Ancient History Timeline

1 - 5 K

1
2
3
4
5
Holocene Epoch 10,000 years ago to the present holocene epoch
Life Forms
         
         
6
7
8
9
10
Holocene Epoch 10,000 years ago to the present holocene epoch
Geologic
interval between glacial incursions, glaciers retreat, sea levels rise, the climate warms, and deserts form in some areas.
Life Forms
Human civilization develops. Activities of mankind begin to affect world climates. The extinction of other species continues.

Age of Cancer: 8000-6500 B.C.
Age of Gemini: 6500-3750 B.C.

Age of Aries: 1800-7 B.C.
Age of Pisces: 7 B.C. - ?????

10,000-6,000 Shift from Hunter Gatherer to food producer in some areas (West Asia initially, Egypt by 6,000)

9558 - End of Atlantis
9,600-10,000 Moon brought here from Lyra

 
11
12
13
14
15
Geologic
         
         
Life Forms
- 11,000 The first hunter-gatherers settle in the Maya highlands and lowlands.        
         
16
17
18
19
20
Geologic
    - 18 last glacial maximum    
         
Life Forms
         
         

1 - 100 K

1-20
20-40
40-60
60-80
80-100
100,000 - 40,000 Neanderthal Man, in Africa and Europe neandethal
- 10 Humans reach Tierra del Fuego at the tip of South America, the last continental region to be inhabited by humans (excluding Antarctica).

- 27 Neanderthals die out, leaving Homo sapiens as the only living species of the genus Homo.

- 50 Modern humans expand from Asia to Australia and Europe. Expansion along the coasts happens faster than expansion inland.
- 31 Modern humans enter North America from Siberia in numerous waves, some later waves across the Bering land bridge, but early waves probably by island-hopping across the Aleutians. At least two of the first waves had left few or no genetic descendants among Americans by the time Europeans arrived across the Atlantic Ocean. Humans reach Solomon Islands. Humans move into Japan.
M343, a genetic marker, first appears. This marker is estimated to have originated in an individual male in Africa 30,000 or more years ago and has propagated since then. This genetic marker is carried by most Western Europeans. It is carried by 70% of the entire population of England and 90% of some parts of Spain and Ireland and is also descended from the Cro-Magnon.
- 74 Supervolcanoic eruption in Toba, Sumatra, Indonesia cause Homo sapiens population to crash to an estimated 2,000. 6 year nuclear winter, then a 1000 year ice-age.
- 60 Birth of Y-chromosomal Adam in Africa (most likely Ethiopia or Sudan). He is the most recent common ancestor from whom all male human Y chromosomes are descended.
Y-chromosomal Adam is not the same individual at all points in human history. The most recent common patrilineal ancestor of humans alive today is different from the one for humans who will be alive a thousand years in the future: as male lines die out, a more recent individual, the Y-mrca of a subtree of the preceding Y-Adam, becomes the new Y-Adam.

 

         

100,000 - 1 Million

1 - 200 k
200 - 400 k
400 - 600 k
600 - 800 k
800 - 100 k
 
- 195 Omo1, Omo2 (Ethiopia, Omo river) are the earliest Homo sapiens
- 160 Homo sapiens Homo sapiens idaltu) in Ethiopia, Awash River, Herto village, practise mortuary rituals and butcher hippos.
- 150 Birth of the mitochondrial Eve in Africa. She is the most recent female ancestor common to all mitochondrial lineages in humans alive today.
- 130 FOXP2 ( gene associated with the development of speech) appears.
- 100 Homo sapiens appear in Africa
- 90 Modern humans enter Asia via two routes: one north through the Middle East, and another route further south from Ethiopia, via the Red Sea and southern Arabia. Mutation causes skin color changes in order to absorb optimal UV light for different geographical latitudes. Modern " race" formation begins. African populations remain more 'diverse' in their genetic makeup than all other humans, due to only a subset of their population leaving Africa.
- 355 Three 1.5m tall Homo heidelbergensis left footprints in powdery volcanic ash solidified in Italy. Homo heidelbergensis is the common ancestor of both Homo neanderthalensis and Homo sapiens. It is morphologically very similar to Homo erectus but Homo heidelbergensis had a larger brain-case, about 93% the size of that of Homo sapiens. The species was tall, 1.8 m (6 ft.) on average, and more muscular than modern humans.    

