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Solomon Senrick

Neogene Period, Neogene Period Information, Prehistoric Facts -- National Geographic - 6 views

  • India continued its slow-moving collision with Asia, which had already started the giant push-up of the Himalaya that continues today. Italy pushed into Europe, giving rise to the Alps. Spain butted France, and the Pyrenees rose.
  • Elephants and apes wandered from Africa to Eurasia. Rabbits, pigs, saber-toothed cats, and rhinos went to Africa
  • In the oceans, a new type of large brown algae, called kelp, latched onto rocks and corals in cool shallow waters, establishing a new habitat favored by sea otters and dugongs, a marine mammal related to the elephant. Sharks grew and dominated the seas once
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    Explains the spread of continents and climate in Neogene era.
kazalskikris

Geology and Landforms - 0 views

  • Due to less active volcanoes, the Earth’s crust has begun to form.   Most of the water vapor that made up almost the entire atmosphere during the Hadean Eon has condensed into a global ocean.  The lava, which covered most of the Earth during the previous Eon, has now cooled to form the ocean floor.  Other, less active, volcanoes erupt to form small chains of islands in the vast ocean.   These islands are the only land surface, considering that the continents that we know today have not formed.  Every so often, a few islands may collide and form larger islands in their places.   Since fewer asteroids hit Earth, these islands stay intact and become the cores of our modern day continents.
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    Becuase of less active volcanoes the earths crust started to form differently.
aleksandera

Geologic Changes to the Very Good Earth | The Institute for Creation Research - 0 views

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    This site explains the geological changes over time
juliane_g

Weird Forests Once Sprouted in Antarctica - 1 views

  • Some 250 million years ago, during the late Permian and early Triassic, the world was a greenhouse, much hotter than it is today.
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    Information on climate during the permian and triassic periods. 
amys123

Quaternary Period: Climate, Animals & Other Facts - 0 views

  • The Quaternary Period is a geologic time period that encompasses the most recent 2.6 million years — including the present day. Part of the Cenozoic Era, the period is usually divided into two epochs — the Pleistocene Epoch, which lasted from approximately 2 million years ago to about 12,000 years ago, and the Holocene Epoch, which began about 12,000 years ago
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    Information about the Quaternary period (landforms, climates, animals etc.)
aleksandera

Geologic Time and Climate Change Science - 0 views

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    The article explains the concept of the geological time scale, it compares it to the climate change which had already occurred and  is occurring.
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    This site explains the relative dating.
guglielmom

Geological game changer: When continents connected: New study shakes up understanding o... - 0 views

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    This article related to unit 2 lesson 1 in the way that is talks about geological change.
anonymous

The Archean Eon - 0 views

  • As cyanobacteria created more free oxygen, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere reached one percent of today’s level, which is 21 percent.
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    Cyanobacteria and oxygen level
majak2

Monster-Size Marine Crocodile Discovered - 0 views

  • Rather than being a rapid extermination, the extinction may have been a more drawn-out transition. “In our interpretation,” Fanti says, “the end-Jurassic event was global in its effects but was mostly likely a complex sequence of local biological crises that are still poorly documented.”
  • if there was a mass extinction, it didn’t kill off life planetwide
  • Paleontologists have long debated whether or not there was a mass extinction at the end of the Jurassic period, 145 million years ago. The group that includes Machimosaurus, called the teleosaurids, is among those thought to have died out.
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    This article describes a fossil of a crocodile that is 120 million years old. It also questions the theory of mass extinction of dinosaurs at the end of the Jurassic period.
aurciuolo

The Archean Eon and the Hadean - 0 views

  • Online exhibits : Geologic time scale The Archean Eon and the Hadean The Archean eon, which preceded the Proterozoic eon, spanned about 1.5 billion years and is subdivided into four eras: the Neoarche
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    The Archean eon, which preceded the Proterozoic eon, spanned about 1.5 billion years and is subdivided into four eras: the Neoarchean (2.8 to 2.5 billion years ago)
harukas

Relative and absolute ages in the histories of Earth and the Moon: The Geologic Time Sc... - 0 views

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    This website is about the differences between absolute ages and relative ages. Also, it shows the geologic time scales.
jiminp

Proterozoic Eon | geochronology | Britannica.com - 0 views

  • The Proterozoic Eon extended from 2.5 billion to 541 million years ago and is often divided into the Paleoproterozoic (2.5 billion to 1.6 billion years ago), the Mesoproterozoic (1.6 billion to 1 billion years ago), and the Neoproterozoic (1 billion to 541 million years ago) eras.
  • Megascopic eukaryotes first appeared about 2.3 billion years ago and became widespread by about 1.8 billion years ago.
  • Eukaryotes employed a form of respiration and oxidative metabolism; they had a central nucleus that could split into separate sex cells, and so for the first time a mixed and variable genetic code could be passed to younger generations.
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  • Many mountain belts formed during the Proterozoic
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    Useful for the period. 
zosiaa

Cretaceous - Dinopedia - Wikia - 0 views

  • uring the Cretaceous, the late Paleozoic - early Mesozoic supercontinent of Pangea completed its breakup into present day continents, although their positions were substantially different at the time
  • llera
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    This describes the continents during the Cretaceous period.
lauran1

Man v. Mammoth Battle Reveals Prehistoric Arctic Life : Discovery News - 0 views

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    This talks about humans in the Arctic that killed mammoths with different tools.
benjaming1

Geologic Change - 0 views

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    This article compares Earth's geologic features in its early years to Earth's geologic features today. In our lessons we review how geologic changes occurred and what they were.  This article also contained information on what the changes were and how they changed. 
jiminp

Proterozoic Era: Timeline & Facts | Study.com - 0 views

  • During the timeline of the era, several different events took place, eventually helping to shape the Earth as we know it today.
  • During the Proterozoic, the Earth had cooled considerably from the previous Hadean eon when the planet was covered by molten lava.
  • Near the end of the Proterozoic, ice sheets were growing towards the equator, and the entire planet was possibly engulfed under a thin layer of snow and ice.
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  • Life during the Proterozoic began to evolve from simple single cell organisms into more advanced single cell organisms
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    This article talks about the climates, evolution of life and increase in oxygen during the Proterozoic.
juliane_g

Images: Bizarre, Primordial Sea Creatures Dominated the Ediacaran Era - 0 views

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    Information on the sea in the Ediacaran era During the Ediacaran period, about 635 million to 541 million years ago, oxygen was sparse, the oceans were murky and marine organisms ate by absorbing nutrients floating around in the water.
benjamink12

Australopithecus afarensis - 0 views

  • Found between 3.85 and 2.95 million years ago in Eastern Africa (Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania),
  • Similar to chimpanzees, Au. afarensis children grew rapidly after birth and reached adulthood earlier than modern humans. This meant Au. afarensis had a shorter period of growing up than modern humans have today, leaving them less time for parental guidance and socialization during childhood.
  • Au. afarensis had both ape and human characteristics: members of this species had apelike face proportions (a flat nose, a strongly projecting lower jaw) and braincase (with a small brain, usually less than 500 cubic centimeters -- about 1/3 the size of a modern human brain)
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    All basic good information about Australopithecus afarensis
claudiav2

The Jurassic Period - 0 views

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    Facts on the Jurassic period 
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