PAPER 61
- THE MAMMALIAN ERA ON URANTIA
The era of mammals
extends from the times of the origin of placental
mammals to the end of the ice age, covering a little
less than fifty million years.
During this
Cenozoic age the world's landscape presented an
attractive appearance--rolling hills, broad valleys,
wide rivers, and great forests. Twice during this
sector of time the Panama Isthmus went up and down;
three times Bering Strait land bridge did the same.
The animal types were both many and varied. The
trees swarmed with birds, and the whole world was an
animal paradise, notwithstanding the incessant
struggle of the evolving animal species for
supremacy.
The accumulated
deposits of the five periods of this
fifty-million-year era contain the fossil records of
the successive mammalian dynasties and lead right up
through the times of the actual appearance of man
himself.
1. THE
NEW CONTINENTAL LAND STAGE
THE AGE OF
EARLY MAMMALS
50,000,000
years ago the land areas of the world were very
generally above water or only slightly submerged.
The formations and deposits of this period are both
land and marine, but chiefly land. For a
considerable time the land gradually rose but was
simultaneously washed down to the lower levels and
toward the seas.
Early in this
period and in North America the placental type of
mammals suddenly appeared, and they
constituted the most important evolutionary
development up to this time. Previous orders of
nonplacental mammals had existed, but this new type
sprang directly and suddenly from the
pre-existent reptilian ancestor whose descendants
had persisted on down through the times of dinosaur
decline. The father of the placental mammals was a
small, highly active, carnivorous, springing type of
dinosaur.
Basic mammalian
instincts began to be manifested in these primitive
mammalian types. Mammals possess an immense survival
advantage over all other forms of animal life in
that they can:
1. Bring forth
relatively mature and well-developed offspring.
2. Nourish,
nurture, and protect their offspring with
affectionate regard.
3. Employ their
superior brain power in self-perpetuation.
4. Utilize
increased agility in escaping from enemies.
5. Apply superior
intelligence to environmental adjustment and
adaptation.
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45,000,000
years ago the continental backbones were elevated in
association with a very general sinking of the coast
lines. Mammalian life was evolving rapidly. A small
reptilian, egg-laying type of mammal flourished, and
the ancestors of the later kangaroos roamed
Australia. Soon there were small horses,
fleet-footed rhinoceroses, tapirs with proboscises,
primitive pigs, squirrels, lemurs, opossums, and
several tribes of monkeylike animals. They were all
small, primitive, and best suited to living among
the forests of the mountain regions. A large
ostrichlike land bird developed to a height of ten
feet and laid an egg nine by thirteen inches. These
were the ancestors of the later gigantic passenger
birds that were so highly intelligent, and that
onetime transported human beings through the air.
The mammals of the
early Cenozoic lived on land, under the water, in
the air, and among the treetops. They had from one
to eleven pairs of mammary glands, and all were
covered with considerable hair. In common with the
later appearing orders, they developed two
successive sets of teeth and possessed large brains
in comparison to body size. But among them all no
modern forms existed.
40,000,000
years ago the land areas of the Northern Hemisphere
began to elevate, and this was followed by new
extensive land deposits and other terrestrial
activities, including lava flows, warping, lake
formation, and erosion.
During the latter
part of this epoch most of Europe was submerged.
Following a slight land rise the continent was
covered by lakes and bays. The Arctic Ocean, through
the Ural depression, ran south to connect with the
Mediterranean Sea as it was then expanded northward,
the highlands of the Alps, Carpathians, Apennines,
and Pyrenees being up above the water as islands of
the sea. The Isthmus of Panama was up; the Atlantic
and Pacific Oceans were separated. North America was
connected with Asia by the Bering Strait land bridge
and with Europe by way of Greenland and Iceland. The
earth circuit of land in northern latitudes was
broken only by the Ural Straits, which connected the
arctic seas with the enlarged Mediterranean.
Considerable
foraminiferal limestone was deposited in European
waters. Today this same stone is elevated to a
height of 10,000 feet in the Alps, 16,000 feet in
the Himalayas, and 20,000 feet in Tibet. The chalk
deposits of this period are found along the coasts
of Africa and Australia, on the west coast of South
America, and about the West Indies.
Throughout this
so-called Eocene period the evolution of
mammalian and other related forms of life continued
with little or no interruption. North America was
then connected by land with every continent except
Australia, and the world was gradually overrun by
primitive mammalian fauna of various types.