 




Millions of years

1
2
3
4
5
Quarternary Period quarternary period
1.8 - Present
 
Pleistocene pleistocene
1.8 m - 10 K
Pliocene 5.3 - 1.8 pliocene
 
Pleistocene Epoch 1.8 million - 10 K pleistocene
Pliocene Epoch 5 - 1.8 pliocene
Geologic - "Great Ice Age." Ice sheets and other glaciers encroach and retreat during four or five primary glacial periods. At its peak, as much as 30% of the Earth's surface is covered by glaciers, and parts of the northern oceans are frozen. The movement of the glaciers alters the landscape. Lakes, such as the Great Lakes in North America, are formed as ice sheets melt, and retreat. Global warming begins after the last glacial maximum, 18,000 years ago.

- 1.8 Homo erectus evolves in Africa. Striking resemblance to modern humans, but had a brain about 74 percent of the size of modern man.
- 1.75 Dmanisi man / Homo georgicus (Georgia, Russia), tiny brain came from Africa, with Homo erectus and Homo habilis characteristics. Common genetic ancestor of humans and Neanderthal.

Life Forms - The oldest species of HomoHomo habilis—evolves. The flora and fauna in the regions not covered by ice are essentially the same as those of the earlier Pliocene Epoch. Mammalian evolution includes the development of large forms: woolly mammoth, woolly rhinoceros, musk ox, moose, reindeer, elephant, mastodon, bison, and ground sloth.
In the Americas, large mammals, such as horses, camels, mammoths, mastodons, saber-toothed cats, and ground sloths, are entirely extinct by the end of this epoch.

- 2 Homo habilis, thought to be the ancestor of the lankier and more sophisticated, Homo ergaster, which in turn gave rise to the more human appearing species, Homo erectus.

Geologic - The emergence of the Isthmus of Panama changes ocean circulation patterns and coincides with the formation of an Arctic ice cap. Plate tectonic interactions result in the uplift of the Sierra Nevada, formation of the Cascade Range, and onset of strike-slip faulting on the San Andreas Fault. In Europe, the Alps continue to rise.
The global climates become cooler and drier.

- 3.7 Some Australopithecus afarensis left footprints on volcanic ash in Laetoli, Kenya.
- 3 The bipedal australopithecines (early hominines) evolve in the savannas of Africa being hunted by Dinofelis.

Life forms - Camels and horses are abundant throughout North America. Ground sloths also evolve and the Great American interchange between South and North America begins.
Primates continue to evolve, and the australopithecines—antecedents to Homo sapiens—develop late in the Pliocene in Africa.
In North America, rhinoceroses and ordeodonts become extinct.

- 4.4 Ardipithecus ramidus ramidus (Hominid, Walks upright most of the time, Still spend time on trees)- 4.4 Earliest evidence of pre-human hominid species
- 4-2 Hominid species-(australopithecus afarensis) in Ethiopia
- 1.8 Nutcracker Man discovered in Tanzania by Mary Leakey
- 1.8 Homo habilis or tool-making man
- 1.7 Homo erectus or erect man - - 1 Homo erectus begins to migrate to Europe and Asia

- 5 Sahelanthropus tchadensisHuman ancestors speciate from the ancestors of the chimpanzees.



