceding era were indeed the age of frogs,
but these ancestors of the land vertebrates were no
longer dominant, having survived in greatly reduced
numbers. Very few types outlived the rigorous trials
of the preceding period of biologic tribulation.
Even the spore-bearing plants were nearly extinct.
1. THE
EARLY REPTILIAN AGE
The erosion
deposits of this period were mostly conglomerates,
shale, and sandstone. The gypsum and red layers
throughout these sedimentations over both America
and Europe indicate that the climate of these
continents was arid. These arid districts were
subjected to great erosion from the violent and
periodic cloudbursts on the surrounding highlands.
Few fossils are to
be found in these layers, but numerous sandstone
footprints of the land reptiles may be observed. In
many regions the one thousand feet of red sandstone
deposit of this period contains no fossils. The life
of land animals was continuous only in certain parts
of Africa.
These deposits
vary in thickness from 3,000 to 10,000 feet, even
being 18,000 on the Pacific coast. Lava was later
forced in between many of these layers. The
Palisades of the Hudson River were formed by the
extrusion of basalt lava between these Triassic
strata. Volcanic action was extensive in different
parts of the world.
Over Europe,
especially Germany and Russia, may be found deposits
of this period. In England the New Red Sandstone
belongs to this epoch. Limestone was laid down in
the southern Alps as the result of a sea invasion
and may now be seen as the peculiar dolomite
limestone walls, peaks, and pillars of those
regions. This layer is to be found all over Africa
and Australia. The Carrara marble comes from such
modified limestone. Nothing of this period will be
found in the southern regions of South America as
that part of the continent remained down and hence
presents only a water or marine deposit continuous
with the preceding and succeeding epochs.
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150,000,000
years ago the early land-life periods of the world's
history began. Life, in general, did not fare well
but did better than at the strenuous and hostile
close of the marine-life era.
As this era opens,
the eastern and central parts of North America, the
northern half of South America, most of Europe, and
all of Asia are well above water. North America for
the first time is geographically isolated, but not
for long as the Bering Strait land bridge soon again
emerges, connecting the continent with Asia.
Great troughs
developed in North America, paralleling the Atlantic
and Pacific coasts. The great eastern-Connecticut
fault appeared, one side eventually sinking two
miles. Many of these North American troughs were
later filled with erosion deposits, as also were
many of the basins of the fresh- and salt-water
lakes of the mountain regions. Later on, these
filled land depressions were greatly elevated by
lava flows which occurred underground. The petrified
forests of many regions belong to this epoch.
The Pacific coast,
usually above water during the continental
submergences, went down excepting the southern part
of California and a large island which then existed
in what is now the Pacific Ocean. This ancient
California sea was rich in marine life and extended
eastward to connect with the old sea basin of the
midwestern region.
140,000,000
years ago, suddenly and with only the hint of
the two prereptilian ancestors that developed in
Africa during the preceding epoch, the reptiles
appeared in full-fledged form. They developed
rapidly, soon yielding crocodiles, scaled reptiles,
and eventually both sea serpents and flying
reptiles. Their transition ancestors speedily
disappeared.
These rapidly
evolving reptilian dinosaurs soon became the
monarchs of this age. They were egg layers and are
distinguished from all animals by their small
brains, having brains weighing less than one pound
to control bodies later weighing as much as forty
tons. But earlier reptiles were smaller,
carnivorous, and walked kangaroolike on their hind
legs. They had hollow avian bones and subsequently
developed only three toes on their hind feet, and
many of their fossil footprints have been mistaken
for those of giant birds. Later on, the herbivorous
dinosaurs evolved. They walked on all fours, and one
branch of this group developed a protective armor.
Several million
years later the first mammals appeared. They were
nonplacental and proved a speedy failure; none
survived. This was an experimental effort to improve
mammalian types, but it did not succeed on Urantia.
The marine life of
this period was meager but improved rapidly with the
new invasion of the sea, which again produced
extensive coast lines of shallow waters. Since there
was more shallow water around Europe and Asia, the
richest fossil beds are to be found about these
continents. Today, if you would study the life of
this age, examine the Himalayan, Siberian, and
Mediterranean regions, as well as India and the
islands of the southern Pacific basin. A prominent
feature of the marine life was the presence of hosts
of the beautiful ammonites, whose fossil remains are
found all over the world.