2. THE
RECENT FLOOD STAGE
THE AGE OF
ADVANCED MAMMALS
This period was
characterized by the further and rapid evolution of
placental mammals, the more progressive forms of
mammalian life developing during these times.
Although the early
placental mammals sprang from carnivorous ancestors,
very soon herbivorous branches developed, and,
erelong, omnivorous mammalian
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families also
sprang up. The angiosperms were the principal food
of the rapidly increasing mammals, the modern land
flora, including the majority of present-day plants
and trees, having appeared during earlier periods.
35,000,000
years ago marks the beginning of the age of
placental-mammalian world domination. The southern
land bridge was extensive, reconnecting the then
enormous Antarctic continent with South America,
South Africa, and Australia. In spite of the massing
of land in high latitudes, the world climate
remained relatively mild because of the enormous
increase in the size of the tropic seas, nor was the
land elevated sufficiently to produce glaciers.
Extensive lava flows occurred in Greenland and
Iceland, some coal being deposited between these
layers.
Marked changes
were taking place in the fauna of the planet. The
sea life was undergoing great modification; most of
the present-day orders of marine life were in
existence, and foraminifers continued to play an
important role. The insect life was much like that
of the previous era. The Florissant fossil beds of
Colorado belong to the later years of these
far-distant times. Most of the living insect
families go back to this period, but many then in
existence are now extinct, though their fossils
remain.
On land this was
pre-eminently the age of mammalian renovation and
expansion. Of the earlier and more primitive
mammals, over one hundred species were extinct
before this period ended. Even the mammals of large
size and small brain soon perished. Brains and
agility had replaced armor and size in the progress
of animal survival. And with the dinosaur family on
the decline, the mammals slowly assumed domination
of the earth, speedily and completely destroying the
remainder of their reptilian ancestors.
Along with the
disappearance of the dinosaurs, other and great
changes occurred in the various branches of the
saurian family. The surviving members of the early
reptilian families are turtles, snakes, and
crocodiles, together with the venerable frog, the
only remaining group representative of man's earlier
ancestors.
Various groups of
mammals had their origin in a unique animal now
extinct. This carnivorous creature was something of
a cross between a cat and a seal; it could live on
land or in water and was highly intelligent and very
active. In Europe the ancestor of the canine family
evolved, soon giving rise to many species of small
dogs. About the same time the gnawing rodents,
including beavers, squirrels, gophers, mice, and
rabbits, appeared and soon became a notable form of
life, very little change having since occurred in
this family. The later deposits of this period
contain the fossil remains of dogs, cats, coons, and
weasels in ancestral form.
30,000,000
years ago the modern types of mammals began to make
their appearance. Formerly the mammals had lived for
the greater part in the hills, being of the
mountainous types; suddenly there began the
evolution of the plains or hoofed type, the grazing
species, as differentiated from the clawed flesh
eaters. These grazers sprang from an
undifferentiated ancestor having five toes and
forty-four teeth, which perished before the end of
the age. Toe evolution did not progress beyond the
three-toed stage throughout this period.
The horse, an
outstanding example of evolution, lived during these
times in both North America and Europe, though his
development was not fully completed until the later
ice age. While the rhinoceros family appeared at the
close
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of this period,
it underwent its greatest expansion subsequently. A
small hoglike creature also developed which became
the ancestor of the many species of swine,
peccaries, and hippopotamuses. Camels and llamas had
their origin in North America about the middle of
this period and overran the western plains. Later,
the llamas migrated to South America, the camels to
Europe, and soon both were extinct in North America,
though a few camels survived up to the ice age.
About this time a
notable thing occurred in western North America: The
early ancestors of the ancient lemurs first made
their appearance. While this family cannot be
regarded as true lemurs, their coming marked the
establishment of the line from which the true lemurs
subsequently sprang.
Like the land
serpents of a previous age which betook themselves
to the seas, now a whole tribe of placental mammals
deserted the land and took up their residence in the
oceans. And they have ever since remained in the
sea, yielding the modern whales, dolphins,
porpoises, seals, and sea lions.
The bird life of
the planet continued to develop, but with few
important evolutionary changes. The majority of
modern birds were existent, including gulls, herons,
flamingoes, buzzards, falcons, eagles, owls, quails,
and ostriches.
