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Evolution: View Talk

- The timeline shows the major events in the evolution of life on Earth over the past 4.5 billion years, from the formation of Earth to modern times. Key events include the emergence of single-celled and multicellular life, plants, animals, dinosaurs, mammals, and primates. - While early land plants reproduced via spores, flowers later evolved as a more effective means of reproduction and dispersal. However, the sudden appearance of modern flowers in the fossil record posed a problem for Darwin's theory of evolution. - Recent discoveries have provided evidence that flowers gradually evolved in a series of steps from seed-bearing plants like ginkgos and conifers, with the earliest known flowering plant dating back

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
48 views

Evolution: View Talk

- The timeline shows the major events in the evolution of life on Earth over the past 4.5 billion years, from the formation of Earth to modern times. Key events include the emergence of single-celled and multicellular life, plants, animals, dinosaurs, mammals, and primates. - While early land plants reproduced via spores, flowers later evolved as a more effective means of reproduction and dispersal. However, the sudden appearance of modern flowers in the fossil record posed a problem for Darwin's theory of evolution. - Recent discoveries have provided evidence that flowers gradually evolved in a series of steps from seed-bearing plants like ginkgos and conifers, with the earliest known flowering plant dating back

Uploaded by

November Rolf
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Evolution

Life timeline
This box: 
 view
 talk
 edit
-4500 —

-4000 —

-3500 —

-3000 —

-2500 —

-2000 —

-1500 —

-1000 —

-500 —

0 —
water
Single-celled
life
Photosynthesis
Eukaryotes
Multicellular
life
Arthropods       Molluscs
Plants
Dinosaurs    
Mammals
Flowers
Birds
Primates
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Earth (−4540)

Earliest water

Earliest life

Earliest oxygen

Atmospheric oxygen

Oxygen crisis

Sexual reproduction

Earliest plants

Earliest animals

Ediacara biota

Cambrian explosion

Tetrapoda

Earliest apes
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Pongola
Huronian
Cryogenian
Andean
Karoo
Quaternary
Ice Ages
Clickable
(million years ago)
(See also: Human timeline, and Nature timeline.)

Further information: Evolution of flowers and Floral biology


While land plants have existed for about 425 million years, the first ones reproduced by a simple
adaptation of their aquatic counterparts: spores. In the sea, plants—and some animals—can simply
scatter out genetic clones of themselves to float away and grow elsewhere. This is how early plants
reproduced. But plants soon evolved methods of protecting these copies to deal with drying out and
other damage which is even more likely on land than in the sea. The protection became the seed,
though it had not yet evolved the flower. Early seed-bearing plants include the ginkgo and conifers.

Archaefructus liaoningensis, one of the earliest known flowering plants

Several groups of extinct gymnosperms, particularly seed ferns, have been proposed as the
ancestors of flowering plants but there is no continuous fossil evidence showing exactly how flowers
evolved. The apparently sudden appearance of relatively modern flowers in the fossil record posed
such a problem for the theory of evolution that it was called an "abominable mystery" by Charles
Darwin.
Recently discovered angiosperm fossils such as Archaefructus, along with further discoveries of
fossil gymnosperms, suggest how angiosperm characteristics may have been acquired in a series of
steps. An early fossil of a flowering plant, Archaefructus liaoningensis from China, is dated about
125 million years old.[21][22] Even earlier from China is the 125–130 million years old Archaefructus
sinensis. In 2015 a plant (130 million-year-old Montsechia vidalii, discovered in Spain) was claimed
to be 130 million years old.[23] In 2018, scientists reported that the earliest flowers began about 180
million years ago.[24]

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