1-100 Millions Years

1-20
20-40
40-60
60-80
80-100
Cenozoic Era 65 - Present cenozoic
   
 
Miocene Epoch 24-5 miocene
Oligocene Epoch oligocene
34-24
Eocene Epoch 55-34 oecene
Paleocene Epoch 65-55 paleocene
   
    Miocene 23.8 - 5.3 miocene
Oligocene oligocene
33.7 - 23.8
Eocene 54.8 - 33.7 eocene
Paleocene 65 - 54.8 paleocene
 
Tertiary Period 65 - 1.8  tertiary
 

Geologic - Modern ocean currents are essentially established. A drop in sea level near the end of the Epoch isolates and dries up the Mediterranean Sea, leaving evaporite deposits on its floor.
The climate is generally cooler than the Oligocene Epoch. A cold transantarctic ocean current isolates the waters around Antarctica, and the continent becomes permanently frozen.
Biologic - Mammal forms are essentially modern, and almost half of modern placental mammal families are present. The ancestor of mastodons disperse into North America.
Almost all the modern groups of whales are present, as well as the early seals and walruses.
Many modern birds—herons, rails, ducks, eagles, hawks, crows, sparrows—are present in Europe and Asia.
Higher primates undergo substantial evolution; advanced primates, including apes, are present in southern Europe and Asia.
Carcharocles megalodon, the largest predaceous shark ever to have lived, inhabits the seas.
The coasts are submerged and kelp forests develop. On land, grasslands replace forests over large areas on several continents.

- 15 Human ancestors speciate from the ancestors of the gibbon (lesser apes).
- 13 Human ancestors speciate from the ancestors of the great apes.
Pierolapithecus catalaunicus is believed to be a common ancestor of humans and the great apes or at least a species that brings us closer to a common ancestor than any previous fossil discovery.
Pierolapithecus had special adaptations for tree climbing, just as humans and other great apes do: a wide, flat ribcage, a stiff lower spine, flexible wrists, and shoulder blades that lie along its back.
- 10 Human ancestors speciate from the ancestors of the gorillas.

Geologic - Tectonic plate movement is still very dynamic. Africa and Europe nearly collide, closing the Tethys Sea and leaving as a remnant the Mediterranean Sea. Volcanism and fragmentation of western North America is associated with the emplacement of major ore deposits.
The southeren ocean forms and the climate is generally temperate. Glaciation begins in Antarctica.
Biologic - Representatives of modern mammals become the dominant vertebrate life form, including horses, pigs, true carnivores, rhinoceroses, elephants, and camels. Oreodonts diversify in North America. Early primates appear in North America, and early apes appear in Egypt. Many archaic mammals become extinct.
The earliest representatives of modern cetaceans (baleen and "toothed" whales) evolve.
Grasslands expand, and forest regions diminish.

- 40 Primates diverge into suborders Strepsirrhini (wet-nosed primates) and Haplorrhini (dry nosed primates). Strepsirrhini contains most of the prosimians; modern examples include the lemurs and lorises. The prosimian tarsiers, along with the simian monkeys and apes are the haplorrhines. One of the earliest haplorrhines is Teilhardina asiatica, a mouse-sized, diurnal creature with small eyes.
- 30 Aegyptopithecus - Haplorrhini splits into infraorders Platyrrhini and Catarrhini. New World monkeys have prehensile tails and males are color blind. They migrated to South America Catarrhines mostly stayed in Africa as the two continents drifted apart. Other ancient catarrhines include today's lemurs. Soon catarrhine males gain color vision but lose the pheromone pathway.
- 25 Proconsul Catarrhini splits into 2 superfamilies, Old World monkeys (Cercopithecoidea) and apes (Hominoidea).
They had a mixture of Old World monkey and ape characteristics. Proconsul's monkey-like features include thin tooth enamel, a light build with a narrow chest and short forelimbs, and an arboreal quadrupedal lifestyle. Its ape-like features are its lack of a tail, ape-like elbows, and a slightly larger brain relative to body size.
Proconsul africanus is a possible ancestor of both great and lesser apes, and humans.

Geologic - Plate tectonics and volcanic activity form the Rockies in western North America. Erosion fills basins. Continental collisions between India and Asia culminate in the Alpine-Himalayan mountain system. Antarctica and Australia continue to separate and drift apart.
The climate is subtropical and moist throughout North America and Europe.
Biologic - Early forms of horse, rhinoceros, camel, and other modern groups such as bats evolve in Europe and North America. Creodonts and ruminant ungulates evolve.
Archaic whales (archeocetes) evolve from terrestrial meat-eating ungulates. Sirenians (dugongs and manatees) first evolve in the shallow Tethys Sea.