By the close of
this Oligocene period, covering ten million
years, the plant life, together with the marine life
and the land animals, had very largely evolved and
was present on earth much as today. Considerable
specialization has subsequently appeared, but the
ancestral forms of most living things were then
alive.
3. THE
MODERN MOUNTAIN STAGE
THE AGE OF THE
ELEPHANT AND THE HORSE
Land elevation and
sea segregation were slowly changing the world's
weather, gradually cooling it, but the climate was
still mild. Sequoias and magnolias grew in
Greenland, but the subtropical plants were beginning
to migrate southward. By the end of this period
these warm-climate plants and trees had largely
disappeared from the northern latitudes, their
places being taken by more hardy plants and the
deciduous trees.
There was a great
increase in the varieties of grasses, and the teeth
of many mammalian species gradually altered to
conform to the present-day grazing type.
25,000,000
years ago there was a slight land submergence
following the long epoch of land elevation. The
Rocky Mountain region remained highly elevated so
that the deposition of erosion material continued
throughout the lowlands to the east. The Sierras
were well re-elevated; in fact, they have been
rising ever since. The great four-mile vertical
fault in the California region dates from this time.
20,000,000
years ago was indeed the golden age of mammals.
Bering Strait land bridge was up, and many groups of
animals migrated to North America from Asia,
including the four-tusked mastodons, short-legged
rhinoceroses, and many varieties of the cat family.
The first deer
appeared, and North America was soon overrun by
ruminants--deer, oxen, camels, bison, and several
species of rhinoceroses--but the giant pigs, more
than six feet tall, became extinct.
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The huge
elephants of this and subsequent periods possessed
large brains as well as large bodies, and they soon
overran the entire world except Australia. For once
the world was dominated by a huge animal with a
brain sufficiently large to enable it to carry on.
Confronted by the highly intelligent life of these
ages, no animal the size of an elephant could have
survived unless it had possessed a brain of large
size and superior quality. In intelligence and
adaptation the elephant is approached only by the
horse and is surpassed only by man himself. Even so,
of the fifty species of elephants in existence at
the opening of this period, only two have survived.
15,000,000
years ago the mountain regions of Eurasia were
rising, and there was some volcanic activity
throughout these regions, but nothing comparable to
the lava flows of the Western Hemisphere. These
unsettled conditions prevailed all over the world.
The Strait of
Gibraltar closed, and Spain was connected with
Africa by the old land bridge, but the Mediterranean
flowed into the Atlantic through a narrow channel
which extended across France, the mountain peaks and
highlands appearing as islands above this ancient
sea. Later on, these European seas began to
withdraw. Still later, the Mediterranean was
connected with the Indian Ocean, while at the close
of this period the Suez region was elevated so that
the Mediterranean became, for a time, an inland salt
sea.
The Iceland land
bridge submerged, and the arctic waters commingled
with those of the Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic coast
of North America rapidly cooled, but the Pacific
coast remained warmer than at present. The great
ocean currents were in function and affected climate
much as they do today.
Mammalian life
continued to evolve. Enormous herds of horses joined
the camels on the western plains of North America;
this was truly the age of horses as well as of
elephants. The horse's brain is next in animal
quality to that of the elephant, but in one respect
it is decidedly inferior, for the horse never fully
overcame the deep-seated propensity to flee when
frightened. The horse lacks the emotional control of
the elephant, while the elephant is greatly
handicapped by size and lack of agility. During this
period an animal evolved which was somewhat like
both the elephant and the horse, but it was soon
destroyed by the rapidly increasing cat family.
As Urantia is
entering the so-called "horseless age," you should
pause and ponder what this animal meant to your
ancestors. Men first used horses for food, then for
travel, and later in agriculture and war. The horse
has long served mankind and has played an important
part in the development of human civilization.
The biologic
developments of this period contributed much toward
the setting of the stage for the subsequent
appearance of man. In central Asia the true types of
both the primitive monkey and the gorilla evolved,
having a common ancestor, now extinct. But neither
of these species is concerned in the line of living
beings which were, later on, to become the ancestors
of the human race.
The dog family was
represented by several groups, notably wolves and
foxes; the cat tribe, by panthers and large
saber-toothed tigers, the latter first evolving in
North America. The modern cat and dog families
increased in numbers all over the world. Weasels,
martens, otters, and raccoons thrived and developed
throughout the northern latitudes.