130,000,000
years ago the seas had changed very little. Siberia
and North America were connected by the Bering
Strait land bridge. A rich and unique marine life
appeared on the Californian Pacific coast, where
over one thousand species of ammonites developed
from the higher types of cephalopods. The life
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changes of this
period were indeed revolutionary notwithstanding
that they were transitional and gradual.
This period
extended over twenty-five million years and is known
as the Triassic.
2. THE
LATER REPTILIAN AGE
120,000,000
years ago a new phase of the reptilian age began.
The great event of this period was the evolution and
decline of the dinosaurs. Land-animal life reached
its greatest development, in point of size, and had
virtually perished from the face of the earth by the
end of this age. The dinosaurs evolved in all sizes
from a species less than two feet long up to the
huge noncarnivorous dinosaurs, seventy-five feet
long, that have never since been equaled in bulk by
any living creature.
The largest of the
dinosaurs originated in western North America. These
monstrous reptiles are buried throughout the Rocky
Mountain regions, along the whole of the Atlantic
coast of North America, over western Europe, South
Africa, and India, but not in Australia.
These massive
creatures became less active and strong as they grew
larger and larger; but they required such an
enormous amount of food and the land was so overrun
by them that they literally starved to death and
became extinct--they lacked the intelligence to cope
with the situation.
By this time most
of the eastern part of North America, which had long
been elevated, had been leveled down and washed into
the Atlantic Ocean so that the coast extended
several hundred miles farther out than now. The
western part of the continent was still up, but even
these regions were later invaded by both the
northern sea and the Pacific, which extended
eastward to the Dakota Black Hills region.
This was a
fresh-water age characterized by many inland lakes,
as is shown by the abundant fresh-water fossils of
the so-called Morrison beds of Colorado, Montana,
and Wyoming. The thickness of these combined salt-
and fresh-water deposits varies from 2,000 to 5,000
feet; but very little limestone is present in these
layers.
The same polar sea
that extended so far down over North America
likewise covered all of South America except the
soon appearing Andes Mountains. Most of China and
Russia was inundated, but the water invasion was
greatest in Europe. It was during this submergence
that the beautiful lithographic stone of southern
Germany was laid down, those strata in which
fossils, such as the most delicate wings of olden
insects, are preserved as of but yesterday.
The flora of this
age was much like that of the preceding. Ferns
persisted, while conifers and pines became more and
more like the present-day varieties. Some coal was
still being formed along the northern Mediterranean
shores.
The return of the
seas improved the weather. Corals spread to European
waters, testifying that the climate was still mild
and even, but they never again appeared in the
slowly cooling polar seas. The marine life of these
times improved and developed greatly, especially in
European waters. Both corals and crinoids
temporarily appeared in larger numbers than
heretofore, but the ammonites dominated the
invertebrate life of the oceans, their average size
ranging from three to four inches, though one
species attained a diameter of eight feet. Sponges
were everywhere, and both cuttlefish and oysters
continued to evolve.
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110,000,000
years ago the potentials of marine life were
continuing to unfold. The sea urchin was one of the
outstanding mutations of this epoch. Crabs,
lobsters, and the modern types of crustaceans
matured. Marked changes occurred in the fish family,
a sturgeon type first appearing, but the ferocious
sea serpents, descended from the land reptiles,
still infested all the seas, and they threatened the
destruction of the entire fish family.
This continued to
be, pre-eminently, the age of the dinosaurs. They so
overran the land that two species had taken to the
water for sustenance during the preceding period of
sea encroachment. These sea serpents represent a
backward step in evolution. While some new species
are progressing, certain strains remain stationary
and others gravitate backward, reverting to a former
state. And this is what happened when these two
types of reptiles forsook the land.
As time passed,
the sea serpents grew to such size that they became
very sluggish and eventually perished because they
did not have brains large enough to afford
protection for their immense bodies. Their brains
weighed less than two ounces notwithstanding the
fact that these huge ichthyosaurs sometimes grew to
be fifty feet long, the majority being over
thirty-five feet in length. The marine crocodilians
were also a reversion from the land type of reptile,
but unlike the sea serpents, these animals always
returned to the land to lay their eggs.