- 65 Carpolestes simpsoni - A Plesiadapis without fur.
A group of small, nocturnal and arboreal, insect-eating mammals called the Euarchonta begins a speciation that will lead to the primate, treeshrew and flying lemur orders. The Primatomorpha is a subdivision of Euarchonta that includes the primates and the proto-primate Plesiadapiformes. One of the early proto-primates is Plesiadapis. Plesiadapis still had claws and the eyes located on each side of the head, because of that they were faster on the ground than on the top of the trees, but they begin to spend long times on lower branches of trees, feeding on fruits and leafs.
One of the last Plesiadapiformes is Carpolestes simpsoni. It had grasping digits but no forward facing eyes.

Geologic - During the Paleocene, the vast inland seas of the Cretaceous Period dry up, exposing large land areas in North America and Eurasia. Australia begins to separate from Antarctica, and Greenland splits from North America. A remnant Tethys Sea persists in the equatorial region.
Biologic - Mammalian life diversifies, spreading into all major environments. Placental mammals eventually dominate the land, and many differentiated forms evolve, including early ungulates (hoofed animals), primates, rodents, and carnivores.

 

100-500 million

100
200
300
400
500
Phanerozoic Era 543 - Present phanerozoic
 
Cretaceous Period cretaceous
144-65
Jurassic Period
206-144 jurassic
 
Tommotian 530 - 527 >
 
 
Permian Period permian
290-248  
 
Silurian Period silurian
443-417
Ordovician Period ordovician
490-443
 
 
Triassic Period
248-206 triassic
 
Penns.
323 - 290 pennsylvanian
Miss. missisipian epoch
354 - 323
Devonian Period
417-354 devonian period
 
Carboniferous Period carboniferous
354-290
 
Cambrian cambrian
543 - 490
 
Mesozoic Era (Middle Life) 248 - 65 mesozoic
Paleozoic Era (Ancient Life) 543 - 248 paleozoic
 
Geologic - The continents—while not in their current positions on the Earth—are shaped much as they are today. South America and Africa separate, and the Atlantic ocean widens. A circum-equatorial sea, Tethys, forms between the continents of the Northern and Southern Hemisphere. The westward movement of North America forms the ancestral Rocky Mountains and the ancestral Sierra Nevada. Sea levels rise, submerging about 30% of the Earth's present land surface.
The global climate is generally warm. The poles are free of ice.
Biologic - Dinosaurs during this time included muttaburrasaurus, quetsalcoatlus, ankylosaurus. The dinosaurs died out towards the end of this period.The first snakes and modern mammals appeared.
Dinosaurs and other large reptiles peak as the dominant vertebrate life form on Earth. Dinosaurs extend their range throughout every continent. Horned dinosaurs are common, while armored ankylosaurs and spiky nodosaurs are rare.
In the shallow seas, invertebrates live in great diversity. Ammonites are a dominant group. Gastropods, corals, sea urchins flourish.
The early flowering plants (angiosperms), modern trees, and many modern types of insects evolve.
Near the end of the Cretaceous Period, several mass extinctions occur, including the extinction of five major reptilian groups: dinosaurs, pterosaurs, ichthyosaurs, pleisosaurs, and mosasaurs. Extinctions also occur among ammonites, corals, and other marine invertebrates.
- 125 Eomaia scansoria, a eutherian mammal, leads to the formation of modern placental mammals. It looks like modern dormouse, climbing small shrubs in Liaoning, China.
- 100 Common genetic ancestor of mice and humans.

