- published: 30 Jul 2010
- views: 245
- author: AdventOfComplexLife
3:10
Neoproterozoic Timeline
Take a tour through the neoproterozoic timeline via this screencast, as explained by Dr Ph...
published: 30 Jul 2010
author: AdventOfComplexLife
Neoproterozoic Timeline
Take a tour through the neoproterozoic timeline via this screencast, as explained by Dr Phoebe Cohen.
- published: 30 Jul 2010
- views: 245
- author: AdventOfComplexLife
4:44
#1 Neoproterozoic and palaeozoic palaeogeography / continental drift.
This is just a quick slide show of what the continents looked like from 600000000 - 280000...
published: 16 Jan 2012
author: DromaeosaurusJack
#1 Neoproterozoic and palaeozoic palaeogeography / continental drift.
This is just a quick slide show of what the continents looked like from 600000000 - 280000000 years ago. Showing you multiple globe views and a map, along with the name of the period and how long ago it was. In the next episode of the series I'll be showing you the mesozoic and cenozoic palaeogeography. I would most appreciate any likes, comments and subscriptions, thanks. -Jack
- published: 16 Jan 2012
- views: 255
- author: DromaeosaurusJack
72:19
Fermor 2012: The Neoproterozoic era; evolution, glaciation and oxygenation
A meeting to discuss the current state of the art regarding our understanding of the Neopr...
published: 27 Sep 2012
author: GeologicalSociety
Fermor 2012: The Neoproterozoic era; evolution, glaciation and oxygenation
A meeting to discuss the current state of the art regarding our understanding of the Neoproterozoic, make progress towards the stratigraphic subdivision of Precambrian time and to provide a mechanism for planning future research strategies.
- published: 27 Sep 2012
- views: 518
- author: GeologicalSociety
67:03
University of Washington Seminar Series: Joseph Kirschvink
Four Billion Years of Climate Change (Lessons From the Precambrian): From Oxygen Poisoning...
published: 25 Sep 2012
author: NASA Astrobiology
University of Washington Seminar Series: Joseph Kirschvink
Four Billion Years of Climate Change (Lessons From the Precambrian): From Oxygen Poisoning to Snowballs & True Polar Wander Presenter: Joseph Kirschvink May 29, 2007 2:30PM PDT Despite a nearly 30% increase in Solar luminosity over the past 4.5 billion years, the geological record of glaciation appears to have increased, not decreased, over geological time. Investigations indicate that two of the three major Precambrian glacial intervals were exceptionally intense, with solid evidence for widespread glaciers flowing into the oceans on or near the Equator, well within the ice-albedo runaway's "Snowball Earth" zone. These glacial events are also associated with large perturbations in global geochemical cycles, which are reflected particularly well in carbon and sulfur isotopes. The first of these low-latitude glaciations in the early Paleoproterozoic (the Makganyene in South Africa) is also associated intimately with the first solid evidence of global oxygenation, including deposition of the world's largest sedimentary manganese deposit; this hints that the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis triggered the event by destroying a methane greenhouse. The subsequent low-latitude glaciations during the Cryogenian period of the Neoproterozoic happened about the time that the animal phyla were diversifying, which also suggests organisms were either involved or affected. However, this biological role is complicated by the recognition that large and rapid events of True Polar ...
- published: 25 Sep 2012
- views: 106
- author: NASA Astrobiology
4:23
3D laser scanning | BGS Palaeontological Collections
The British Geological Survey's fossil collections house an estimated three million specim...
published: 07 Oct 2011
author: bgschannel
3D laser scanning | BGS Palaeontological Collections
The British Geological Survey's fossil collections house an estimated three million specimens, representing most groups of organisms (phyla) with a fossil record, and all geological periods from Neoproterozoic to Recent. This short movie shows pictures and 3D reproductions of some of our fossils, including Britain's oldest animal, as well as reconstructions of how they looked in life.
- published: 07 Oct 2011
- views: 1030
- author: bgschannel
2:11
Namacalathus: The First Animals
Namacalathus: The First Animals Strange Rocks May Preserve Some of Earth's First Animals (...
published: 26 Nov 2010
author: Evoimpertinente
Namacalathus: The First Animals
Namacalathus: The First Animals Strange Rocks May Preserve Some of Earth's First Animals (video) video.sciencemag.org Strange Rocks May Preserve Some of Earth's First Animals news.sciencemag.org Riferimenti Nature Geoscience Possible animal-body fossils in pre-Marinoan limestones from South Australia www.nature.com in video Back in time. This animation shows 3D images of fossils, possibly spongelike animals, emerging from a piece of rock as it is ground down.