Soon after two
species of dinosaurs migrated to the water in a
futile attempt at self-preservation, two other types
were driven to the air by the bitter competition of
life on land. But these flying pterosaurs were not
the ancestors of the true birds of subsequent ages.
They evolved from the hollow-boned leaping
dinosaurs, and their wings were of batlike formation
with a spread of twenty to twenty-five feet. These
ancient flying reptiles grew to be ten feet long,
and they had separable jaws much like those of
modern snakes. For a time these flying reptiles
appeared to be a success, but they failed to evolve
along lines which would enable them to survive as
air navigators. They represent the nonsurviving
strains of bird ancestry.
Turtles increased
during this period, first appearing in North
America. Their ancestors came over from Asia by way
of the northern land bridge.
One hundred
million years ago the reptilian age was drawing to a
close. The dinosaurs, for all their enormous mass,
were all but brainless animals, lacking the
intelligence to provide sufficient food to nourish
such enormous bodies. And so did these sluggish land
reptiles perish in ever-increasing numbers.
Henceforth, evolution will follow the growth of
brains, not physical bulk, and the development of
brains will characterize each succeeding epoch of
animal evolution and planetary progress.
This period,
embracing the height and the beginning decline of
the reptiles, extended nearly twenty-five million
years and is known as the Jurassic.
3. THE
CRETACEOUS STAGE
THE
FLOWERING-PLANT PERIOD
THE AGE OF BIRDS
The great
Cretaceous period derives its name from the
predominance of the prolific chalk-making
foraminifers in the seas. This period brings Urantia
to near the end of the long reptilian dominance and
witnesses the appearance of flowering plants and
bird life on land. These are also the times of the
termination
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of the westward
and southward drift of the continents, accompanied
by tremendous crustal deformations and concomitant
widespread lava flows and great volcanic activities.
Near the close of
the preceding geologic period much of the
continental land was up above water, although as yet
there were no mountain peaks. But as the continental
land drift continued, it met with the first great
obstruction on the deep floor of the Pacific. This
contention of geologic forces gave impetus to the
formation of the whole vast north and south mountain
range extending from Alaska down through Mexico to
Cape Horn.
This period thus
becomes the modern mountain-building stage of
geologic history. Prior to this time there were few
mountain peaks, merely elevated land ridges of great
width. Now the Pacific coast range was beginning to
elevate, but it was located seven hundred miles west
of the present shore line. The Sierras were
beginning to form, their gold-bearing quartz strata
being the product of lava flows of this epoch. In
the eastern part of North America, Atlantic sea
pressure was also working to cause land elevation.
100,000,000
years ago the North American continent and a part of
Europe were well above water. The warping of the
American continents continued, resulting in the
metamorphosing of the South American Andes and in
the gradual elevation of the western plains of North
America. Most of Mexico sank beneath the sea, and
the southern Atlantic encroached on the eastern
coast of South America, eventually reaching the
present shore line. The Atlantic and Indian Oceans
were then about as they are today.
95,000,000
years ago the American and European land masses
again began to sink. The southern seas commenced the
invasion of North America and gradually extended
northward to connect with the Arctic Ocean,
constituting the second greatest submergence of the
continent. When this sea finally withdrew, it left
the continent about as it now is. Before this great
submergence began, the eastern Appalachian highlands
had been almost completely worn down to the water's
level. The many colored layers of pure clay now used
for the manufacture of earthenware were laid down
over the Atlantic coast regions during this age,
their average thickness being about 2,000 feet.
Great volcanic
actions occurred south of the Alps and along the
line of the present California coast-range
mountains. The greatest crustal deformations in
millions upon millions of years took place in
Mexico. Great changes also occurred in Europe,
Russia, Japan, and southern South America. The
climate became increasingly diversified.
90,000,000
years ago the angiosperms emerged from these early
Cretaceous seas and soon overran the continents.
These land plants suddenly appeared along
with fig trees, magnolias, and tulip trees. Soon
after this time fig trees, breadfruit trees, and
palms overspread Europe and the western plains of
North America. No new land animals appeared.