Geologic - The supercontinent of Pangea begins to breakup as North America separates from Eurasia and Africa. The Atlantic Ocean begins to form. Tectonic plate subduction along western North America causes the Earth's crust to fold and mountains form in the western part of the continent.
Biologic - The first birds appeared (e.g. Archaeopteryx).
Dinosaurs included diplodocus, stegasaurus, brachiosaurus.
Reptiles adapt to life in the sea, in the air, and on land. Dinosaurs are the dominant reptile on land.
Archaeopteryx, the first bird, evolves.
Early amphibians, extinct by the late Triassic, are succeeded by the first frogs, toads, and salamanders.
Mammals are small, shrew-like animals.
Plant forms are dominated by the cycads and cycadeoides. Conifers and gingkoes are widespread.

 

Geologic - Pangaea covers nearly a quarter of the Earth's surface. The Triassic Period, unlike the previous periods, is marked by few significant geologic events. Toward the end of the Triassic Period, continental rifting begins to break apart the supercontinent.
The general climate is warm, becoming semiarid to arid.
Biologic - The first dinosaurs such as Coelophosis and Euskelosaurus, and mammals, turtles, crocodiles and frogs appeared. Life began to diversify after the end-Permian extinction. Early dinosaurs evolve. Many are bipedal, fast, and relatively small. The largest Triassic dinosaurs are only 20 feet (6 meters) in length—small when compared to later Mesozoic forms.
Marine reptiles evolve, such as ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs.
Ferns, cycads, ginkgoes, and conifers flourish.
Mass extinctions occur at the end of the Triassic Period, reducing some marine and terrestrial groups, such as the ammonites, therapsids, early reptiles, and primitive amphibians, by as much as 75 percent.

Geologic - A single supercontinent, Pangaea, forms as Earth's landmasses collide and merge. Pangaea extends across all climatic zones and nearly from one pole to the other. This supercontinent is surrounded by an immense world ocean.
Extensive glaciation persists in what is now India, Australia, and Antarctica. Hot, dry conditions prevail elsewhere on Pangaea, and deserts become widespread.
Biologic - The first sailback reptiles such as Dimetrodon appeared. Invertebrate marine life is rich and diverse at the beginning of the Permian period. Toward the end of this period, mass extinctions occur among large groups of corals, bryozoans, arthropods, and other invertebrates. 99% of all life perishes.
On land, insects evolve into their modern forms; dragonflies and beetles appear.
Amphibians decline in number, but reptiles undergo a spectacular evolutionary development of carnivorous and herbivorous, terrestrial and aquatic forms.
Ferns and conifers persist in the cooler air.


- 256 Phtinosuchus, an early Therapsid. Shortly after the appearance of the first reptiles, two branches split off. One is Synapsida: they had a pair of holes in their skulls behind the eyes, which were used to increase the space for jaw muscles. The other branch is Diapsida.
From synapsids came the Therapsida, the direct ancestor of mammals. They are often called mammal-like reptiles.
The earliest mammal-like reptilian are the pelycosaurs. The pelycosaurs was the first animals to have temporal fenestra.Pelycosaurs are not Therapsida but soon they gave rise to them. The therapsids have temporal fenestrae larger and more mammal-like than pelycosaurs, their teeth show more serial differentiation; and later forms had evolved a secondary palate. A secondary palate enables the animal to eat and breathe at the same time and is a sign of a more active, perhaps warm-blooded, way of life.
- 220 One sub-group of therapsids, the cynodonts have evolved more mammal-like characteristics.
The jaws of cynodonts resemble modern mammal jaws more closely and their teeth are multi-cusped and differentiated down the jaw. Cynodonts are the direct ancestors of all modern mammals.
- 220 Repenomamus From eucynodonts ( cynodonts) came the first mammals. Most early mammals were small and shrew-like animals that fed on insects. Constant body temperature. All mammals have milk glands for their young.
Neocortex has evolved in mammals. This brain region is unique to mammals.
- 250 First Human race seeded

Geologic -Two major land masses form: Laurasia (North America, Greenland, Eurasia, and Scandinavia) to the north of the equator, and Gondwana (South America, Africa, peninsular India, Australia, and Antarctica) to the south. Collisions between Laurasia and Gondwana form major mountain ranges. Coal-forming sediments are laid down in vast swamps.
Global climatic changes occur, changing from warm and wet to cooler and drier. The result is a long interval of glaciation in the southern hemisphere.
Biologic - The first reptiles appeared. Great swamp forests covered the land.

