Mesozoic period. Mesozoic era. History of the Earth. Brief description of the Mesozoic era and its periods The first of the three periods of the Mesozoic era of the geological

Finance

Mesozoic era

The Mesozoic era is the era of middle life. It is named so because the flora and fauna of this era are transitional between the Paleozoic and Cenozoic. In the Mesozoic era, the modern outlines of the continents and oceans, modern marine fauna and flora are gradually formed. The Andes and Cordilleras, mountain ranges of China and East Asia were formed. The basins of the Atlantic and Indian oceans formed. The formation of the Pacific Ocean depressions began.

The Mesozoic era is divided into three periods: Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous.

Triassic

The Triassic period got its name from the fact that three different rock complexes are attributed to its deposits: the lower one is continental sandstone, the middle one is limestone and the upper one is neiper.

The most characteristic sediments of the Triassic period are: continental sandy-argillaceous rocks (often with coal lenses); marine limestones, clays, shales; lagoonal anhydrites, salts, gypsums.

During the Triassic period, the northern continent of Laurasia merged with the southern continent - Gondwana. The great bay, which began in the east of Gondwana, stretched all the way to the northern coast of modern Africa, then turned south, almost completely separating Africa from Gondwana. A long bay stretched from the west, separating the western part of Gondwana from Laurasia. Many depressions arose on Gondwana, gradually filled with continental deposits.

Volcanic activity intensified in the Middle Triassic. The inland seas become shallow, and numerous depressions are formed. The formation of the mountain ranges of South China and Indonesia begins. On the territory of the modern Mediterranean, the climate was warm and humid. It was cooler and wetter in the Pacific zone. Deserts dominated the territory of Gondwana and Laurasia. The climate of the northern half of Laurasia was cold and dry.

Along with changes in the distribution of sea and land, the formation of new mountain ranges and volcanic regions, there was an intensive replacement of some animal and plant forms by others. Only a few families have moved from Paleozoic era to the Mesozoic. This gave grounds to some researchers to assert about the great catastrophes that occurred at the turn of the Paleozoic and Mesozoic. However, when studying the deposits of the Triassic period, one can easily be convinced that there is no sharp boundary between them and the Permian deposits, therefore, some forms of plants and animals were replaced by others, probably gradually. main reason were not catastrophes, but an evolutionary process: more perfect forms gradually replaced less perfect ones.

The seasonal change in temperatures of the Triassic period began to have a noticeable effect on plants and animals. Separate groups of reptiles have adapted to the cold seasons. It was from these groups that mammals originated in the Triassic, and somewhat later, birds. At the end of the Mesozoic era, the climate became even colder. Deciduous woody plants appear, which partially or completely shed their leaves during the cold seasons. This feature of plants is an adaptation to a colder climate.

The cooling in the Triassic period was insignificant. It was most pronounced in northern latitudes. The rest of the area was warm. Therefore, the reptiles felt quite well in the Triassic period. Their most diverse forms, with which small mammals were not yet able to compete, settled over the entire surface of the Earth. The rich vegetation of the Triassic period also contributed to the extraordinary flowering of reptiles.

Gigantic forms of cephalopods have developed in the seas. The diameter of the shells of some of them was up to 5 m. True, gigantic cephalopod mollusks, such as squid, reaching 18 m in length, still live in the seas, but in the Mesozoic era there were much more gigantic forms.

The composition of the atmosphere of the Triassic period has changed little compared to the Permian. The climate became more humid, but the deserts in the center of the continent remained. Some plants and animals of the Triassic period have survived to this day in the region of Central Africa and South Asia. This suggests that the composition of the atmosphere and the climate of individual land areas have not changed much during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras.

And yet the stegocephalians died out. They were replaced by reptiles. More perfect, mobile, well adapted to various living conditions, they ate the same food as stegocephalians, settled in the same places, ate young stegocephalians and eventually exterminated them.

Among the Triassic flora, calamites, seed ferns, and cordaites were occasionally encountered. True ferns predominated, ginkgo, bennetite, cycad, coniferous. Cycads still exist in the area of ​​the Malay Archipelago. They are known as sago palms. In my own way appearance cycads occupy an intermediate position between palms and ferns. The trunk of cycads is rather thick, columnar. The crown consists of stiff pinnate leaves arranged in a corolla. Plants reproduce by means of macro- and microspores.

Triassic ferns were coastal herbaceous plants with broad, dissected leaves with reticulate venation. Of the coniferous plants, volttia has been well studied. She had a dense crown and cones like spruce.

The ginkgos were pretty tall trees, their leaves formed dense crowns.

A special place among the Triassic gymnosperms was occupied by bennetites - trees with whorled large complex leaves resembling the leaves of cycads. The reproductive organs of bennetites occupy an intermediate place between the cones of cycads and the flowers of some flowering plants, in particular magnoliaceae. Thus, it is probably the bennetites that should be considered the ancestors of flowering plants.