85,000,000
years ago Bering Strait closed, shutting off the
cooling waters of the northern seas. Theretofore the
marine life of the Atlantic-Gulf waters and that of
the Pacific Ocean had differed greatly, owing to the
temperature variations of these two bodies of water,
which now became uniform.
The deposits of
chalk and greensand marl give name to this period.
The sedimentations of these times are variegated,
consisting of chalk, shale, sandstone,
Page 690
and small amounts
of limestone, together with inferior coal or
lignite, and in many regions they contain oil. These
layers vary in thickness from 200 feet in some
places to 10,000 feet in western North America and
numerous European localities. Along the eastern
borders of the Rocky Mountains these deposits may be
observed in the uptilted foothills.
All over the world
these strata are permeated with chalk, and these
layers of porous semirock pick up water at upturned
outcrops and convey it downward to furnish the water
supply of much of the earth's present arid regions.
80,000,000
years ago great disturbances occurred in the earth's
crust. The western advance of the continental drift
was coming to a standstill, and the enormous energy
of the sluggish momentum of the hinter continental
mass upcrumpled the Pacific shore line of both North
and South America and initiated profound
repercussional changes along the Pacific shores of
Asia. This circumpacific land elevation, which
culminated in present-day mountain ranges, is more
than twenty-five thousand miles long. And the
upheavals attendant upon its birth were the greatest
surface distortions to take place since life
appeared on Urantia. The lava flows, both above and
below ground, were extensive and widespread.
75,000,000
years ago marks the end of the continental drift.
From Alaska to Cape Horn the long Pacific coast
mountain ranges were completed, but there were as
yet few peaks.
The backthrust of
the halted continental drift continued the elevation
of the western plains of North America, while in the
east the worn-down Appalachian Mountains of the
Atlantic coast region were projected straight up,
with little or no tilting.
70,000,000
years ago the crustal distortions connected with the
maximum elevation of the Rocky Mountain region took
place. A large segment of rock was overthrust
fifteen miles at the surface in British Columbia;
here the Cambrian rocks are obliquely thrust out
over the Cretaceous layers. On the eastern slope of
the Rocky Mountains, near the Canadian border, there
was another spectacular overthrust; here may be
found the prelife stone layers shoved out over the
then recent Cretaceous deposits.
This was an age of
volcanic activity all over the world, giving rise to
numerous small isolated volcanic cones. Submarine
volcanoes broke out in the submerged Himalayan
region. Much of the rest of Asia, including Siberia,
was also still under water.
65,000,000
years ago there occurred one of the greatest lava
flows of all time. The deposition layers of these
and preceding lava flows are to be found all over
the Americas, North and South Africa, Australia, and
parts of Europe.
The land animals
were little changed, but because of greater
continental emergence, especially in North America,
they rapidly multiplied. North America was the great
field of the land-animal evolution of these times,
most of Europe being under water.
The climate was
still warm and uniform. The arctic regions were
enjoying weather much like that of the present
climate in central and southern North America.
Great plant-life
evolution was taking place. Among the land plants
the angiosperms predominated, and many present-day
trees first appeared, including
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beech, birch,
oak, walnut, sycamore, maple, and modern palms.
Fruits, grasses, and cereals were abundant, and
these seed-bearing grasses and trees were to the
plant world what the ancestors of man were to the
animal world--they were second in evolutionary
importance only to the appearance of man himself.
Suddenly and without previous gradation, the
great family of flowering plants mutated. And this
new flora soon overspread the entire world.
60,000,000
years ago, though the land reptiles were on the
decline, the dinosaurs continued as monarchs of the
land, the lead now being taken by the more agile and
active types of the smaller leaping kangaroo
varieties of the carnivorous dinosaurs. But some
time previously there had appeared new types of the
herbivorous dinosaurs, whose rapid increase was due
to the appearance of the grass family of land
plants. One of these new grass-eating dinosaurs was
a true quadruped having two horns and a capelike
shoulder flange. The land type of turtle, twenty
feet across, appeared as did also the modern
crocodile and true snakes of the modern type. Great
changes were also occurring among the fishes and
other forms of marine life.
