- The Paleozoic Era, one of the longest of the Eras, is the oldest Era which started approximately 541 million years ago and ended about 252 million years ago.
- Its name means “ancient life” in Greek and it is known for the variety of life that rapidly began to appear.
- The Paleozoic Era can be subdivided into six geologic periods.
- These include: the Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous, and the Permian Periods.
The Cambrian Period:
- The Cambrian Period is a Geologic Time Scale period which ran from 541 million years ago to 485 million years ago.
- During this time, an event called the Cambrian Explosion began which resulted in an unprecedented number of creatures evolving during one single period in Earth’s entire history.
- Some of the flora which evolved during this time included algae and some of the animals that evolved included creatures such as trilobites.
- It was also during this time that most of the world’s major marine phyla started evolving.
The Ordovician Period:
- Running from approximately 485 to 440 million years ago, the Ordovician Period was a period of time in which many of the animal species that we are familiar with today starting evolving.
- Some of these species include cephalopods, snails, shellfish and primitive fish.
- This was also a period of time in which corals started evolving.
- On the cusp of the Ordovician and Silurian Periods, there was a major extinction event which resulted in approximately 60% of the marine invertebrates to become extinct.
- This is considered to be the First Mass Extinction.
The Silurian Period:
- Spanning from approximately 440 to 419 million years ago, the Silurian was a Geologic Time Scale period in which the Earth was beginning to recover from the First Major Extinction.
- It was a time when Snowball Earth began to warm and the number of marine animals began to dramatically rise.
- During this period, jaw-less fish multiplied, jawed fish began to first evolve and it is also the time when freshwater fish began to evolve.
The Devonian Period:
- Starting around 419 million years ago and ending about 360 million years ago, the Devonian Period was known for an uptick in the number of fish and the diversification of these fish.
- This resulted in many paleontologists referring to this period as the Age of the Fish.
- However, fish wasn’t the only animals to evolve.
- This was also a time when amphibians began to evolve.
- It was also a time when flora such as trees began to evolve.
- 4 million years before the end of this period, the Second Mass Extinction hit the world.
- This extinction wiped out 57% of all marine genera.
The Carboniferous Period:
- Starting approximately 360 million years ago and ending about 300 million years ago, the Carboniferous Period is a place in Earth’s timeline in which the average global temperatures of the world began to rise.
- Average worldwide temperatures were approximately 68 degrees Fahrenheit (about 20 degrees Celsius).
- The landscape of the Earth during this geological time scale was mainly tropical swamps.
- As these tropical trees began to die after their natural lifespans were over, they would eventually become peat which would then, in turn, eventually become rich deposits of coal over time.
The Permian Period:
- The Permian Period originated around 300 million years ago and ended about 250 million years ago.
- This period on the Geologic Time Scale was the last period of the Paleozoic Era.
- During this period, the Earth was at its driest as compared to any other previous period and it was also a period of time which was dominated by synapsids and reptiles.
- Conifers also began to evolve and would eventually come to dominate the dry terrain.
- At the end of this period was the Third Mass Extinction known by many paleontologists as the “Great Dying.”
- All but 5% of the world’s life would go extinct during this period.
- This era began approximately 252 million years ago and ended about 66 million years ago.
- This era can be subdivided into 3 periods – these include the Triassic, the Jurassic and the Cretaceous Periods.
The Triassic Period:
- Starting approximately 250 million years ago and ending about 200 million years ago, the Triassic is a period of which is usually broken down into 3 major epochs – The Early Triassic, The Middle Triassic, and the Late Triassic Epochs.
- During this period, a variety of different animals began evolving including nothosaurs and ichthyosaurs.
- All types of crustaceans and corals also began to proliferate.
- By the end of the Triassic Period, there was an explosion in reptilian evolution and dinosaurs also began to evolve.
- However, as temperatures on Earth began to rise, the Fourth Major Extinction occurred – also known as the Triassic-Jurassic Extinction Event.
- This event killed off all archosaurs, except for crocodiles, and almost all of the large amphibians that existed at the time.
- It also killed off over 30% if all marine animals.
The Jurassic Period:
- The Jurassic Period ran from 200 to 145 million years ago and is one of the most famous of the Periods on the Geologic Time Scale.
- This period can be subdivided into its three major epochs which include the Early Jurassic, the Middle Jurassic, and the Late Jurassic Epochs.
- During this beginning of this period on the geological time scale, huge prairies of ferns crossed the land masses and dinosaurs such as Diplodocus and Brachiosaurus fed off of these fern forests.
- True crocodiles began to evolve during this time as well.
- It was also the time when mammals began to evolve.
- By the end of the Jurassic Period, there was an extinction called the Jurassic-Cretaceous Extinction Event that killed off a fair number of species during this time.
- However, this extinction event is not considered to be one of the major ones on the prehistoric timeline.
The Cretaceous Period:
- The Cretaceous Period occurred on Earth’s timeline from about 145 million to 66 million years ago.
- This period can be subdivided into two epochs – the Early Cretaceous Epoch and the Late Cretaceous Epoch.
- During this time, dinosaurs such as Eustreptospondylus, Carcharodontosaurus and Spinosaurus began to evolve and the Iguanodon managed to spread its kind to every continent on the planet.
- It was during this period that the K-T Extinction, also known as the Fifth Major Extinction (the most recent one) occurred.
- This extinction event would bring an end to the dinosaurs and would cause 75% of the world’s species’ to go extinct.
- On the Geologic Time Scale, the Cenozoic Era covers from approximately 66 million years ago to the present.
- This period of time corresponds with the extinction of the dinosaurs and the rise of mammals and therefore known as the Cenozoic Era which means “new life” in Greek.
- This era is divided into 2 periods which include the Tertiary and the Quaternary Periods.
The Tertiary Period:
- The Tertiary Period ran from approximately 66 million years ago all the way to about 2.58 million years ago.
- It is the traditional name for the first period of the Cenozoic Era and can be broken down into the Paleocene, the Eocene, the Oligocene, the Miocene and the Pliocene Epochs.
- During this period, mammals evolved dramatically.
- However, they weren’t the only animals to evolve during this time.
- It was also a period of time in which birds, insects, and mollusks all dramatically evolved.
The Quaternary Period:
- The Quaternary Period is a period on the Geologic Time Scale that’s known mainly for the spread of humanity and climate change.
- This period runs from about 2.6 million years ago to the Present Day.
- During this period, glaciers advanced from the poles, carving out canyons and valleys, and then retreat backward.
- The Earth freezes and then subsequently thaws with the sea levels rising and falling with each wave.
- Humans evolve, spread all over the planet and then begin to alter the climate – resulting in Climate Change.
- The term “Anthropocene” is used informally by popular culture and a growing number of scientists to describe the current epoch in which we are living. The term was coined by Paul Crutzen and Eugene Stoermer in 2000 to describe the current time, in which humans have had an enormous impact on the environment.