Of the invertebrates of the Triassic period, all types of animals that exist in our time are already known. The most typical marine invertebrates were reef-building animals and ammonites.

In the Paleozoic, animals already existed that covered the bottom of the sea in colonies, forming reefs, although not very powerful. In the Triassic period, when many colonial six-ray corals appear instead of tabulates, the formation of reefs up to a thousand meters thick begins. Cups of six-pointed corals had six or twelve calcareous partitions. As a result of the mass development and rapid growth of corals, underwater forests were formed on the bottom of the sea, in which numerous representatives of other groups of organisms settled. Some of them took part in reef formation. bivalves, algae, sea ​​urchins, sea ​​stars, sponges lived between corals. Destroyed by waves, they formed coarse-grained or fine-grained sand, which filled all the voids of the corals. Washed out by waves from these voids, calcareous silt was deposited in bays and lagoons.

Some bivalve mollusks are quite characteristic of the Triassic period. Their paper-thin shells with brittle ribs in some cases form whole layers in the deposits of this period. Bivalves lived in shallow muddy bays - lagoons, on reefs and between them. In the Upper Triassic period, many thick-shell bivalve mollusks appeared, firmly attached to the limestone deposits of shallow water basins.

At the end of the Triassic, due to increased volcanic activity, part of the limestone deposits was covered with ash and lavas. Steam rising from the depths of the Earth brought with it many compounds from which deposits of non-ferrous metals were formed.

The most common of the gastropod molluscs were pronebranchial. Ammonites were widely distributed in the seas of the Triassic period, the shells of which in some places accumulated in huge quantities. Having appeared in the Silurian period, they did not yet play a large role among other invertebrates throughout the Paleozoic era. Ammonites could not successfully compete with the rather complex nautiloids. Ammonite shells were formed from calcareous plates, which had the thickness of tissue paper and therefore almost did not protect the soft body of the mollusk. Only when their partitions were bent into numerous folds, ammonite shells gained strength and turned into a real shelter from predators. With the complication of the partitions, the shells became even more durable, and the external structure made it possible for them to adapt to the most diverse living conditions.

Representatives of echinoderms were sea urchins, lilies and stars. At the upper end of the body of sea lilies, there was a flower-like main body. It distinguishes a corolla and grasping organs - “hands”. Between the "hands" in the corolla were the mouth and anus. With “hands”, the sea lily raked water into the mouth opening, and with it the sea animals that it fed on. The stem of many Triassic crinoids was spiral.

The Triassic seas were inhabited by calcareous sponges, bryozoans, leaf-legged crayfish, and ostracods.

The fish were represented by sharks living in freshwater bodies and molluscoids inhabiting the sea. The first primitive bony fish appear. Powerful fins, a well-developed dentition, a perfect shape, a strong and light skeleton - all this contributed to the rapid spread of bony fish in the seas of our planet.

Amphibians were represented by stegocephalians from the group of labyrinthodonts. They were sedentary animals with a small body, small limbs and a large head. They lay in the water waiting for the prey, and when the prey approached, they grabbed it. Their teeth had complex labyrinthine folded enamel, which is why they were called labyrinthodonts. The skin was moistened with mucous glands. Other amphibians came out on land to hunt insects. The most characteristic representatives of labyrinthodonts are mastodonosaurs. These animals, whose skulls reached one meter in length, resembled huge frogs in appearance. They hunted fish and therefore rarely left the aquatic environment.

Mastodonosaurus.

The swamps became smaller, and the mastodonosaurs were forced to inhabit ever deeper places, often accumulating in large numbers. That is why many of their skeletons are now being found in small areas.

Reptiles in the Triassic are characterized by considerable diversity. New groups are emerging. Of the cotylosaurs, only procolophons remain - small animals that fed on insects. An extremely curious group of reptiles were the archosaurs, which included thecodonts, crocodiles, and dinosaurs. Representatives of thecodonts, ranging in size from a few centimeters to 6 m, were predators. They still differed in a number of primitive features and looked like Permian pelycosaurs. Some of them - pseudosuchia - had long limbs, a long tail and led a terrestrial lifestyle. Others, including crocodile-like phytosaurs, lived in the water.

Crocodiles of the Triassic period - small primitive animals of protosuchia - lived in fresh water.

Dinosaurs include theropods and prosauropods. Theropods moved on well-developed hind limbs, had a heavy tail, powerful jaws, small and weak forelimbs. In size, these animals ranged from a few centimeters to 15 m. All of them were predators.

Prosauropods ate, as a rule, plants. Some of them were omnivores. They walked on four legs. Prosauropods had a small head, long neck and tail.

Representatives of the synaptosaur subclass led the most diverse lifestyle. Trilophosaurus climbed trees, fed on plant foods. In appearance, he resembled a cat.

Seal-like reptiles lived near the coast, feeding mainly on molluscs. Plesiosaurs lived in the sea, but sometimes came ashore. They reached 15 m in length. They ate fish.

