NegOr Q3 GenBio2 SLKWeek2 v2 FINAL
NegOr Q3 GenBio2 SLKWeek2 v2 FINAL
NegOr Q3 GenBio2 SLKWeek2 v2 FINAL
HISTORYOFLIFEONEARTH
For General Biology 2 Grade 11
Quarter 3 / Week 2
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FOREWORD
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OBJECTIVES
Attheendofthelesson,learnersshallbeableto:
K:describe the general features of the different
subdivisions that characterized the earliest animals
and when they appeared on Earth;
S:identifythesubdivisionsofthegeologictimescale;and
A: appreciatethebeginningsoflifeanditsexistencein the
present time.
LEARNINGCOMPETENCY
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I.WHAT HAPPENED
Let’s Have Fun: Four Pics, One Word
Sources:
https://pixels.com/featured/triassic-landscape-publiphoto.html
https://study.com/academy/lesson/holocene-epoch-lesson-for-kids.html
https://www.emedicinehealth.com/how_many_days_after_your_period_do_you_ovulate/articl
e_em.htm
https://www.pngfind.com/mpng/iiJixwJ_tcr77220-punctuation-marks-magnetic-accents-
image-punctuation-marks/
RICHDEPO
Answer:
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II. WHAT I NEED TO KNOW
DISCUSSION
The earth is around 4.5 billion years old. The planet we all
call our home has undergone a series of geological and biological
challenges that have changed not only its landscape but also its
inhabitants. By studying the Earth’s geological time line, we will
be able to trace the processes by which fossils and living
organisms have evolved since the time that life started until the
present day.
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Figure2. GeologicTimeScale wherethehistoryofearth is dividedinto eons, eras andperiods.Source:
https://www.pinterest.ph/pin/175499716715361317/
Geologic time may be divided into epochs which last for less
than ten million years, periods lasting for tens of millions of years,
eras which last for hundreds of millions of years, and in eons which
last for billions of years. Many scientists have studied the Earth and
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how changes in the Earth’s land and water forms and its
atmosphere have brought about the subsequent evolution of the
species. The Earth’s geological life may be divided in the
following:
1. Precambrian
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The Earth was already more than600millionyearsold when
life began. The planet had cooled down from its original molten
state, developing a solid crust and oceans created from water
vapor in the atmosphere. Many scientists think these primordial
seas gave rise to life, with hot, mineral-rich volcanic vents acting
as catalysts for chemical reactions across the surface of tiny water
bubbles, which led to the first cell membranes. Other bubbles are
thought to have formed self-replicating substances by attracting
chemicals from around them. Over time the two combined to
produce energy-using, living cells.
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bizarre creatures bore little resemblance to modern life forms.
They grew on the sea bed and lacked any obvious heads, mouths,
or digestive organs. Fossils of the largest known among them,
Dickinsonia, resemble a ribbed doormat. What happened to the
mysterious Ediacarans is not clear. They could be the ancestors of
later animals, or they may have been completely erased by
extinction.
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The Cenozoic (65.5 million years ago to present) is divided
into three periods: the Paleogene (65.5 to 23.03 million years
ago), Neogene (23.03 to 2.6 million years ago), and the
Quaternary (2.6 million years ago to present). Paleogene and
Neogene are relatively new terms that now replace the
deprecated term, Tertiary. The Paleogene is subdivided into three
epochs: the Paleocene (65.5to55.8millionyears ago), the Eocene
(55.8to 33.9 million years ago), and the Oligocene (33.9 to 23.03
million years ago).The Neogene is subdivided into two epochs:
the Miocene (23.03 to 5.332 million years ago) and Pliocene
(5.332 to 2.588 million years ago)
(https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/cenozoic/cenozoic.php)
Figure4.CenozoicPeriod.
Source: https://www.google.com/search?
rlz=1C1BNSD_enPH940PH940&ei=z54nYOjrNIm2mAW1pq_ACQ&q=cenozoic&oq=cenozoic&gs_lcp=Cgdnd3
Mtd2l6EAMyBwgAELEDEEMyBwgAELEDEEMyBAgAEEMyB
AgAEEMyAggAMgIIADICCAAyCAgAELEDEIMBMgIIADICCAA6BwgAELADEEM6BwgAEEcQsAM6CggAELE
DEIMBEEM6BQgAELEDOg4ILhCxAxCDARDHARCvAToHCC4QsQMQQzoKCC4QxwEQowIQCjoICC4QxwE
QrwE6BAguEAo6BwguELEDEAo6DQguELEDEMcBEKMCEEM6BQguELEDOgIILjoICC4QsQMQgwFQ4hBY_
mpg4HpoBnACeASAAcgBiAGXFJIBBjAuMTcuMZgBAKABAaoBB2d3cy13aXqwAQDIAQrAAQE&sclient=gws
-wiz&ved=0ahUKEwioj534yObuAhUJG6YKHTXTC5gQ4dUDCA0&uact=5
Neogene
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other groups of life remained relatively unchanged. Early
hominids, the ancestors of humans, appeared in Africa near the
end of the period. Some continental movement took place, the
most significant event being the connection of North and South
America at the Isthmus of Panama, late in the Pliocene. This cut
off the warm ocean currents from the Pacific to the Atlantic
Ocean, leaving only the Gulf Stream to transfer heat to the Arctic
Ocean. The global climate cooled considerably over the course of
the Neogene, culminating in a series of continental glaciations in
the Quaternary Period that follows.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neogene)
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Paleogene
The Paleogene (informally Lower Tertiary or Early Tertiary) is
a geologic period and system that spans 43 million years from the
end of the Cretaceous Period66Myatothebeginningof the Neogene
Period 23.03 Mya.