- published: 26 Nov 2010
- views: 510
- author: Evoimpertinente
21:38
Orgin of First Cells at Terrestrial, Anoxic Geothermal Fields
Orgin of first cells at terrestrial, anoxic geothermal fields Armen Y. Mulkidjaniana Andre...
published: 21 Feb 2012
author: Dave Flang
Orgin of First Cells at Terrestrial, Anoxic Geothermal Fields
Orgin of first cells at terrestrial, anoxic geothermal fields Armen Y. Mulkidjaniana Andrew Yu. Bychkovc Daria V. Dibrova Michael Y. Galperine Eugene V. Koonin www.pnas.org The firdt animals: ca. 760-million-year-old sponge like fossils from Nambia. Braihn CK, Prave AR, Hoffmann KH, ct al. S Afr J Sci. 2012;108 One of the most profound events in biospheric evolution was the emergence of animals, which is thought to have occurred some 600--650 Ma. Here we report on the discovery of phosphatised body fossils that we interpret as ncient sponge-like fossils and term them Otavia antiqua gen. et sp. nov. The fossils are found in Namibia in rocks that range in age between about 760 Ma and 550 Ma. This age places the advent of animals some 100 to 150 million years earlier than proposed, and prior to the extreme climatic changes and postulated stepwise increases in oxygen levels of Ediacaran time. These findings support the predictions based on genetic sequencing and inferences drawn from biomarkers that the first animals were sponges. Further, the deposition and burial of Otavia as sedimentary particles may have driven the large positive C-isotopic excursions and increases in oxygen levels that have been inferred for Neoproterozoic time. The Authors. Licensee: AOSIS OpenJournals. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License. nora.nerc.ac.uk "If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, quacks like a duck, and has feathers like a duck, then it probably is a ...
- published: 21 Feb 2012
- views: 339
- author: Dave Flang
6:27
In Citrus Heights
At present, Earth provides the only example of an environment that has given rise to the e...
published: 27 Jul 2011
author: charizardoystersauce
In Citrus Heights
At present, Earth provides the only example of an environment that has given rise to the evolution of life.[44] Highly energetic chemistry is believed to have produced a self-replicating molecule around 4 billion years ago and half a billion years later the last common ancestor of all life existed.[45] The development of photosynthesis allowed the Sun's energy to be harvested directly by life forms; the resultant oxygen accumulated in the atmosphere and formed a layer of ozone (a form of molecular oxygen [O3]) in the upper atmosphere. The incorporation of smaller cells within larger ones resulted in the development of complex cells called eukaryotes.[46] True multicellular organisms formed as cells within colonies became increasingly specialized. Aided by the absorption of harmful ultraviolet radiation by the ozone layer, life colonized the surface of Earth.[47] Since the 1960s, it has been hypothesized that severe glacial action between 750 and 580 Ma, during the Neoproterozoic, covered much of the planet in a sheet of ice. This hypothesis has been termed "Snowball Earth", and is of particular interest because it preceded the Cambrian explosion, when multicellular life forms began to proliferate.[48] Following the Cambrian explosion, about 535 Ma, there have been five major mass extinctions.[49] The most recent such event was 65 Ma, when an asteroid impact triggered the extinction of the (non-avian) dinosaurs and other large reptiles, but spared some small animals such ...
- published: 27 Jul 2011
- views: 230
- author: charizardoystersauce
0:58
gold mine egypt
Workers continue to protest at Sukari gold mine | Egypt:ww19.psui.cn Centamin investors ba...