In some places, footprints of a huge animal walking on four legs are quite often found. They called it the chirotherium. Based on the surviving prints, one can imagine the structure of the foot of this animal. Four clumsy toes surrounded a thick, meaty sole. Three of them had claws. The forelimbs of the chirotherium are almost three times smaller than the hind ones. On the wet sand, the animal left deep footprints. With the deposition of new layers, the traces gradually petrified. Later, the land was flooded with the sea, which hid the traces. They were covered with marine sediments. Consequently, in that era, the sea repeatedly flooded. The islands sank below sea level, and the animals living on them were forced to adapt to new conditions. Many reptiles appear in the sea, which undoubtedly descended from mainland ancestors. Turtles with a wide bone shell, dolphin-like ichthyosaurs - fish-lizards and gigantic plesiosaurs with a small head on a long neck quickly developed. Their vertebrae are transformed, limbs are changed. The cervical vertebrae of an ichthyosaur fuse into one bone, and in turtles they grow, forming the upper part of the shell.

The ichthyosaur had a row of homogeneous teeth; teeth disappear in turtles. The five-fingered limbs of ichthyosaurs turn into flippers well adapted for swimming, in which it is difficult to distinguish the shoulder, forearm, wrist and finger bones.

Since the Triassic period, reptiles that have moved to live in the sea gradually populate more and more vast expanses of the ocean.

The oldest mammal found in the Triassic deposits of North Carolina is called the dromaterium, which means "running beast." This "beast" was only 12 cm long. Dromatherium belonged to oviparous mammals. They are like modern Australian echidna and the platypus, did not give birth to cubs, but laid eggs, from which underdeveloped cubs hatched. Unlike reptiles, who did not care about their offspring at all, dromateriums fed their young with milk.

Deposits of oil, natural gases, brown and hard coal, iron and copper ores, and rock salt are associated with deposits of the Triassic period.

The Triassic period lasted 35 million years.

Jurassic period

For the first time, deposits of this period were found in the Jura (mountains in Switzerland and France), hence the name of the period. The Jurassic period is subdivided into three divisions: leyas, doger and malm.

The deposits of the Jurassic period are quite diverse: limestones, clastic rocks, shales, igneous rocks, clays, sands, conglomerates formed in a variety of conditions.

Sedimentary rocks containing many representatives of fauna and flora are widely distributed.

Intensive tectonic movements at the end of the Triassic and at the beginning of the Jurassic contributed to the deepening of the large bays that gradually separated Africa and Australia from Gondwana. The gulf between Africa and America deepened. Depressions formed in Laurasia: German, Anglo-Paris, West Siberian. The Arctic Sea flooded the northern coast of Laurasia.

Intense volcanism and mountain-building processes led to the formation of the Verkhoyansk fold system. The formation of the Andes and the Cordillera continued. Warm sea currents have reached the Arctic latitudes. The climate became warm and humid. This is evidenced by the significant distribution of coral limestones and the remains of thermophilic fauna and flora. There are very few deposits of a dry climate: lagoonal gypsum, anhydrites, salts and red sandstones. The cold season already existed, but it was characterized only by a decrease in temperature. There was no snow or ice.

The climate of the Jurassic period depended not only on sunlight. Many volcanoes, outpourings of magma on the bottom of the oceans heated the water and the atmosphere, saturated the air with water vapor, which then rained on land, flowing in stormy streams into lakes and oceans. Numerous freshwater deposits testify to this: white sandstones alternating with dark loams.

The warm and humid climate favored the flowering flora. Ferns, cicadas, and conifers formed extensive marshy forests. Araucaria, arborvitae, cicadas grew on the coast. Ferns and horsetails formed the undergrowth. In the Lower Jurassic, the vegetation throughout the northern hemisphere was fairly uniform. But already starting from the Middle Jurassic, two plant belts can be identified: the northern one, dominated by ginkgo and herbaceous ferns, and the southern one, with bennetites, cicadas, araucaria, and tree ferns.

The characteristic ferns of the Jurassic period were matonii, which have survived to this day in the Malay Archipelago. Horsetails and club mosses almost did not differ from modern ones. The place of extinct seed ferns and cordaites is occupied by cycads, which now grow in tropical forests.

Ginkgoaceae were also widely distributed. Their leaves turned to the sun with an edge and resembled huge fans. From North America and New Zealand to Asia and Europe, dense forests of coniferous plants grew - araucaria and bennetites. The first cypress and, possibly, spruce trees appear.

The representatives of the Jurassic conifers also include sequoia - a modern giant California pine. Currently, sequoias remain only on the Pacific coast of North America. Separate forms of even more ancient plants have been preserved, for example, glassopteris. But there are few such plants, since they were supplanted by more perfect ones.

The lush vegetation of the Jurassic period contributed to the widespread distribution of reptiles. Dinosaurs have greatly evolved. Among them are lizard and ornithischian. Lizards moved on four legs, had five toes on their feet, and ate plants. Most of them had a long neck, a small head and a long tail. They had two brains: one small - in the head; the second is much larger in size - at the base of the tail.