The global climate during the Paleogene departed from the
hot and humid conditions of the late Mesozoic Era and began a
cooling and drying trend which, despite having been periodically
disrupted by warm periods such as the Paleocene–
EoceneThermal Maximum,persisted until the temperature began
to rise again due to the end of the most recent glacial period of
the current ice age. The trend was partly caused by the formation
of the Antarctic Circum polar Current, which significantly lowered
oceanic water temperatures. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleo
gene)
During the Paleogene, the continents continued
to drift closer to their current positions. India was in the process of
colliding with Asia, forming the Himalayas. The Atlantic
Ocean continued to widen by a few centimeters each year. Africa was
moving north to meetwith Europe and form the
Mediterranean Sea, while South America was moving closer to North
America (they would later connect via the Isthmus of Panama).
Inland seas retreated from North America early in the period.
Australia had also separated from Antarctica and was drifting toward
Southeast Asia. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleogene)
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trees became primates,the group to which humans belong. Birds,
which were already well established by the endof the Cretaceous,
also experienced adaptive radiation as they took over the skies
left empty by the now extinct pterosaurs.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleogene)
Pronounced cooling in the Oligocene led to a massive floral
shift and many extant modern plants arose during this
time. Grasses and herbs such as Artemisia began to appear at
the expense of tropical plants, which began to decline. Conifer
forests developed in mountainous areas.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleogene)
3. TheMesozoicEra
The Mesozoic Era is the age of the dinosaurs and lasted almost
180 million years from approximately 250 to 65 million years ago.
This era includes three well known periods called
the Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods. It is also called
the Age of Reptiles and the Age of Conifers.
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesozoic)
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which, after the Mesozoic Era, collided with Eurasia forming the
Himalayas. (Dinosaurs and other fossils. Jason Hamilton.
https://scienceviews.com/dinosaurs/mesozoic.html)
The environment was unusually warm and polar ice caps did
not yet exist. This played a large part in evolution and is a key
factor behind the flourishing of the dinosaurs. During the Triassic
period, the climate was generally dry, which changed near the
Jurassic Period as oceans began to rise due to mounting layers of
magma covering the seafloor. As a result, flooding over took
many parts of the exposed land. This allowed the climate to
change with increased humidity and it continued that way even
into the Cretaceous Period. However, the climate began to cool
during the Cretaceous although temperatures may have risen
again near the end of the Mesozoic. (Dinosaurs and other
fossils.JasonHamilton. https://scienceviews.com/dinosaurs/mesoz
oic.html)
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TriassicPeriod
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quiescent. At the end of the Triassic, however, plate tectonic
activity picked up, and a period of continental rifting began. On
the margins of the continents, shallow seas, which had dwindled
in area at the end of the Permian, became more extensive; as sea
levels gradually rose, the waters of continental shelves were
colonized for the first time by large marine reptiles and reef-
building corals of modern aspect.
Jurassic Period
TheEarlyJurassicspansfrom200to175millionyearsago.The
climate was tropical, much more humid than the Triassic. In the
oceans, plesiosaurs, ichthyosaurs, and ammonites were abundant.
On land, dinosaurs and other archosaurs staked their claim as the
dominant race, with the ropods such as Dilophosaurus at the top
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of the food chain. The first true crocodiles evolved, pushing the
large amphibians to near extinction. All in all, archosaurs rose to
rule the world.
Figure6.JurassicPeriod dinosaurs.
Source:https://www.google.com/search?q=jurassic+period&tbm=isch&ved=2ahUKEwi
st_CLvebuAhVQAKYKHWJwBnMQ2-
cCegQIABAA&oq=jurassic+period&gs_lcp=CgNpbWcQAzIFCAAQsQMyAggAMgIIADICCA
AyAggAMgIIADICCAAyAggAMgIIADICCAA6BggAEAcQHjoECAAQQzoHCAAQsQMQQ1CGk
gdYqrEHYIqzB2gAcAB4AoAB2AOIAZIXkgEKMC4xMC4zLjIuMZgBAKABAaoBC
2d3cy13aXotaW1nwAEB&sclient=img&ei=Y5InYOz5M9CAmAXi4JmYBw&bih=754&biw=1536&rlz=1C1BNSD_enPH940PH
940#imgrc=XerZAeljnzLzuM&imgdii=w4By3Fz3m4B3KM
The Middle Jurassic spans from 175 to 163 million years ago.
