- published: 10 May 2016
- views: 13632
A geologic period is one of several subdivisions of geologic time enabling cross-referencing of rocks and geologic events from place to place.
These periods form elements of a hierarchy of divisions into which geologists have split the Earth's history.
Eons and eras are larger subdivisions than periods while periods themselves may be divided into epochs and ages.
The twelve currently recognised periods of the present eon – the Phanerozoic – are defined by the International Commission on Stratigraphy (ICS) by reference to the stratigraphy at particular locations around the world.
In 2004 the Ediacaran Period of the latest Precambrian was defined in similar fashion (and was the first such newly designated period in 130 years) but earlier periods are simply defined by age.
A consequence of this approach to the Phanerozoic periods is that the ages of their beginnings and ends can change from time to time as the absolute age of the chosen rock sequences, which define them, is more precisely determined.
Geologic Periods We find the reasons inside their bones Eons, era, period, epochs, study on 4.6 billion, all life has shown They’re flying up, they’re crawling when they’re in their zone Pre-Cambrian time where it starts it Most of all time don’t you see Paleozoic life gets varied when it drops, ooh It then goes to the Mesozoic, dinosaurs there naturally Then humans in Cenozoic it don’t stop Pre-Cambrian life got here no one knows Algae and fungi, bacteria, worms Cambrian-invertebrates show Ordovician-jawless fish, become common Coral reefs, fish with jaws-Silurian…an…an Devonian-lungfish and sharks too Permian-amphibians, come on Triassic-dinosaurs through Jurassic-birds advance Cretaceous-dinosaurs die, mass extinction Next up Tertiary We have grass, bears, plants And then Quaternar...
A video to show the geological periods of our planet. There are not all Earth ages, only the periods with terrestrial life ;) Credits: Celestia Please subscribe to my channel. Thanks for watching :) NOTE: For all visitors. I know there are some misspellings in the image texts. All images are from the Celestia space simulator, not mine ;) In 2:35 you can see a red impact mark in the map, I know the best known massive extintion was in the Cretaceous. But it was in the last stage of the period entering in the Paleocene ;) Thanks for your understanding.
Make a LineStorm video like this at your school! We'd love to animate with you! Contact LineStorm Animation at www.linestorm.com, or posborn@motionart.org. "Eras" is a fast-paced, hand-drawn, animated timeline of the four most prominent geologic eras of Earth's history -- Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Students 12 to 15 years of age created "Eras" in the LineStorm Animation classes at the Creative Arts at Park School summer program in Brookline, Massachusetts. Originating entirely on flipbooks, "Eras" visualizes the delightful Science Song of the same name, composed by David Haines, from his oratorio, "LifeTime: Songs of Life and Evolution." The North Cambridge Family Opera Company Chorus performed at M.I.T.'s Kresge Auditorium during the Cambridge Science Festival. David ...
This video discusses the major changes to the planet since its formation to the present day. We explain how Earth formed, where the Moon came from, how the atmosphere changed over time, where the water in the oceans originated, what the first life and fossils looked like, when more complex life forms began, a long period when little happened, when most of Earth became a snowball, and how extinction events allowed geologists to break down the most recent chunk of geologic time. You will learn the difference between an eon and an era, why we should be grateful for asteroid and comet impacts, and when oxygen started showing up in the atmosphere. Visit our blog for free assessment questions about the content in this video: https://geosciencevideos.wordpress.com
The geologic time scale is an essential tool for understanding the history of Earth and the evolution of life. In this lesson, explore the principal eons, eras, periods, and epochs that help us track major events in geologic history.
With a solid understanding of biology on the small scale under our belts, it's time for the long view - for the next twelve weeks, we'll be learning how the living things that we've studied interact with and influence each other and their environments. Life is powerful, and in order to understand how living systems work, you first have to understand how they originated, developed and diversified over the past 4.5 billion years of Earth's history. Hang on to your hats as Hank tells us the epic drama that is the history of life on Earth. Like CrashCourse on Facebook! http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Table of Contents 1) Archaean & Proterozoic Eons 01:53 a) Protobionts 03:54 b) Prokaryotes 04:18 c) Eukaryotes 06:...
An overview of the major Supereons, Eons, Eras, Periods, and more recent Epochs of geologic time. Some mnemonic devices are suggested as well.