The largest of the Jurassic dinosaurs was the brachiosaurus, reaching a length of 26 m, weighing about 50 tons. It had columnar legs, a small head, and a thick long neck. Brachiosaurs lived on the shores of the Jurassic lakes, fed on aquatic vegetation. Every day, the brachiosaurus needed at least half a ton of green mass.

Brachiosaurus.

Diplodocus is the oldest reptile, its length was 28 m. It had a long thin neck and a long thick tail. Like a brachiosaurus, diplodocus moved on four legs, the hind legs were longer than the front ones. Diplodocus spent most of his life in swamps and lakes, where he grazed and escaped from predators.

Diplodocus.

Brontosaurus was comparatively tall, had a large hump on its back and a thick tail. Its length was 18 m. The vertebrae of the brontosaurus were hollow. Chisel-shaped small teeth were densely located on the jaws of a small head. The brontosaurus lived in swamps, on the shores of lakes.

Brontosaurus.

Ornithischian dinosaurs are divided into bipedal and quadrupedal. Different in size and appearance, they fed mainly on vegetation, but predators are already appearing among them.

Stegosaurs are herbivores. They had two rows of large plates on their backs and paired spikes on their tails that protected them from predators. Many scaly lepidosaurs appear - small predators with beak-shaped jaws.

In the Jurassic period, flying lizards first appear. They flew with the help of a leathery shell stretched between the long finger of the hand and the bones of the forearm. Flying lizards were well adapted to flight. They had light tubular bones. The extremely elongated outer fifth finger of the forelimbs consisted of four joints. The first finger looked like a small bone or was completely absent. The second, third and fourth fingers consisted of two, rarely three bones and had claws. The hind limbs were quite strongly developed. They had sharp claws at their ends. The skull of flying lizards was relatively large, as a rule, elongated and pointed. In old lizards, the cranial bones fused and the skulls became similar to the skulls of birds. The premaxilla sometimes grew into an elongated toothless beak. Toothed lizards had simple teeth and sat in recesses. The largest teeth were in front. Sometimes they stick out to the side. This helped the lizards to catch and hold prey. The animal spine consisted of 8 cervical, 10–15 dorsal, 4–10 sacral, and 10–40 caudal vertebrae. Rib cage was wide and had a high keel. The shoulder blades were long, the pelvic bones were fused. The most characteristic representatives of flying lizards are pterodactyl and rhamphorhynchus.

Pterodactyl.

Pterodactyls in most cases were tailless, different in size - from the size of a sparrow to a crow. They had wide wings and a narrow skull extended forward with a small number of teeth in the front. Pterodactyls lived in large flocks on the shores of the lagoons of the late Jurassic sea. During the day they hunted, and at nightfall they hid in trees or in rocks. The skin of pterodactyls was wrinkled and bare. They ate mainly fish, sometimes sea lilies, molluscs, and insects. In order to take off, pterodactyls had to jump off rocks or trees.

Rhamphorhynchus had long tails, long narrow wings, a large skull with numerous teeth. Long teeth of various sizes arched forward. The lizard's tail ended in a blade that served as a rudder. Ramphorhynchus could take off from the ground. They settled on the banks of rivers, lakes and seas, fed on insects and fish.

Ramphorhynchus.

Flying lizards lived only in the Mesozoic era, and their heyday falls on the late Jurassic period. Their ancestors were apparently extinct ancient reptiles pseudosuchia. The long-tailed forms appeared before the short-tailed ones. At the end of the Jurassic, they became extinct.

It should be noted that flying lizards were not the ancestors of birds and bats. Flying lizards, birds and the bats originated and developed each in its own way, and there are no close family ties between them. The only one common feature for them - the ability to fly. And although they all acquired this ability due to a change in the forelimbs, the differences in the structure of their wings convince us that they had completely different ancestors.

The seas of the Jurassic period were inhabited by dolphin-like reptiles - ichthyosaurs. They had a long head, sharp teeth, large eyes surrounded by a bone ring. The length of the skull of some of them was 3 m, and the body length was 12 m. The limbs of ichthyosaurs consisted of bone plates. Elbow, metatarsus, hand and fingers did not differ much in shape from each other. About a hundred bone plates supported a wide flipper. Shoulder and pelvic girdle were poorly developed. There were several fins on the body. Ichthyosaurs were viviparous animals. Along with ichthyosaurs lived plesiosaurs. They had a thick body with four flipper-like limbs, a long serpentine neck with a small head.

In the Jurassic, new genera of fossil turtles appear, and at the end of the period, modern turtles.

Tailless frog-like amphibians lived in fresh water. There were a lot of fish in the Jurassic seas: bony, rays, sharks, cartilaginous, ganoid. They had an internal skeleton made of flexible cartilaginous tissue impregnated with calcium salts: a dense bony scaly cover that protected them well from enemies, and jaws with strong teeth.

