Las ERAS GEOLÓGICAS y sus características / Escalas de tiempo geológico
Geological Time Scales and Their Significance
Overview of Geological Time Scales
- Geological time scales are vast periods used by scientists to categorize Earth's history, divided into five main categories: eons, eras, periods, epochs, and ages.
- Eons span billions of years; eras last hundreds of millions; periods cover around 100 million years. Smaller divisions include epochs and ages.
Importance of Major Events
- Geological eras are not fixed timeframes like decades or centuries but are defined by significant geological events that mark their beginnings and ends.
- For instance, the Archean eon concludes with the advent of photosynthesis, which dramatically increased atmospheric oxygen levels.
Breakdown of Eons
- There are three primary eons:
- Archean (4 billion to 2.5 billion years ago)
- Proterozoic (2.5 billion to 542 million years ago)
- Phanerozoic (542 million years ago to present).
Detailed Structure of Eras
- Each eon is subdivided into several shorter geological eras characterized by significant biological changes:
- The Mesozoic era includes three periods: Cretaceous, Jurassic, and Triassic.
Epochs and Ages within Periods
- Each period further divides into epochs; for example, the Jurassic period has three epochs: Late Jurassic, Middle Jurassic, and Early Jurassic.
- Ages represent the smallest units in this hierarchy; for instance, the Middle Jurassic epoch consists of two ages: Lalinense and Ian.
Characteristics of Geological Eras
Distribution of Eras in Geological Time Scale
- The geological time scale comprises ten distinct eras categorized under different eons:
- Archean (4 billion to ~3.6 billion years ago)
- Proterozoic (2.5 billion to ~542 million years ago)
- Phanerozoic includes Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic.
Key Features of Each Era
- Paleoarchean:
- Duration: ~400 million years from ~4 billion to ~3.6 billion years ago.
- Notable for solidifying Earth's crust and forming the first continent.
- Paleo-Proterozoic:
- Duration: ~900 million years from ~2.5 billion to ~1.6 billion years ago.
- Marked by a rise in atmospheric oxygen leading to anaerobic extinctions.
- Meso-Proterozoic:
- Duration: ~500 million years from ~1.6 billion to ~1 billion years ago.
- Significant for sexual reproduction emergence among organisms.
- Neo-Proterozoic:
- Duration: <500 million years from ~1 billion to ~542 million years ago.
- Characterized by major glaciations and evolution of multicellular life forms.
- Paleozoic Era:
- Duration: From approximately 541 million to about 252 million years ago.
- Known for rapid diversification in marine species and formation/disintegration of Pangaea.
Evolutionary Milestones Across Eras
Mesozoic Era Highlights
- Known as the "Age of Dinosaurs," spanning from about 252 million to 66 million years ago with significant plant/animal evolution occurring during this time.
Cenozoic Era Developments
- Extending from approximately 66 million years ago until now; it began post-dinosaur extinction marked by mammalian development dominating terrestrial ecosystems.