This lecture explains the geological formations in India and is divided into 4 eras and 10 periods. 4 eras include Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic. 10 periods explained are Quaternary, Tertiary, Carboniferous, Gondwana, Upper & Lower Paleozoic, Vindhyan, Cuddapah, Dharwar and Archean. Join our fully evaluated UPSC Geography optional test series at - https://www.doorsteptutor.com/Exams/IAS/Mains/Optional/Geography/Test-Series/, Post evaluation get personalized feedback & improvement call for each test. IAS Mains Geography optional postal course visit - http://www.examrace.com/IAS/IAS-FlexiPrep-Program/Postal-Courses/Examrace-IAS-Geography-Series.htm For Maps and locations books click here - http://www.examrace.com/IAS/IAS-FlexiPrep-Program/Postal-Courses/Examrace-IAS-Geo...
This was a school science project I did with my friends on earth's geologic time scale.(: My friends and I spent a TON of time on this and we're really proud of how it turned out. I do have permission from both of them to post this so yeah. It took us forever to find all the information we did and most of our information was from "http://www.fossils-facts-and-finds.com/". They had practically all the information we needed. Also, credit for the background music goes to "http://www.freeplaymusic.com/" They had a wide variety of music to choose from, and we choose "Solvent Full" from their "Ambient" section. They have free downloads for music of all types, you just choose what kinds and download them. I've found this website really useful in many occasions, especially for school videos and...
Video by BlethwynFilms (Timelordtenfan) Lyrics by ParrMr (http://youtu.be/FXpeovWDi9k) Original Song by The Script (For the First Time) Primary Clips From Walking with Dinosaurs (BBC, 1999) Walking with Beasts (BBC, 2001) Walking with Cavemen (BBC, 2003) Walking With Monsters (BBC, 2005) Additional Clips From http://www.youtube.com/user/TheMicrobiology09 http://youtu.be/LPmViwmJSJE http://youtu.be/6W5zVYbVfhE http://youtu.be/KKhLu_nJ-S8 http://commonfossilsofoklahoma.snomnh.ou.edu/geological-time-scale
Geologic Periods We find the reasons inside their bones Eons, era, period, epochs, study on 4.6 billion, all life has shown They’re flying up, they’re crawling when they’re in their zone Pre-Cambrian time where it starts it Most of all time don’t you see Paleozoic life gets varied when it drops, ooh It then goes to the Mesozoic, dinosaurs there naturally Then humans in Cenozoic it don’t stop Pre-Cambrian life got here no one knows Algae and fungi, bacteria, worms Cambrian-invertebrates show Ordovician-jawless fish, become common Coral reefs, fish with jaws-Silurian…an…an Devonian-lungfish and sharks too Permian-amphibians, come on Triassic-dinosaurs through Jurassic-birds advance Cretaceous-dinosaurs die, mass extinction Next up Tertiary We have grass, bears, plants And then Quaternar...
A video to show the geological periods of our planet. There are not all Earth ages, only the periods with terrestrial life ;) Credits: Celestia Please subscribe to my channel. Thanks for watching :) NOTE: For all visitors. I know there are some misspellings in the image texts. All images are from the Celestia space simulator, not mine ;) In 2:35 you can see a red impact mark in the map, I know the best known massive extintion was in the Cretaceous. But it was in the last stage of the period entering in the Paleocene ;) Thanks for your understanding.
Make a LineStorm video like this at your school! We'd love to animate with you! Contact LineStorm Animation at www.linestorm.com, or posborn@motionart.org. "Eras" is a fast-paced, hand-drawn, animated timeline of the four most prominent geologic eras of Earth's history -- Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic. Students 12 to 15 years of age created "Eras" in the LineStorm Animation classes at the Creative Arts at Park School summer program in Brookline, Massachusetts. Originating entirely on flipbooks, "Eras" visualizes the delightful Science Song of the same name, composed by David Haines, from his oratorio, "LifeTime: Songs of Life and Evolution." The North Cambridge Family Opera Company Chorus performed at M.I.T.'s Kresge Auditorium during the Cambridge Science Festival. David ...