Of the invertebrates in the Jurassic seas, ammonites, belemnites, sea lilies were found. However, in the Jurassic period, there were much fewer ammonites than in the Triassic. The Jurassic ammonites also differ from the Triassic in their structure, with the exception of the phyloceras, which did not change at all during the transition from the Triassic to the Jura. Separate groups of ammonites have preserved mother-of-pearl to our time. Some animals lived in the open sea, others inhabited bays and shallow inland seas.

Cephalopods - belemnites - swam in whole flocks in the Jurassic seas. Along with small specimens, there were real giants - up to 3 m long.

The remains of internal shells of belemnites, known as "devil's fingers", are found in Jurassic deposits.

In the seas of the Jurassic period, bivalve mollusks, especially those belonging to the oyster family, also developed significantly. They start to form oyster jars.

Significant changes are undergoing sea urchins that settled on reefs. Along with the round forms that have survived to this day, there lived bilaterally symmetrical, irregularly shaped hedgehogs. Their body was stretched in one direction. Some of them had a jaw apparatus.

The Jurassic seas were relatively shallow. The rivers brought muddy water into them, delaying gas exchange. Deep bays were filled with decaying remains and silt containing large amounts of hydrogen sulfide. That is why in such places the remains of animals, carried by sea currents or waves, are well preserved.

Sponges, starfish, sea lilies often overwhelm Jurassic deposits. In the Jurassic period, "five-armed" sea lilies became widespread. Many crustaceans appear: barnacles, decapods, leaf-legged crayfish, freshwater sponges, among insects - dragonflies, beetles, cicadas, bedbugs.

In the Jurassic period, the first birds appear. Their ancestors were the ancient reptile pseudosuchia, which also gave rise to dinosaurs and crocodiles. Ornithosuchia is most similar to birds. She, like birds, moved on her hind legs, had a strong pelvis and was covered with feather-like scales. Part of pseudosuchia moved to live on trees. Their forelimbs were specialized for grasping branches with their fingers. There were lateral depressions on the skull of Pseudosuchia, which significantly reduced the mass of the head. Climbing trees and jumping on branches strengthened the hind limbs. Gradually expanding forelimbs supported the animals in the air and allowed them to glide. An example of such a reptile is scleromochlus. His long thin legs indicate that he jumped well. The elongated forearms helped the animals to climb and cling to the branches of trees and bushes. The most important moment in the process of turning reptiles into birds was the transformation of scales into feathers. The heart of the animals had four chambers, which ensured a constant body temperature.

In the late Jurassic period, the first birds appear - Archeopteryx, the size of a dove. In addition to short feathers, Archeopteryx had seventeen flight feathers on its wings. The tail feathers were located on all tail vertebrae and were directed back and down. Some researchers believe that the feathers of the bird were bright, like those of modern tropical birds, others - that the feathers were gray or brown, and others - that they were variegated. The mass of the bird reached 200 g. Many signs of Archeopteryx speak of its family ties with reptiles: three free fingers on the wings, a head covered with scales, strong conical teeth, a tail consisting of 20 vertebrae. The vertebrae of the bird were biconcave, like those of fish. Archeopteryx lived in araucaria and cicada forests. They fed mainly on insects and seeds.

Archeopteryx.

Among mammals, predators appeared. Small in size, they lived in forests and dense bushes, hunting small lizards and other mammals. Some of them have adapted to life in trees.

Deposits of coal, gypsum, oil, salt, nickel and cobalt are associated with the Jurassic deposits.

This period lasted 55 million years.

Cretaceous period

The Cretaceous period got its name because powerful chalk deposits are associated with it. It is divided into two sections: lower and upper.

Mountain-building processes at the end of the Jurassic significantly changed the outlines of the continents and oceans. North America, previously separated from the vast Asian continent by a wide strait, joined with Europe. In the east, Asia joined America. South America completely separated from Africa. Australia was where it is today, but was smaller. The formation of the Andes and the Cordillera, as well as individual ranges of the Far East, continues.

In the Upper Cretaceous period, the sea flooded vast areas of the northern continents. were under water Western Siberia and Eastern Europe, most of Canada and Arabia. Thick strata of chalk, sands, and marls accumulate.

At the end of the Cretaceous period, mountain building processes are again activated, as a result of which the mountain ranges of Siberia, the Andes, the Cordillera and the mountain ranges of Mongolia were formed.

The climate has changed. In the high latitudes in the north, during the Cretaceous period, there was already a real winter with snow. Within the boundaries of the modern temperate zone, some tree species (walnut, ash, beech) did not differ in any way from modern ones. The leaves of these trees fell for the winter. However, as before, the climate as a whole was much warmer than today. Ferns, cycads, ginkgos, bennetites, conifers, in particular sequoias, yews, pines, cypresses, and spruces were still common.