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Birds continued
to evolve, though few marked changes occurred.
Reptiles were similar to modern types--snakes,
crocodiles, and turtles.
Thus drew to a
close a very eventful and interesting period of the
world's history. This age of the elephant and the
horse is known as the Miocene.
4. THE
RECENT CONTINENTAL-ELEVATION STAGE
THE LAST GREAT
MAMMALIAN MIGRATION
This is the period
of preglacial land elevation in North America,
Europe, and Asia. The land was greatly altered in
topography. Mountain ranges were born, streams
changed their courses, and isolated volcanoes broke
out all over the world.
10,000,000
years ago began an age of widespread local land
deposits on the lowlands of the continents, but most
of these sedimentations were later removed. Much of
Europe, at this time, was still under water,
including parts of England, Belgium, and France, and
the Mediterranean Sea covered much of northern
Africa. In North America extensive depositions were
made at the mountain bases, in lakes, and in the
great land basins. These deposits average only about
two hundred feet, are more or less colored, and
fossils are rare. Two great fresh-water lakes
existed in western North America. The Sierras were
elevating; Shasta, Hood, and Rainier were beginning
their mountain careers. But it was not until the
subsequent ice age that North America began its
creep toward the Atlantic depression.
For a short time
all the land of the world was again joined excepting
Australia, and the last great world-wide animal
migration took place. North America was connected
with both South America and Asia, and there was a
free exchange of animal life. Asiatic sloths,
armadillos, antelopes, and bears entered North
America, while North American camels went to China.
Rhinoceroses migrated over the whole world except
Australia and South America, but they were extinct
in the Western Hemisphere by the close of this
period.
In general, the
life of the preceding period continued to evolve and
spread. The cat family dominated the animal life,
and marine life was almost at a standstill. Many of
the horses were still three-toed, but the modern
types were arriving; llamas and giraffelike camels
mingled with the horses on the grazing plains. The
giraffe appeared in Africa, having just as long a
neck then as now. In South America sloths,
armadillos, anteaters, and the South American type
of primitive monkeys evolved. Before the continents
were finally isolated, those massive animals, the
mastodons, migrated everywhere except to Australia.
5,000,000
years ago the horse evolved as it now is and from
North America migrated to all the world. But the
horse had become extinct on the continent of its
origin long before the red man arrived.
The climate was
gradually getting cooler; the land plants were
slowly moving southward. At first it was the
increasing cold in the north that stopped animal
migrations over the northern isthmuses; subsequently
these North American land bridges went down. Soon
afterwards the land connection between Africa and
South America finally submerged, and the Western
Hemisphere was isolated much as it is today. From
this time forward distinct types of life began to
develop in the Eastern and Western Hemispheres.
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And thus does
this period of almost ten million years' duration
draw to a close, and not yet has the ancestor of man
appeared. This is the time usually designated as the
Pliocene.
5. THE
EARLY ICE AGE
By the close of
the preceding period the lands of the northeastern
part of North America and of northern Europe were
highly elevated on an extensive scale, in North
America vast areas rising up to 30,000 feet and
more. Mild climates had formerly prevailed over
these northern regions, and the arctic waters were
all open to evaporation, and they continued to be
ice-free until almost the close of the glacial
period.
Simultaneously
with these land elevations the ocean currents
shifted, and the seasonal winds changed their
direction. These conditions eventually produced an
almost constant precipitation of moisture from the
movement of the heavily saturated atmosphere over
the northern highlands. Snow began to fall on these
elevated and therefore cool regions, and it
continued to fall until it had attained a depth of
20,000 feet. The areas of the greatest depth of
snow, together with altitude, determined the central
points of subsequent glacial pressure flows. And the
ice age persisted just as long as this excessive
precipitation continued to cover these northern
highlands with this enormous mantle of snow, which
soon metamorphosed into solid but creeping ice.
The great ice
sheets of this period were all located on elevated
highlands, not in mountainous regions where they are
found today. One half of the glacial ice was in
North America, one fourth in Eurasia, and one fourth
elsewhere, chiefly in Antarctica. Africa was little
affected by the ice, but Australia was almost
covered with the antarctic ice blanket.
