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LECTURE 7: Mesozoic Era 248 mya – 65 mya. Periods of the Mesozoic Era. Triassic 248 mya-206 mya Jurassic 206 mya-146 mya Cretaceous 146 mya-65 mya. What Significant Events Occurred During the Mesozoic Era? (248 mya- 65 mya). Age of Dinosaurs Largest animals to have ever walked the earth
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Periods of the Mesozoic Era • Triassic • 248 mya-206 mya • Jurassic • 206 mya-146 mya • Cretaceous • 146 mya-65 mya
What Significant Events Occurred During the Mesozoic Era?(248 mya- 65 mya) • Age of Dinosaurs • Largest animals to have ever walked the earth • Gave rise to birds: today’s only living dinosaurs • Age of Reptiles • Some started to fly, others went into the sea • First crocodiles, snakes and turtles • First Mammals • First Birds • First Angiosperms • Flowering plants
What Plants Survived the 3rd Mass Extinction? • Less impact on plants than on animals • Only around 20% of plant species died out • Instead, the landscape continued to change gradually • Hardy seed-bearing plants replaced spore-bearing plants as drier environments replaced swampy wetlands during the Mesozoic Era
Why did Plants Survive the Permian Extinction? • Plants are hardier than animals • A simple lifestyle • Plants’ basic needs—water, carbon dioxide, and a few essential nutrients—are always present • Built-in protection • When confronted with environmental challenges, plants have their own protective gear. Seeds, for example, can lie dormant for long periods of time until conditions improve
Part of a fern frond Thaumatopteris braunianaTriassic • Ferns and other spore-bearing plants were still part of the landscape at the beginning of the Mesozoic EraBut they were not as abundant, diverse, or widespread as seed-bearing plants, such as conifers
Conifer branches with leavesPagiophyllum • Triassic Spore-bearing plants such as ferns need wet conditions for sperm to swim to the egg.But seed-bearing plants such as conifers can thrive in drier habitats because their sperm is transported inside a pollen grain
What Animals Survived the Permian Extinction? • Only one species out of five tetrapods survived • Every tetrapod to have lived since, including you, can be traced back to these few survivors • Synapsids, bounced back more quickly than reptiles or other tetrapods • Mammals descended from these tetrapod survivors • The most common synapsid fossils found from the beginning of the Triassic Period are: • Cynodonts • Mammal-like teeth and may have had hair and whiskers • Dicynodonts (most Common Triassic Synapsids) • Non-mammalian 2 tusks (Testudines- turtles)
Dicynodont synapsid Lystrosaurusa group of plant-eating synapsids united by their sharp, turtle-like beaks
What Existed in the Triassic Sea? • Large Giant, Predatory Reptiles • Sauropterygian • Augustasaurus hagdorniEarly sauropterygians had webbed hands and feet. Over millions of years, hands, feet, and limbs evolved into solid, broad paddles. Moving its paddles up and down as a bird moves its wings, sauropterygians would swim or “fly” through the water much like today’s sea turtles and penguins do
What was the First Mammal? • Megazostrodon and Morganucodon - 210 mya • Hair • “Toolkit” of different shaped teeth for different tasks • Small (10-12 cm)
Early Jurassic MammalMorganucodon oelheri With large eyes and a long snout, this little mammal may have been a nocturnal hunter with good vision and an acute sense of smell.
What are Archosaurs? • Appear in the Triassic Period • Diapsids • Includes descendents, extinct, and living species: • Dinosaurs (including Birds) • Crocodiles • Pterosaurs
What were the First Dinosaurs? • Eoraptor lunensis • Small, Bipedal • Carnivore • Herrerasaurus ischigualastensis
What Happened at the End of the Triassic 200 mya? • Mass Extinction #4 • Caused By Continental Shift/Pangaea Starting to break apart • On land, volcanic activity led to global warming • many reptiles:all large crurotarsans (non-dinosaurian archosaurs) • many of the large amphibians were wiped out • At sea, sea levels dropped, eliminating habitat for marine animals • 50% of all marine life • This event vacated ecological niches, allowing the dinosaurs to assume the dominant roles in the Jurassic period
Pangaea pulls apartEarth’s continents are constantly—slowly—on the move. Pangaea assembled completely during the Triassic Period before beginning to break apart in the Jurassic Period
Triassic ReptilesWent Extinct at the End of the Triassic • Phytosaur reptile Machaeroprosopus andersoniWith their long snouts and sharp teeth, phytosaurs looked, and perhaps behaved, like today’s crocodiles—although they are not closelyrelated • (Nostrils behind eyes- Crocs nostrils on tip of snout)
What New Predators Existed in Jurassic Seas? • Ichthyosaur reptileStenopterygius quadriscissus • One group of marine reptiles, the ichthyosaurs, changed dramatically as they evolved. They started off looking basically like reptiles with flippers. But over time they became much more dolphin-like, their form changing as their lifestyle changed
What are Angiosperms? • Flowering Plants- 140 mya • Seeds enclosed in Fruits • Archaeanthus linnenbergeri • Greek angos, meaning “vessel,” and sperma, meaning “seed”
Maple and legume (angiosperm) leaves Acer cretaceum • Gleditsiophyllum aristatumThis leaf on the top belonged to a maple tree. The one on the bottom belonged to a legume, a relative of pea and bean plants
DINOSAUR DIVERSITY • 2 Orders • Saurischia (Lizard- Hipped) • Theropods • Bipedal carnivores/Bird Ancestors • Sauropods • Quadripedal herbivores (LARGEST ANIMALS EVER) • Ornithischia (Bird-Hipped) • Mostly Quadrupedal Herbivores
Sauropods • Brachiosaurus • Argentinosaurus (largest dinosaur)
Therapods • First Dinosaurs • HerrerasaurusandEoraptor • Tyrannasaurus rex • Deinonychus
Are Birds Dinosaurs? • Yes! • A group of theropod dinosaurs called dromaeosaurs (raptors)are among birds’ very closest relatives • Dromaeosaur skeletons share many things in common with those of birds. Some are easier to see than others
What was the First Bird? • Archaeopteryx • True Flyer
What happened at the End of the Cretaceous? • Mass Extinction #5 • Wiped out more than 50% of life on Earth—including all dinosaurs except birds • Cause is debated • Asteroid • Volcanic Activity