This video discusses the major changes to the planet since its formation to the present day. We explain how Earth formed, where the Moon came from, how the atmosphere changed over time, where the water in the oceans originated, what the first life and fossils looked like, when more complex life forms began, a long period when little happened, when most of Earth became a snowball, and how extinction events allowed geologists to break down the most recent chunk of geologic time. You will learn the difference between an eon and an era, why we should be grateful for asteroid and comet impacts, and when oxygen started showing up in the atmosphere. Visit our blog for free assessment questions about the content in this video: https://geosciencevideos.wordpress.com
The geologic time scale is an essential tool for understanding the history of Earth and the evolution of life. In this lesson, explore the principal eons, eras, periods, and epochs that help us track major events in geologic history.
With a solid understanding of biology on the small scale under our belts, it's time for the long view - for the next twelve weeks, we'll be learning how the living things that we've studied interact with and influence each other and their environments. Life is powerful, and in order to understand how living systems work, you first have to understand how they originated, developed and diversified over the past 4.5 billion years of Earth's history. Hang on to your hats as Hank tells us the epic drama that is the history of life on Earth. Like CrashCourse on Facebook! http://www.facebook.com/YouTubeCrashCourse Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/TheCrashCourse Table of Contents 1) Archaean & Proterozoic Eons 01:53 a) Protobionts 03:54 b) Prokaryotes 04:18 c) Eukaryotes 06:...
An overview of the major Supereons, Eons, Eras, Periods, and more recent Epochs of geologic time. Some mnemonic devices are suggested as well.
This lecture explains the geological formations in India and is divided into 4 eras and 10 periods. 4 eras include Precambrian, Paleozoic, Mesozoic and Cenozoic. 10 periods explained are Quaternary, Tertiary, Carboniferous, Gondwana, Upper & Lower Paleozoic, Vindhyan, Cuddapah, Dharwar and Archean. Join our fully evaluated UPSC Geography optional test series at - https://www.doorsteptutor.com/Exams/IAS/Mains/Optional/Geography/Test-Series/, Post evaluation get personalized feedback & improvement call for each test. IAS Mains Geography optional postal course visit - http://www.examrace.com/IAS/IAS-FlexiPrep-Program/Postal-Courses/Examrace-IAS-Geography-Series.htm For Maps and locations books click here - http://www.examrace.com/IAS/IAS-FlexiPrep-Program/Postal-Courses/Examrace-IAS-Geo...
This was a school science project I did with my friends on earth's geologic time scale.(: My friends and I spent a TON of time on this and we're really proud of how it turned out. I do have permission from both of them to post this so yeah. It took us forever to find all the information we did and most of our information was from "http://www.fossils-facts-and-finds.com/". They had practically all the information we needed. Also, credit for the background music goes to "http://www.freeplaymusic.com/" They had a wide variety of music to choose from, and we choose "Solvent Full" from their "Ambient" section. They have free downloads for music of all types, you just choose what kinds and download them. I've found this website really useful in many occasions, especially for school videos and...
Video by BlethwynFilms (Timelordtenfan) Lyrics by ParrMr (http://youtu.be/FXpeovWDi9k) Original Song by The Script (For the First Time) Primary Clips From Walking with Dinosaurs (BBC, 1999) Walking with Beasts (BBC, 2001) Walking with Cavemen (BBC, 2003) Walking With Monsters (BBC, 2005) Additional Clips From http://www.youtube.com/user/TheMicrobiology09 http://youtu.be/LPmViwmJSJE http://youtu.be/6W5zVYbVfhE http://youtu.be/KKhLu_nJ-S8 http://commonfossilsofoklahoma.snomnh.ou.edu/geological-time-scale
Visit: http://www.spaceandintelligence.com Racism, denialism or creationism will not be tolerated. The Permian--Triassic extinction event, informally known as the Great Dying, was an extinction event that occurred 252 million years ago, forming the boundary between the Permian and Triassic geologic periods, as well as the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras. It is the Earth's most severe known extinction event, with up to 96% of all marine species and 70% of terrestrial vertebrate species becoming extinct. It is the only known mass extinction of insects. Some 57% of all families and 83% of all genera became extinct. Because so much biodiversity was lost, the recovery of life on Earth took significantly longer than after any other extinction event, possibly up to 10 million years. Presented by To...