The northern
regions of this world have experienced six separate
and distinct ice invasions, although there were
scores of advances and recessions associated with
the activity of each individual ice sheet. The ice
in North America collected in two and, later, three
centers. Greenland was covered, and Iceland was
completely buried beneath the ice flow. In Europe
the ice at various times covered the British Isles
excepting the coast of southern England, and it
overspread western Europe down to France.
2,000,000
years ago the first North American glacier started
its southern advance. The ice age was now in the
making, and this glacier consumed nearly one million
years in its advance from, and retreat back toward,
the northern pressure centers. The central ice sheet
extended south as far as Kansas; the eastern and
western ice centers were not then so extensive.
1,500,000
years ago the first great glacier was retreating
northward. In the meantime, enormous quantities of
snow had been falling on Greenland and on the
northeastern part of North America, and erelong this
eastern ice mass began to flow southward. This was
the second invasion of the ice.
These first two
ice invasions were not extensive in Eurasia. During
these early epochs of the ice age North America was
overrun with mastodons, woolly mammoths, horses,
camels, deer, musk oxen, bison, ground sloths, giant
beavers, saber-toothed tigers, sloths as large as
elephants, and many groups of the cat and dog
families. But from this time forward they were
rapidly reduced in
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numbers by the
increasing cold of the glacial period. Toward the
close of the ice age the majority of these animal
species were extinct in North America.
Away from the ice
the land and water life of the world was little
changed. Between the ice invasions the climate was
about as mild as at present, perhaps a little
warmer. The glaciers were, after all, local
phenomena, though they spread out to cover enormous
areas. The coastwise climate varied greatly between
the times of glacial inaction and those times when
enormous icebergs were sliding off the coast of
Maine into the Atlantic, slipping out through Puget
Sound into the Pacific, and thundering down
Norwegian fiords into the North Sea.
6.
PRIMITIVE MAN IN THE ICE AGE
The great event of
this glacial period was the evolution of primitive
man. Slightly to the west of India, on land now
under water and among the offspring of Asiatic
migrants of the older North American lemur types,
the dawn mammals suddenly appeared. These
small animals walked mostly on their hind legs, and
they possessed large brains in proportion to their
size and in comparison with the brains of other
animals. In the seventieth generation of this order
of life a new and higher group of animals
suddenly differentiated. These new
mid-mammals--almost twice the size and height of
their ancestors and possessing proportionately
increased brain power--had only well established
themselves when the Primates, the third vital
mutation, suddenly appeared. (At this same
time, a retrograde development within the mid-mammal
stock gave origin to the simian ancestry; and from
that day to this the human branch has gone forward
by progressive evolution, while the simian tribes
have remained stationary or have actually
retrogressed.)
1,000,000
years ago Urantia was registered as an inhabited
world. A mutation within the stock of the
progressing Primates suddenly produced two
primitive human beings, the actual ancestors of
mankind.
This event
occurred at about the time of the beginning of the
third glacial advance; thus it may be seen that your
early ancestors were born and bred in a stimulating,
invigorating, and difficult environment. And the
sole survivors of these Urantia aborigines, the
Eskimos, even now prefer to dwell in frigid northern
climes.
Human beings were
not present in the Western Hemisphere until near the
close of the ice age. But during the interglacial
epochs they passed westward around the Mediterranean
and soon overran the continent of Europe. In the
caves of western Europe may be found human bones
mingled with the remains of both tropic and arctic
animals, testifying that man lived in these regions
throughout the later epochs of the advancing and
retreating glaciers.
7. THE
CONTINUING ICE AGE
Throughout the
glacial period other activities were in progress,
but the action of the ice overshadows all other
phenomena in the northern latitudes. No other
terrestrial activity leaves such characteristic
evidence on the topography. The distinctive boulders
and surface cleavages, such as potholes, lakes,
displaced stone, and rock flour, are to be found in
connection with no other
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phenomenon in
nature. The ice is also responsible for those gentle
swells, or surface undulations, known as drumlins.
And a glacier, as it advances, displaces rivers and
changes the whole face of the earth. Glaciers alone
leave behind them those telltale drifts--the ground,
lateral, and terminal moraines. These drifts,
particularly the ground moraines, extend from the
eastern seaboard north and westward in North America
and are found in Europe and Siberia.
750,000
years ago the fourth ice sheet, a union of the North
American central and eastern ice fields, was well on
its way south; at its height it reached to southern
Illinois, displacing the Mississippi River fifty
miles to the west, and in the east it extended as
far south as the Ohio River and central
Pennsylvania.
