Theme 5C Flashcards
How old are the Earth and its life?
Earth: 4.5bil
Unicellular prokaryotes: 3.5bil
Multicellular life: 2.1bil
Complex multicellular animals: 650mil
What was early Earth’s atmosphere?
- originally little oxygen - reducing atmosphere
- oxidation prevented by removal of oxygen and other oxidizing gases or vapours (water (H2O), methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3) and hydrogen (H2) as major components)
- the input of energy (lightning) would transform these into organic compounds in ‘primordial soup’
Archaean Period
- From 4bil to 510million years ago
- Prokaryotes, Eukaryotes, Multicellularity
- Cyanobacteria photosynthesized for energy, converted early reducing atmosphere into an oxidizing one
- Stimulated biodiversity and led to near-extinction of oxygen-intolerant organisms
Great Oxygenation Event
- Free oxygen accumulates in the atmosphere about 2.5billion years ago, with a huge increase 850 million years ago
What is the evidence of the great oxygenation event?
- Banded Iron Formations abundant between 2.5 and 1.8 billion years ago, decline after
- Major changes in the number of rock types formed after this event: hydrated and oxidized minerals
Why the long gap before O2 atmosphere?
- Probably a long period of anoxygenic photosynthesis
- Free oxygen reacted with ocean chemistry (not immediately released into the atmosphere) –
- Banded Iron Formations – oxygen was reacting with iron and sulfur to form these rocks, common between 2.5 and 1.8 billion years ago
What is endosymbiosis?
- The origin of key eukaryotic organelles resulting from the symbiosis between separate single-celled organisms
- mitochondria and plastids were free-living bacteria taken inside another cell
Evidence of Endosymbiosis?
- Organelles are bound by membranes (just like prokaryotes)
- Organelles have their own DNA separate from DNA in the nucleus
- Mitochondrial DNA sequences similar to bacteria/ chloroplast DNA sequences similar to those of some cyanobacteria
- Reproduction: mitochondria replicate by pinching
What is the Paleozoic period?
Cambrian explosion; invasion of land; the appearance of gymnosperms; major groups of tetrapods
What was the Cambrian Explosion?
- Rapid appearance of many groups of organisms about 530 million years ago
- Preceded by appearance of small shell parts
- Unusually high number of sites with soft-body preservation (e.g. Burgess Shale)
- Includes evidence of arthropods, echinoderms, and a large number of extinct forms
- Features of many modern groups appear: heads, mouths, eyes, legs
Why was it an explosion of life?
- Genetic diversity likely present
- Increasing O2 levels from eukaryotic algae (allowing for higher metabolic rates, larger body size, etc.)
- Evolution of grazing, reduction of algal mats
- Shift in ocean chemistry favouring production of calcium carbonate
Extinction and Mass Extinctions
- Normal background rate of extinction varies but usually less than or equal to the rate of speciation over time
- Mass extinction: rate of extinction greatly exceeds the rate of speciation (usually defined as more than 75% of known species in a geologically short interval
- Mass extinctions are periodic
Why are mass extinctions significant to evolution?
- Niches are cleared/ecological opportunities available
- Leaves ‘dead clades walking’ (low diversity remnants of once diverse lineages)