During this epoch, dinosaurs flourished as huge herds of sauropods,
such as Brachiosaurus and Diplodocus, filled the fern prairies, chased
by many new predators such as Allosaurus. Conifer forests made up
a large portion of the forests. In the
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oceans, plesiosaurs were quite common, and ichthyosaurs
flourished. This epoch was the peak of the reptiles.
Cretaceous Period
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The breakup of the world continent Pangea, which began to
disperse during the Jurassic, continued. This led to increased
regional differences in floras and faunas between the northern
and southern continents.
The end of the Cretaceous brought the end of many
previously successful and diverse groups of organisms, such as
non-avian dinosaurs and ammonites. This laid open the stage for
those groups which had previously taken secondary roles to come
to the fore front. The Cretaceous was thus the time in which life
as it now exists on Earth came together.
(https://ucmp.berkeley.edu/mesozoic/cretaceous/cretaceous.php)
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low in the higher latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, but by the
middle of the period, species diversification was increasing
exponentially. Swamps were dominated by conifers and angiosperm
dicots.
4. Paleozoic Life
The story of the earliest Paleozoic animals is one of life in the
sea. Presumably simple fungi and related forms existed in fresh
water environments, but the fossil record provides no evidence of
these modes of life. The terrestrial environment of the early
Paleozoic was barren of the simplest of life forms.
Figure7.AnearlySiluriancoral-stromatoporoidcommunity.
FromE.WinsoninW.S.McKerrow(ed.),TheEcologyofFossils,GeraldDuckworth&CompanyLtd
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The Cambrian explosion was a sharp and sudden increase in
the rate of evolution. About 541 million years ago, at the onset of
the Cambrian Period, intense diversification resulted in more than
35new animal phyla; however, new discoveries show that the
―explosion‖ started roughly 575 million years ago, near the end of
the Proterozoic Eon (2.5billionto541millionyearsago), with the
Ediacara fauna. The biota rapidly diversified throughout the
Cambrian and Ordovician periods as life forms adapted to virtually all
marine environments. In numbers of described marine species,
fossils of trilobites dominate Cambrian rocks, whereas brachiopods
(lamp shells) predominate in strata from the Ordovician through the
Permian Period.
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The Permian extinction, at the end of the Paleozoic Era,
eliminated such major invertebrate groups as the blastoids(an
extinct group of echinoderms related to the modern starfish and
sealilies), fusulinids, and trilobites. Other major groups, which
included the ammonoids, brachiopods, bryozoans(moss animals),
corals, and crinoids(cuplike echinoderms with five or more
feathery arms), were severely decimated but managed to survive.
It has been estimated that as many as 95% of the marine
invertebrate species perished during the late Permian Period.
Extinction rates were much lower among vertebrates, both
aquatic and terrestrial, and among plants. Causes of this
extinction event remain unclear, but they may be related to the
changing climate and exceptionally low sea levels of the time.
Although of lesser magnitude, other important Paleozoic mass
extinctions occurred at the end of the Ordovician Periodand
during the late Devonian Period. (Crick, Rex. Paleozoic era.
https://www.britannica.com/science/Paleozoic-Era. Updated
January 19, 2021)
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REFERENCES
CretaceousPeriod:Animals,Plants&ExtinctionEvent.Mary Bagley.
Retrieved February 4, 2021 from
https://www.livescience.com/29231-cretaceous-period.html
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GeneralBiology2TextbookforSeniorHighSchool.1253G.
AranetaAvenue,QuezonCity:VibalGroup,Inc.
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SYNOPSIS
This module talks about the
geologic time, the extensive interval of
time occupied bythe geologic
historyofEarth.Formal
geologictimebeginsat the start of the
Archean Eon (4.0 to 2.5 billion years
ago) and continues to the present day.
Modern geologic time scales
additionally often include the Hadean
Eon, which is an informal interval that
extends from about 4.6 billion years
ago (corresponding to Earth’s initial
formation) to 4.0 billion years ago.
Geologic time is, in effect, that segment
of Earth history that is represented by
and recorded in the
planet’srockstrata.Itsubdividesalltime
into named units of abstract time called
—in descending order of duration—
eons, eras, periods, epochs, and ages.
The relative geologic time scale
developed from the fossil record has
been numerically quantified by means
of absolute dates obtained with
radiometric dating methods.
.
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