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Palaeozoic

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Palaeozoic (or Paleozoic) era is the earliest of the three eras of the Phanerozoic. Its name means early life. It lasted from about 541 to 252 million years ago (mya) and ended with the greatest extinction event, the Permian–Triassic extinction event. The Palaeozoic was the beginning of plants and animals. In particular, fish dominate the Palaeozoic.

Beginning

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The Cambrian explosion marks the era with thousands of new life forms in the ancient seas. The era saw the development of most invertebrate groups, life's conquest of land, the evolution of fish, reptiles, synapsids (the ancestors of mammals), amphibians, insects, and plants, the formation of the supercontinent of Pangea and at least two distinct ice ages. The Earth rotated faster than it does today, so days were shorter, and the nearer moon caused stronger tides.

Oxygen and CO2 levels

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Oxygen content of the atmosphere over the last billion years.[1]

At the start of the long Carboniferous period oxygen was low and carbon dioxide was high. The huge growth of trees and other plants during this time reversed these data. The carbon dioxide level dropped throughout the Carboniferous, and the oxygen level rose continuously until it dropped in the Permian.[2]

Oxygen reached a peak of about 30% about 280 million years ago.[3] That is much higher than today's 21%.

The six periods of the Palaeozoic are:

References

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  1. Martin, Daniel; McKenna, Helen; Livina, Valerie (2016). "The human physiological impact of global deoxygenation". The Journal of Physiological Sciences. 67 (1): 97–106. doi:10.1007/s12576-016-0501-0. ISSN 1880-6546. PMC 5138252. PMID 27848144.
  2. Lane N. 2002. Oxygen: the molecule that made the World. Oxford University Press, diagram p83. ISBN 0-19-860783-0
  3. Lane N. 2002. Chapter 5: The Bolsover Dragonfly: Oxygen and the rise of the Giants