- 375 Tiktaalik is a genus of sarcopterygian (lobe-finned) fishes from the late Devonian with many tetrapod-like features.
- 365 Some fresh water lobe-finned fish ( Sarcopterygii) develop legs and give rise to the Tetrapoda. The first tetrapods evolved in shallow and swampy freshwater habitats.
Primitive tetrapods developed from a lobe-finned fish (an "osteolepid Sarcopterygian"), with a two-lobed brain in a flattened skull, a wide mouth and a short snout, whose upward-facing eyes show that it was a bottom-dweller, and which had already developed adaptations of fins with fleshy bases and bones. The "living fossil" coelacanth is a related lobe-finned fish without these shallow-water adaptations. These fishes used their fins as paddles in shallow-water habitats choked with plants and detritus. The universal tetrapod characteristics of front limbs that bend backward at the elbow and hind limbs that bend forward at the knee can plausibly be traced to early tetrapods living in shallow water.
Panderichthys is a 90-130 cm long fish from the Late Devonian period. It have a large tetrapod-like head. Panderichthys exhibits features transitional between lobe-finned fishes and early tetrapods. Lungfishes retain some characteristics of the early Tetrapodas. One example is the Australian Lungfish.
- 315 Acanthostega Ichthyostega Acanthostega is an extinct amphibian, among the first animals to have recognizable limbs. It is a candidate for being one of the first vertebrates to be capable of coming onto land. It lacked wrists, and was generally poorly adapted to come onto land. The limbs could not support the animal's weight. Acanthostega had both lungs and gills, also indicating it was a link between lobe-finned fish and terrestrial vertebrates.
Ichthyostega is an early tetrapod. Being one of the first animals with legs, arms, and finger bones, Ichthyostega is seen as a hybrid between a fish and an amphibian. Ichthyostega' had legs but its limbs probably weren't used for walking, they may have spent very brief periods out of water and would have used their legs to paw their way through the mud.
Amphibia were the first four-legged animals to develop lungs.
Amphibians living today still retain many characteristics of the early tetrapods.
- 300 Hylonomus - From amphibians came the first reptiles: Hylonomus is the earliest known reptile. It was 20 cm long (including the tail) and probably would have looked rather similar to modern lizards. It had small sharp teeth and probably ate millipedes and early insects. It is a precursor of later amniotes and mammal-like reptiles.
Evolution of the amniotic egg gives rise to the Amniota, reptiles who can reproduce on land and lay eggs on dry land. They did not need to return to water for reproduction. This adaptation gave them the capability to colonize the uplands for the first time.
Reptiles have advanced nervous system, compared to amphibians. They have twelve pairs of cranial nerves.

Geologic - Europe and North America collide, forming the northern part of the ancestral Appalachian mountain range. Europe and North America straddle the equator. Africa and South America are positioned over the South Pole.
The climate is generally warm and moist.
Biologic - The first amphibians, insects and spiders appeared.
The diversification of fish from the Devonian Period continues in both marine and freshwater environments, though armored fish become extinct. Benthic (bottom-dwelling) marine communities include a variety of invertebrates: crinoids, blastoids, and brachiopods. The ammonites are common in open marine waters.
Insects, such as cockroaches, flourish. The first reptiles evolve.
Land environments are dominated by plants, from small, shrubby growths to tall trees. Early club mosses, horsetails, forest trees (Cordaites), and ferns are common.
This period is dominated by various forms of fish—armored fish, lungfish, and sharks.
Ammonites evolve from nautiloids and become one of the dominant invertebrate forms.
As the ozone layer forms, the first air-breathing arthropods—spiders and mites—evolve on land. Amphibians evolve and venture onto land.
Plant life, including lowland forests of giant psilophyta plants, develop and spread over the planet.