In the middle of the Cretaceous, flowering plants flourish. At the same time, they are replacing representatives of the most ancient flora - spore and gymnosperms. It is believed that flowering plants originated and developed in the northern regions, subsequently they settled throughout the planet. Flowering plants are much younger than conifers known to us since the Carboniferous period. Dense forests of giant tree ferns and horsetails had no flowers. They adapted well to the conditions of life of that time. However, gradually wet air primary forests became increasingly dry. There was very little rain, and the sun was unbearably hot. The soil dried up in areas of primary swamps. On the southern continents deserts emerged. Plants have moved to areas with a cooler, wetter climate in the north. And then the rains came again, saturating the damp soil. The climate of ancient Europe became tropical, and forests similar to modern jungles arose on its territory. The sea recedes again, and the plants that inhabited the coast in a humid climate found themselves in a drier climate. Many of them died, but some adapted to the new living conditions, forming fruits that protected the seeds from drying out. The descendants of such plants gradually populated the entire planet.

The soil has also changed. Silt, the remains of plants and animals enriched it with nutrients.

In primary forests, plant pollen was carried only by wind and water. However, the first plants appeared, the pollen of which fed on insects. Part of the pollen stuck to the wings and legs of insects, and they carried it from flower to flower, pollinating plants. In pollinated plants, the seeds ripened. Plants that were not visited by insects did not multiply. Therefore, only plants with fragrant flowers of various shapes and colors spread.

With the advent of flowers, insects also changed. Among them, insects appear that cannot live without flowers at all: butterflies, bees. Pollinated flowers develop into fruits with seeds. Birds and mammals ate these fruits and carried the seeds over long distances, spreading the plants to new parts of the continents. Many herbaceous plants appeared, populating the steppes and meadows. The leaves of the trees fell off in autumn, and in summer heat curled up.

Plants spread throughout Greenland and the islands of the Arctic Ocean, where it was relatively warm. At the end of the Cretaceous, with the cooling of the climate, many cold-resistant plants appeared: willow, poplar, birch, oak, viburnum, which are also characteristic of the flora of our time.

With the development of flowering plants, by the end of the Cretaceous, the bennetites died out, and the number of cycads, ginkgos, and ferns significantly decreased. Along with the change in vegetation, the fauna also changed.

Foraminifers spread considerably, the shells of which formed thick deposits of chalk. The first nummulites appear. Corals formed reefs.

Ammonites of the Cretaceous seas had shells of a peculiar shape. If all the ammonites that existed before the Cretaceous period had shells wrapped in one plane, then the Cretaceous ammonites had elongated shells, bent in the form of a knee, spherical and straight ones were encountered. The surface of the shells was covered with spikes.

According to some researchers, the bizarre forms of Cretaceous ammonites are a sign of the aging of the entire group. Although some representatives of ammonites still continued to multiply at a high rate, their vital energy in the Cretaceous period almost dried up.

According to other scientists, ammonites were exterminated by numerous fish, crustaceans, reptiles, mammals, and outlandish forms of Cretaceous ammonites are not a sign of aging, but mean an attempt to somehow protect themselves from excellent swimmers, which bony fish and sharks had become by that time.

The disappearance of ammonites was also facilitated by a sharp change in physical and geographical conditions in the Cretaceous.

Belemnites, which appeared much later than ammonites, also completely die out in the Cretaceous period. Among the bivalve mollusks there were animals, different in shape and size, closing the valves with the help of teeth and pits. In oysters and other mollusks attached to the seabed, the valves become different. The lower sash looked like a deep bowl, and the upper one looked like a lid. Among the Rudists, the lower wing turned into a large thick-walled glass, inside of which there was only a small chamber for the mollusk itself. The round, lid-like top flap covered the lower one with strong teeth, with which it could rise and fall. Rudists lived mainly in the southern seas.

In addition to bivalve mollusks, whose shells consisted of three layers (outer horny, prismatic and mother-of-pearl), there were mollusks with shells that had only a prismatic layer. These are mollusks of the genus Inoceramus, widely settled in the seas of the Cretaceous period - animals that reached one meter in diameter.

In the Cretaceous period, many new species of gastropods appear. Among sea urchins, the number of irregular heart-shaped forms is especially increasing. And among sea lilies, varieties appear that do not have a stem and freely swim in the water with the help of long feathery “arms”.

Great changes have taken place among the fish. In the seas of the Cretaceous period, ganoid fish are gradually dying out. The number of bony fish is increasing (many of them still exist today). Sharks gradually acquire a modern look.

Numerous reptiles still lived in the sea. The descendants of ichthyosaurs that died out at the beginning of the Cretaceous reached 20 m in length and had two pairs of short flippers.

New forms of plesiosaurs and pliosaurs appear. They lived on the high seas. Crocodiles and turtles inhabited freshwater and saltwater basins. Large lizards with long spikes on their backs and huge pythons lived on the territory of modern Europe.

Of the terrestrial reptiles for the Cretaceous period, trachodons and horned lizards were especially characteristic. Trachodons could move both on two and on four legs. Between the fingers they had membranes that helped them swim. The jaws of trachodons resembled a duck's beak. They had up to two thousand small teeth.