In Asia the
Siberian ice sheet made its southernmost invasion,
while in Europe the advancing ice stopped just short
of the mountain barrier of the Alps.
500,000
years ago, during the fifth advance of the ice, a
new development accelerated the course of human
evolution. Suddenly and in one generation the
six colored races mutated from the aboriginal human
stock. This is a doubly important date since it also
marks the arrival of the Planetary Prince.
In North America
the advancing fifth glacier consisted of a combined
invasion by all three ice centers. The eastern lobe,
however, extended only a short distance below the
St. Lawrence valley, and the western ice sheet made
little southern advance. But the central lobe
reached south to cover most of the State of Iowa. In
Europe this invasion of the ice was not so extensive
as the preceding one.
250,000
years ago the sixth and last glaciation began. And
despite the fact that the northern highlands had
begun to sink slightly, this was the period of
greatest snow deposition on the northern ice fields.
In this invasion
the three great ice sheets coalesced into one vast
ice mass, and all of the western mountains
participated in this glacial activity. This was the
largest of all ice invasions in North America; the
ice moved south over fifteen hundred miles from its
pressure centers, and North America experienced its
lowest temperatures.
200,000
years ago, during the advance of the last glacier,
there occurred an episode which had much to do with
the march of events on Urantia--the Lucifer
rebellion.
150,000
years ago the sixth and last glacier reached its
farthest points of southern extension, the western
ice sheet crossing just over the Canadian border;
the central coming down into Kansas, Missouri, and
Illinois; the eastern sheet advancing south and
covering the greater portion of Pennsylvania and
Ohio.
This is the
glacier that sent forth the many tongues, or ice
lobes, which carved out the present-day lakes, great
and small. During its retreat the North American
system of Great Lakes was produced. And Urantian
geologists have very accurately deduced the various
stages of this development and have correctly
surmised that these bodies of water did, at
different times, empty first into the Mississippi
valley, then eastward into the Hudson valley, and
finally by a northern route into the St. Lawrence.
It is thirty-seven thousand years since the
connected Great Lakes system began to empty out over
the present Niagara route.
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100,000
years ago, during the retreat of the last glacier,
the vast polar ice sheets began to form, and the
center of ice accumulation moved considerably
northward. And as long as the polar regions continue
to be covered with ice, it is hardly possible for
another glacial age to occur, regardless of future
land elevations or modification of ocean currents.
This last glacier
was one hundred thousand years advancing, and it
required a like span of time to complete its
northern retreat. The temperate regions have been
free from the ice for a little over fifty thousand
years.
The rigorous
glacial period destroyed many species and radically
changed numerous others. Many were sorely sifted by
the to-and-fro migration which was made necessary by
the advancing and retreating ice. Those animals
which followed the glaciers back and forth over the
land were the bear, bison, reindeer, musk ox,
mammoth, and mastodon.
The mammoth sought
the open prairies, but the mastodon preferred the
sheltered fringes of the forest regions. The
mammoth, until a late date, ranged from Mexico to
Canada; the Siberian variety became wool covered.
The mastodon persisted in North America until
exterminated by the red man much as the white man
later killed off the bison.
In North America,
during the last glaciation, the horse, tapir, llama,
and saber-toothed tiger became extinct. In their
places sloths, armadillos, and water hogs came up
from South America.
The enforced
migration of life before the advancing ice led to an
extraordinary commingling of plants and of animals,
and with the retreat of the final ice invasion, many
arctic species of both plants and animals were left
stranded high upon certain mountain peaks, whither
they had journeyed to escape destruction by the
glacier. And so, today, these dislocated plants and
animals may be found high up on the Alps of Europe
and even on the Appalachian Mountains of North
America.
The ice age is the
last completed geologic period, the so-called
Pleistocene, over two million years in length.
35,000
years ago marks the termination of the great ice age
excepting in the polar regions of the planet. This
date is also significant in that it approximates the
arrival of a Material Son and Daughter and the
beginning of the Adamic dispensation, roughly
corresponding to the beginning of the Holocene or
postglacial period.
This narrative,
extending from the rise of mammalian life to the
retreat of the ice and on down to historic times,
covers a span of almost fifty million years. This is
the last--the current--geologic period and is known
to your researchers as the Cenozoic or
recent-times era.
[Sponsored by a
Resident Life Carrier.] |