Biologic - The first land plants and giant sea scorpions called Eurypterids appeared.
Life in seas is still dominated by invertebrates: corals, arthropods, and crinoids. Rapid evolution occurs among suspension feeders, and pelagic (open ocean) predators, such as nautiloids, become abundant. Fish evolve jaws. Late in the Silurian Period, the first sharks appear.
The earliest land plants are represented by leafless, vascular plants called psilophytes.
Geologic - The North American, European, and Asian land masses are situated on or near the equator. Laurentia and Baltica collide. Gondwana sits in the south polar region. Shallow flooding of continental areas deposits sediments; later withdrawal of ocean water leaves oxidized "red beds" and extensive salt deposits.

Geologic - The barren continents of Laurentia, Baltica, Siberia, and Gondwana are separated by large oceans. Shallow seas cover much of North America at the beginning of the period. As the seas recede, they leave a thick layer of limestone. Later in the period, the seas recover North America, depositing quartz, sandstones, and more limestone.
Biologic - The first nautiloids appeared. Corals and trilobites were common. Metazoan invertebrates are still the dominant form of life on Earth. Corals, crinoids, and clams evolve, as well as the first early vertebrates—primitive fish with bony armor plates.
Late in the Ordovician Period, mass extinctions of marine life occur, opening niches for benthic (bottom-dwelling) and planktonic (floating, swimming) organisms.

- 480 A Placodermi The Placodermi were prehistoric fishes. Placoderms were the first of the jawed fishes, their jaws evolving from the first of their gill arches .Their head and thorax were covered by articulated armoured plates and the rest of the body was scaled or naked.
- 400 First Coelacanth appears; this order of animals had been thought to have no extant members until living specimens were discovered in 1938. It is often referred to as a living fossil.

Geologic - Sedimentary rocks (sandstone, shale, limestone, conglomerate) form in shallow seas over the continents. Rodinia begins to break up into northern and southern portions. Gondwana in the south incorporates South America, Africa, Antarctica, and Western Australia as well as peninsular India and parts of Arabia.
The global climate is generally mild.
Biologic - The first fishes, corals, trilobites and shellfish appeared.
Marine metazoans with mineralized skeletons, such as sponges, bryozoans, corals, brachiopods, molluscs, arthropods, and echinoderms, flourish. One group of arthropods, the trilobites, are particularly dominant in the shallow-water marine habitats.
Plant life is limited to marine algae.

- 580 The movement of all animals may have started with cnidarians. Almost all cnidarians possess nerves and muscles and, because they are the simplest animals to possess it, their direct ancestors were very likely the first animals to use nerves and muscles together. Cnidarians are also the first animals with an actual body of definite form and shape. They have radial symmetry.
- 550 Flatworm Flatworms are the earliest animals to have a brain, and the simplest animals alive to have bilateral symmetry. They are also the simplest animals with organs that form from three germ layers.
- 540 Acorn worms are considered more highly specialised and advanced than other similarly shaped worm-like creatures. They have a circulatory system with a heart that also functions as a kidney. Acorn worms have the gill-like structure it uses for breathing, a structure similar to that of primitive fish. Acorn worms are thus sometimes said to be a link between vertebrates and invertebrates.
- 530 Pikaia The earliest known ancestor of the chordates is Pikaia. It is the first known animal with a notochord.Pikaia is believed to be the ancestor of all chordates and vertebrates.
The Lancelet, still living today, retains some characteristics of the primitive chordates. It resembles Pikaia
Other earliest known chordate-like fossils is from a conodonts a "eel-shaped animal of 4-20 cm long" with a pair of huge eyes at the head end were and a complex basket of teeth.
- 505 Agnatha The first vertebrates appear: the ostracoderms, jawless fish related to present-day lampreys and hagfishes. Haikouichthys and Myllokunmingia are examples of these jawless fish, or Agnatha. (See also prehistoric fish). They were jawless and their internal skeletons were cartilaginous. They lacked the paired (pectoral and pelvic) fins of more advanced fish. They were the Precursors to the bony fish.