In 360 BC, the famous Greek philosopher Plato wrote about a battle between his city Athens and a great empire named Atlantis. In two of his books, 'Timaeus' and 'Critias', Plato describes this war that ended when Atlantis disappeared in the ocean, due to "violent earthquakes and floods". According to Plato, all this happened 9.000 years before his time which would be at least 9.400 BC, some 12.400 years ago. Intriguingly, this also corresponds to the period when the geological age of the Younger Dryas suddenly ended with an abrupt warming of more than 10°C in only a few years. This event marked the beginning of the Holocene, the era in which we are still living today. Sea levels must have risen rapidly and dramatically, and as a result entire civilizations, if any existed, would have disap...
David Mickelson, Professor Emeritus, Geology and Geophysics, UW-Madison, discusses the glaciers, volcanoes and tropical seas which created the landscapes of Wisconsin. The Ice Age Trail, across Wisconsin, provides examples of the various geological periods and formations. Explore the full archive of WPT’s University Place lectures online at http://wpt.org/universityplace
Featuring some of the then-modern theories about dinosaurs and how they lived, and in this case, how and why they died. (how they became extinct) The Death of the Dinosaurs explores the mysteries as to why these fantastic beasts vanished from the face of the earth. With the help of sophisticated animation, this video addresses the perplexing issue of the dinosaurs' extinction, examining the latest theories on the topic, from massive meteors to disease to violent volcanic eruptions. The Cretaceous–Paleogene (K–Pg) extinction event, also known as the Cretaceous–Tertiary (K–T) extinction, was a mass extinction of some three-quarters of plant and animal species on Earth—including all non-avian dinosaurs—that occurred over a geologically short period of time, 66 million years ago. It marked th...
Peter Barnes, author of With Liberty and Dividends for All, discusses economics for the Antrhopocene Era - the geological period of time in which humans have had a significant global impact on earth's ecosystems. This event was hosted by the Schumacher Center for New Economics and the American Institute for Economic Research. It was co-sponsored by Kosmos Journal, Orion Magazine, The Carrot Project, Greenhorns, BerkShares, Inc., and Community Land Trust in the Southern Berkshires. Subscribe: http://bit.ly/1r3825A More info here: http://centerforneweconomics.org
In 360 BC, the famous Greek philosopher Plato wrote about a battle between his city Athens and a great empire named Atlantis. In two of his books, 'Timaeus' and 'Critias', Plato describes this war that ended when Atlantis disappeared in the ocean, due to "violent earthquakes and floods". According to Plato, all this happened 9.000 years before his time which would be at least 9.400 BC, some 12.400 years ago. Intriguingly, this also corresponds to the period when the geological age of the Younger Dryas suddenly ended with an abrupt warming of more than 10°C in only a few years. This event marked the beginning of the Holocene, the era in which we are still living today. Sea levels must have risen rapidly and dramatically, and as a result entire civilizations, if any existed, would have disap...
The Permian--Triassic extinction event, informally known as the Great Dying, was an extinction event that occurred 252 million years ago, forming the boundary between the Permian and Triassic geologic periods, as well as the Paleozoic and Mesozoic eras. It is the Earth's most severe known extinction event, with up to 96% of all marine species and 70% of terrestrial vertebrate species becoming extinct. It is the only known mass extinction of insects. Some 57% of all families and 83% of all genera became extinct. Because so much biodiversity was lost, the recovery of life on Earth took significantly longer than after any other extinction event, possibly up to 10 million years. Researchers have variously suggested that there were from one to three distinct pulses, or phases, of extinction. T...
This edition of COSMIC JOURNEYS explores the still unfolding story of Earth's past and the light it sheds on the science of climate change today. While that story can tell us about the mechanisms that can shape our climate. it's still the unique conditions of our time that will determine sea levels, ice coverage, and temperatures. Ice, in its varied forms, covers as much as 16% of Earth's surface, including 33% of land areas at the height of the northern winter. Glaciers, sea ice, permafrost, ice sheets and snow play an important role in Earth's climate. They reflect energy back to space, shape ocean currents, and spawn weather patterns. But there are signs that Earth's great stores of ice are beginning to melt. To find out where Earth might be headed, scientists are drilling down int...