published: 11 Sep 2012
author: Abby Sylvia
gold mine egypt
Workers continue to protest at Sukari gold mine | Egypt:ww19.psui.cn Centamin investors back Egypt gold mine plan:ww19.psui.cn Home |:ww19.psui.cn Ancient Egypt::ww19.psui.cn Sukari Gold Mine:ww19.psui.cn Gold Mining in Egypt:ww19.psui.cn Mining industry of Egypt:ww19.psui.cn Morupule Colliery Expansion Project, Botswana Morupule Colliery is an underground coal mine located in Palapye,... "All production has been brought to a halt at the Sukari Gold Mine. There is an ongoing strike and sit-in of all workers within the mine. This open-ended strike has been going on for four days now — since 3 February," said Mohamed Hamed, Deputy Director of the Marsa Alam Youth Center for Development. The earliest known beryl mine in the world is located in Sophia, WVWadi Sikait, Eastern Desert. Its mining started during the Ptolemaic period, although most of mining activities date to the Roman and Byzantine periods.[11] All the other beryl mining sites such as Gebel Zabara, Wadi Umm Debaa and Wadi Gimal are Roman-Byzantine or Islamic (mid-6th century onward) in date. Beryl mining ceased in Egypt when the Spanish Empire discovered superior-quality emeralds in Colombia in the 16th century.[11] The deposit is hosted within a late Neoproterozoic granitoid intrusiveplex as a large, covered, vein-type and brittle-ductile shear zone. The zone is characterised by a mass northeast-southwest strike-slip alteration that forms into a regional flower structure. Extensional vein-associated faults also ...
- published: 11 Sep 2012
- views: 67
- author: Abby Sylvia
0:10
Links Between Geological Processes, Microbial Activities&evolution; Of Life
xxsurl.com Links Between Geological Processes, Microbial Activities&evolution; Of Life Pref...
published: 01 Aug 2012
author: claytongibbons833
Links Between Geological Processes, Microbial Activities&evolution; Of Life
xxsurl.com Links Between Geological Processes, Microbial Activities&evolution; Of Life Preface. - Acknowledgements. - Contributors. - 1. Oceanic pillow lavas and hyaloclastites as habitats for microbial life through time - a review; H. Furnes et al. - 2. Microbial colonization of various habitable niches during alteration of oceanic crust; M. Ivarsson, NG Holm. - 3. Ambient inclusion trails: their recognition, age range and applicability to early life on earth; D. Wacey et al. - 4. Spatial distribution of the subseafloor life: diversity of biogeography; F. Inagaki, S. Nakagawa. - 5. Analysis of deep subsurface microbial communities by functional genes and genomics; A. Teske, J. Biddle. - 6. Diversity of Behamian stromatolite substrates; R. Ginsburg, N. Planavsky.- 7. Evaporite microbial films, mats, microbialites, and stromatolites; R. Brigmon et al. - 8. Microbial life in extreme environments: linking geological and microbial processes; H. Dong. - 9. Marine methane biochemistry of the Black Sea: a review; T. Pape et al. - 10. From volcanic winter to snowball earth: an alternative explanation for neoproterozoic biosphere stress; RJ Stern et al. - Subject index. EAN/ISBN : 9781402083068 Publisher(s): Springer Netherlands Format: ePub/PDF Author(s): Dilek, Yildirim - Furnes, Harald - Muehlenbachs, Karlis Preface. - Acknowledgements. - Contributors. - 1. Oceanic pillow lavas and hyaloclastites as habitats for microbial life through time - a review; H. Furnes et al. - 2 ...
- published: 01 Aug 2012
- views: 3
- author: claytongibbons833
105:05
The Foundation of Climate Science
The Foundation of Climate Science - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global War...
published: 17 Apr 2011
author: HouseResourceOrg
The Foundation of Climate Science
The Foundation of Climate Science - Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming - 2010-05-06 - Even after months of personal attacks against climate scientists stemming from a manufactured scandal over stolen emails, the underlying science behind the need to stem the tide of heat-trapping emissions remains solid. To explain what we know about climate change, and why and how we know it, Chairman Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and the Select Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming hosted top-level American climate scientists at a congressional hearing on Thursday, May 6, 2010. The scientists addressed the claims of deniers head-on. Thursday's panel featured a member of the investigative panel convened by the University of East Anglia and led by Lord Ron Oxburgh to review the stolen emails from that school's Climactic Research Unit. The "Oxburgh Inquiry" exonerated the scientists who were attacked following the emails, saying they "saw no evidence of any deliberate scientific malpractice in any of the work." The hearing also included three scientists involved in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports, which have also been attacked by climate science deniers. The Republican witness on the panel was Lord Christopher Walter Monckton, 3rd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley. WITNESSES: Dr. Lisa Graumlich, Director, School of Natural Resources and the Environment, University of Arizona, and member of the "Oxburgh Inquiry" panel; Dr. Chris Field ...
- published: 17 Apr 2011
- views: 5530
- author: HouseResourceOrg