600-1000 million

600
700
800
900
1000
Vendian 650 - 543 vendian
       
Neoproterozoic 900 - 543 neoproterozoic
Mesoproterozoic 1600 - 900 mesoproterozoic

- 600 It is thought that the earliest multicellular life on Earth was a sponge-like creature.
Sponges are among the simplest of animals, with partially differentiated tissues but without muscles, nerves, or internal organs.
Sponges ( Porifera) are the phylogenetically oldest animal phylum extant today.
In some ways they are closer to being cell colonies than multicellular organisms.

  - 850 Proterospongia (members of the Choanoflagellata) are the best living examples of what the ancestor of all animals may have looked like.
They live in colonies, and show a primitive level of cellular specialization for different tasks.
The similarities between Proterospongia and sponges are strong evidence for the close relationship between protozoans and metazoans.

- 900 Choanoflagellate The choanoflagellates are considered ancestors of the entire animal kingdom, and in particular may be the direct ancestors of sponges.
The choanocytes (collar cells) of sponges have the same basic structure as choanoflagellates. Collar cells are occasionally found in a few other animal groups, such as flatworms. Comparisons of DNA sequences support a close affiliation between choanoflagellates and animals.

 

1 - 5 Billion

1
2
3
4
5
 
Paleoproterozoic 2.5 - 1.6paleoproterozoic
     
Proterozoic Eon 2.5 - 540 M proterozoic eon
Archean Eon 3.9 - 2.5 archeaon
Hadean Eon (Azoic) hadeon eon
4.5 - 3.9
   
Precambrian Time 4.5 - 543 M precambrian  
Geologic - The supercontinent Rodinia forms approximately 1.1 billion years ago. Plate tectonics slows to approximately the same rate as the present. Large mountain chains form as the continents collide. Quartz-rich sandstones, shales, and limestones are deposited over the continents. Oxygen levels increase as life on Earth develops the ability to obtain energy through photosynthesis. The late Proterozoic is an "Ice House" world.
Biologic - Eukaryotes (single-celled organisms with a nucleus) evolve. These are more advanced forms of algae and a wide variety of protozoa. Eukaryotes can reproduce sexually, which makes genetic diversity possible, as well as the ability to adapt to and survive environmental changes. Multi-celled, soft-bodied marine organisms (metazoans) evolve.
- 1.2 Sexual reproduction evolves, leading to faster evolution. [1]
Geologic - The Earth's permanent crust is formed. Vast amounts of metallic minerals are deposited. The oceans and atmosphere result from volcanic outgassing.
Biologic - The earliest life forms evolve in the seas. They are the prokaryotes—single-celled organisms with no nucleus—cyanobacteria (blue-green algae). The earliest bacteria obtain energy through chemosynthesis (ingestion of organic molecules).
- 2.5 First organisms to utilize oxygen.
- 2.1 More complex cells appear: the eukaryotes, which contain various organelles. The eukaryotic cell seems to have evolved from a symbiotic community of prokaryotic cells. The origin of the eukaryotic cell is a milestone in the evolution of life: their higher level of organizational complexity permits the development of truly multicellular organisms.

Geologic - The Earth forms as a solid planet.
Biologic - No evidence of life yet known.

- 3.9 Cells resembling prokaryotes appear. These first organisms are chemoautotrophs: they use carbon dioxide as a carbon source and oxidize inorganic materials to extract energy. Later, prokaryotes evolve glycolysis, a set of chemical reactions that free the energy of organic molecules such as glucose. Glycolysis generates ATP molecules as short-term energy currency, and ATP continue to be used in almost all organisms unchanged to this day.
- 4 The earliest life appears, possibly derived from self-reproducing RNA molecules. The copying/reproducing/replicating of these molecules requires resources like energy, space and smaller building blocks, which soon become limited, resulting in competition. Natural selection favors those molecules which are more efficient at replication. DNA molecules then took over as the main replicators. They soon develop inside an enclosing membrane which provide a stable physical and chemical environment conducive to their replication - the birth of proto-cells.