Triceratops had three horns on their heads and a huge bone shield that reliably protected animals from predators. They lived mostly in dry places. They ate vegetation.

Triceratops.

Styracosaurs had nasal outgrowths - horns and six horny spikes on the posterior edge of the bone shield. Their heads reached two meters in length. The spikes and horns made styracosaurs dangerous to many predators.

The most terrible predatory lizard was a tyrannosaurus rex. It reached a length of 14 m. Its skull, more than a meter long, had large sharp teeth. Tyrannosaurus moved on powerful hind legs, leaning on a thick tail. Its front legs were small and weak. From the tyrannosaurs, fossilized traces remained, 80 cm long. The step of the tyrannosaurus was 4 m.

Tyrannosaur.

Ceratosaurus was a relatively small but fast predator. He had a small horn on his head and a bone crest on his back. Ceratosaurus moved on its hind legs, each of which had three fingers with large claws.

Torbosaurus was rather clumsy and preyed mainly on sedentary scolosaurs, reminiscent of modern armadillos in appearance. Thanks to powerful jaws and strong teeth, Torbosaurs easily gnawed through the thick bone carapace of scolosaurs.

Scolosaurus.

The flying lizards still continued to exist. The huge Pteranodon, whose wingspan was 10 m, had a large skull with a long bone crest on the back of the head and a long toothless beak. The body of the animal was relatively small. Pteranodons ate fish. Like modern albatrosses, they spent most of their lives in the air. Their colonies were by the sea. Recently, the remains of another Pteranodon have been found in the Cretaceous of America. Its wingspan reached 18 m.

Pteranodon.

There are birds that could fly well. The Archeopteryx are completely extinct. However, some birds had teeth.

In Hesperornis, a waterfowl, the long finger of the hind limbs was connected to the other three by a short swimming membrane. All fingers had claws. From the forelimbs, only slightly bent humerus in the form of a thin stick remained. Hesperornis had 96 teeth. The young teeth grew inside the old ones and replaced them as soon as they fell out. Hesperornis is very similar to the modern loon. It was very difficult for him to move on land. Raising the front part of the body and pushing off the ground with its feet, Hesperornis moved in small jumps. However, in the water he felt free. He dived well, and it was very difficult for the fish to avoid his sharp teeth.

Hesperornis.

Ichthyornis, contemporaries of the Hesperornis, were the size of a dove. They flew well. Their wings were strongly developed, and the sternum had a high keel, to which powerful pectoral muscles were attached. The beak of the Ichthyornis had many small, recurved teeth. The small brain of ichthyornis resembled the brain of reptiles.

Ichthyornis.

In the late Cretaceous period, toothless birds appear, whose relatives - flamingos - exist in our time.

Amphibians are no different from modern ones. And mammals are represented by predators and herbivores, marsupials and placentals. They do not yet play a significant role in nature. However, at the end of the Cretaceous period - the beginning of the Cenozoic era, when giant reptiles died out, mammals spread widely across the Earth, taking the place of dinosaurs.

There are many hypotheses regarding the reasons for the extinction of dinosaurs. Some researchers believe that the main reason for this was mammals, which appeared in abundance at the end of the Cretaceous period. Predatory mammals exterminated dinosaurs, and herbivores intercepted plant food from them. A large group of mammals fed on dinosaur eggs. According to other researchers, the main reason mass death dinosaurs was a sharp change in physical and geographical conditions at the end of the Cretaceous period. Cooling and droughts led to a sharp decrease in the number of plants on Earth, as a result of which the dinosaur giants began to feel a lack of food. They perished. And predators, for which dinosaurs served as prey, also died, because they had nothing to eat. Perhaps the heat of the sun was not enough for the embryos to mature in the eggs of dinosaurs. In addition, the cold snap had a detrimental effect on adult dinosaurs. Not having a constant body temperature, they depended on the temperature of the environment. Like modern lizards and snakes, warm weather they were active, but in the cold they moved sluggishly, could fall into winter stupor and become easy prey for predators. Dinosaur skin did not protect them from the cold. And they almost did not care about their offspring. Their parental functions were limited to laying eggs. Unlike dinosaurs, mammals had a constant body temperature and therefore suffered less from cold snaps. In addition, they were protected by wool. And most importantly, they fed their cubs with milk, took care of them. Thus, mammals had certain advantages over dinosaurs.

Birds that had a constant body temperature and were covered with feathers also survived. They incubated the eggs and fed the chicks.

Of the reptiles, those who hid from the cold in burrows that lived in warm areas survived. From them came modern lizards, snakes, turtles and crocodiles.

Large deposits of chalk, coal, oil and gas, marls, sandstones, and bauxites are associated with the deposits of the Cretaceous period.

The Cretaceous period lasted 70 million years.

