Saturday, April 17, 2021

Devonian Period

 The Devonian Period spanned about 60 million years of the Paleozoic, from 419.2 million years ago to 358.9 million years ago. It is sandwiched between the Silurian Period, which came earlier, and the Carboniferous Period, which is more recent.

The first significant  adaptations of life on dry land occurred during this period, for life was well underway in colonizing the land. Moss forests and bacterial/algal mats of earlier were joined early in the period by primitive rooted plants that created the first stable soils and harbored such arthropods as mites and scorpions. By far the largest land organism at the beginning of this period was a poorly-understood plant which was possibly the fruiting body of an enormous fungus, a rolled liverwort mat, or another organism of uncertain affinities. This plant stood more than 8 meters (26 ft) tall, which means it towered over the low, carpet-like vegetation that covered the land. The first fossils of insects appeared around 416 million years ago, in the Early Devonian.

Many Early Devonian plants did not have true roots or leaves like modern plants. These were generally very short, growing hardly more than a few centimeters tall. By the middle of the period, forests of shrub-like plants existed, for plants like horsetails and ferns had evolved. These had true roots and leaves, and many were quite tall. Also, the earliest-known trees appeared in the Middle Devonian, although probably not any that we would recognize. Certainly I didn't recognize them from their descriptions, and they all seemed to have 'extinct' in their description. By the end of the Devonian, the first seed-forming plants had appeared. There was such a rapid appearance of so many plant groups and growth forms that it is called the "Devonian Explosion". Various terrestrial arthropods (which includes insects, spiders, and crustaceans) also became well-established.

Fish reached substantial diversity, so that Devonian is often called the Age of Fishes. Among the marine vertebrates, jawless armored fish declined in diversity, while jawed fish increased in both the sea and fresh water. Early cartilaginous and bony fishes also became diverse in the seas. The first abundant genus of shark appeared during this period. The ancestors of all four-limbed vertebrates began adapting to walking on land, as their pectoral and pelvic fins evolved into legs.

The first ammonites (an extinct specie of mollusc) appeared during the Devonian. Trilobites (which look something like armored roaches), brachiopods (similar to a mollusc) and great coral reefs were common in the seas. The Late Devonian extinction, which started about 375 million years ago, affected marine line severely, killing off—among other things—all trilobites save for a few species.

The Devonian was relatively warm, and probably lacked any glaciers. For this reason, the sea level was high. The temperature gradient from the equator to the poles was not as large as it is today. The weather was also very arid, particularly along the equator. Surface temperature of the tropical seas was probably 86°F in the Early Devonian, but CO2 levels dropped steeply throughout the period, because the newly evolved forests drew carbon out of the atmosphere. By Mid-Devonian, there was a cooling of about 9°F. However, there is evidence that the temperature rose again in the Late Devonian, which may have contributed to the extinction event.

The geography was dominated by the supercontinent Gondwana to the south, Siberia to the north, and the early formation of Euramerica in between. It was a time of great tectonic activity, as Euramerica and Gondwana drew closer together. In the early Devonian, Laurentia and Baltica collided, forming Euramerica, which rotated into the natural dry zone along the Tropic of Capricorn (appromately 23.3° South of the equator). Then the plate of Euramerica and Gondwana started to meet, beginning to form the supercontinent Pangaea. This raised the northern Appalachian Mountains and formed the Caledonian Mountains in Great Britain and Scandinavia. The west coast of Euramerica was low lying, with deep silty embayments, river deltas and estuaries (found today in Idaho and Nevada). However, a volcanic island arc approached the west coast in the Late Devonian, and began to uplift that coast in a prelude to mountain-building that happened later.

Hey, we're getting somewhere! If trees and tall bushes could grow during this time period, then the soil must be decent, right? So maybe we could grow crops, so long as we bring our own seeds. And maybe we could set up a farm with some barnyard animals, too, like chicken, ducks, cows and goats. There's insects for the fowl to eat. Do you think cows and goats would eat horsetails and liverworts? Because the article didn't say anything about grasses. And as long as we don't go swimming in shark-filled waters, I think we'd be relatively safe.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devonian

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