The wading and
swimming prebirds of earlier ages had not been a
success in the air, nor had the flying dinosaurs.
They were a short-lived species, soon becoming
extinct. They, too, were subject to the dinosaur
doom, destruction, because of having too little
brain substance in comparison with body size. This
second attempt to produce animals that could
navigate the atmosphere failed, as did the abortive
attempt to produce mammals during this and a
preceding age.
55,000,000
years ago the evolutionary march was marked by the
sudden appearance of the first of the true
birds, a small pigeonlike creature which was the
ancestor of all bird life. This was the third type
of flying creature to appear on earth, and it sprang
directly from the reptilian group, not from the
contemporary flying dinosaurs nor from the earlier
types of toothed land birds. And so this becomes
known as the age of birds as well as the
declining age of reptiles.
4. THE
END OF THE CHALK PERIOD
The great
Cretaceous period was drawing to a close, and its
termination marks the end of the great sea invasions
of the continents. Particularly is this true of
North America, where there had been just twenty-four
great inundations. And though there were subsequent
minor submergences, none of these can be compared
with the extensive and lengthy marine invasions of
this and previous ages. These alternate periods of
land and sea dominance have occurred in million-year
cycles. There has been an agelong rhythm associated
with this rise and fall of ocean floor and
continental land levels. And these same rhythmical
crustal movements will continue from this time on
throughout the earth's history but with diminishing
frequency and extent.
This period also
witnesses the end of the continental drift and the
building of the modern mountains of Urantia. But the
pressure of the continental masses and the thwarted
momentum of their agelong drift are not the
exclusive influences in mountain building. The chief
and underlying factor in determining the location of
a mountain range is the pre-existent lowland, or
trough, which has become filled up with the
comparatively lighter deposits of the land erosion
Page 692
and marine drifts
of the preceding ages. These lighter areas of land
are sometimes 15,000 to 20,000 feet thick;
therefore, when the crust is subjected to pressure
from any cause, these lighter areas are the first to
crumple up, fold, and rise upward to afford
compensatory adjustment for the contending and
conflicting forces and pressures at work in the
earth's crust or underneath the crust. Sometimes
these upthrusts of land occur without folding. But
in connection with the rise of the Rocky Mountains,
great folding and tilting occurred, coupled with
enormous overthrusts of the various layers, both
underground and at the surface.
The oldest
mountains of the world are located in Asia,
Greenland, and northern Europe among those of the
older east-west systems. The mid-age mountains are
in the circumpacific group and in the second
European east-west system, which was born at about
the same time. This gigantic uprising is almost ten
thousand miles long, extending from Europe over into
the West Indies land elevations. The youngest
mountains are in the Rocky Mountain system, where,
for ages, land elevations had occurred only to be
successively covered by the sea, though some of the
higher lands remained as islands. Subsequent to the
formation of the mid-age mountains, a real mountain
highland was elevated which was destined,
subsequently, to be carved into the present Rocky
Mountains by the combined artistry of nature's
elements.
The present North
American Rocky Mountain region is not the original
elevation of land; that elevation had been long
since leveled by erosion and then re-elevated. The
present front range of mountains is what is left of
the remains of the original range which was
re-elevated. Pikes Peak and Longs Peak are
outstanding examples of this mountain activity,
extending over two or more generations of mountain
lives. These two peaks held their heads above water
during several of the preceding inundations.
Biologically as
well as geologically this was an eventful and active
age on land and under water. Sea urchins increased
while corals and crinoids decreased. The ammonites,
of preponderant influence during a previous age,
also rapidly declined. On land the fern forests were
largely replaced by pine and other modern trees,
including the gigantic redwoods. By the end of this
period, while the placental mammal has not yet
evolved, the biologic stage is fully set for the
appearance, in a subsequent age, of the early
ancestors of the future mammalian types.
And thus ends a
long era of world evolution, extending from the
early appearance of land life down to the more
recent times of the immediate ancestors of the human
species and its collateral branches. This, the
Cretaceous age, covers fifty million years and
brings to a close the premammalian era of land life,
which extends over a period of one hundred million
years and is known as the Mesozoic.
[Presented by a
Life Carrier of Nebadon assigned to Satania and now
functioning on Urantia.] |