From the book Journey to the Past author Golosnitsky Lev Petrovich

Mesozoic era - the middle ages of the earth Life takes possession of land and air What changes and improves living beings? The collections of fossils collected in the geological and mineralogical museum have already told us a lot: about the depths of the Cambrian Sea, where people similar to

From the book Before and After Dinosaurs author Zhuravlev Andrey Yurievich

Mesozoic Perestroika In comparison with the Paleozoic "immovability" of bottom animals in the Mesozoic, everything literally spread and spread in all directions (fish, cuttlefish, snails, crabs, sea urchins). sea ​​lilies waved their hands and broke away from the bottom. Bivalve scallops

From the book How Life Originated and Developed on Earth author Gremyatsky Mikhail Antonovich

XII. Mesozoic (“middle”) era The Paleozoic era ended with a whole revolution in the history of the Earth: a huge glaciation and the death of many animal and plant forms. In the middle era, we no longer meet very many of those organisms that existed for hundreds of millions.

On land, the variety of reptiles increased. Their hind limbs have become more developed than the front ones. The ancestors of modern lizards and turtles also appeared in the Triassic period. In the Triassic period, the climate of individual territories was not only dry, but also cold. As a result of the struggle for existence and natural selection, the first mammals appeared from some predatory reptiles, which were no more than rats. It is assumed that they, like modern platypuses and echidnas, were oviparous.

Plants

Reptiles penitent in jurassic spread not only on land, but also in the water and air environment. Flying lizards are widespread. In the Jurassic period, the very first birds, Archeopteryx, also appeared. As a result of the flowering of spore and gymnosperms, the size of the body of herbivorous reptiles increased excessively, some of them reached a length of 20-25 m.

Plants

Thanks to warm and humid climate in the Jurassic, tree-like plants flourished. In the forests, as before, gymnosperms and fern-like plants dominated. Some of them, such as sequoia, have survived to this day. The first flowering plants that appeared in the Jurassic had a primitive structure and were not widely distributed.

Climate

AT Cretaceous the climate has changed dramatically. Cloudiness has significantly decreased, and the atmosphere has become dry and transparent. As a result of this, the sun's rays fell directly on the leaves of plants. material from the site

Animals

On land, the class of reptiles still maintained its dominance. Predatory and herbivorous reptiles increased in size. Their bodies were covered with armor. The birds had teeth, but otherwise they were close to modern birds. In the second half of the Cretaceous, representatives of the marsupial and placental subclass appeared.

Plants

The climatic changes of the Cretaceous period had a negative impact on ferns and gymnosperms, and their numbers began to decrease. But angiosperms, on the contrary, multiplied. By the middle of the Cretaceous, many families of monocots and dicots of angiosperms had developed. In their diversity and appearance, they are in many respects close to modern flora.


Mesozoic Triassic period Jurassic period Cretaceous period The Mesozoic era is the penultimate group of systems of the stratigraphic scale and the corresponding era of the geological history of the Earth. Covers the time interval from about 230 to 67 million years. It was first isolated in 1841. British geologist John Philips.




Animal world in the Triassic Reptiles and dinosaurs reached a dominant position The appearance of the first frogs, turtles, crocodiles The appearance of the first mammals, the saturation of the ocean with mollusks The formation of new species of lobsters, corals The appearance of pterosaurs - a transitional form of birds




The Jurassic period began 185 million years ago and lasted 53 million years. Terrestrial animals of the northern hemisphere could not move freely from one continent to another due to rising ocean levels.


Fauna in the Jura Dinosaurs dominated on land, reaching a length of up to 20 m. Starting from giant sauropods to smaller and faster predators. Distribution of insects, predecessors of flies, wasps, ants Appearance of the first bird - Archeopteryx Appearance of cephalopods





The Cretaceous period began 144 million years ago and lasted 80 million years. The continuation of the split of the land into continents. The sea flooded vast areas of land. The remains of hard-covering plankton organisms formed huge strata of Cretaceous deposits on the ocean floor. At first, the climate was warm and humid, but then it became noticeably colder.




Flora of the Cretaceous The emergence of angiosperms that displace gymnosperms The Great Extinction had little effect on terrestrial vegetation. Angiosperms continued to displace lower organized groups, true herbs appeared, and in particular, cereal plants.

The Mesozoic era is the era of middle life. The Mesozoic is a transitional stage between the Paleozoic and Cenozoic. In the Mesozoic era, the modern outlines of the continents and oceans, modern marine fauna and flora are gradually formed. The Andes and Cordilleras, mountain ranges of China and East Asia were formed. The basins of the Atlantic and Indian oceans formed. The formation of the Pacific Ocean depressions began.

The Mesozoic era is divided into three periods:

  • Triassic - 252-201 million years ago;
  • Jurassic - 201-145 million years ago;
  • Cretaceous - 145-66 million years ago.

Periods of the Mesozoic Era

Triassic period (Triassic). The initial erathem of the Mesozoic era lasts 35 million years. This is the time of the formation of the Atlantic Ocean. The single continent of Pangea again begins to break into two parts - Gondwana and Laurasia. Inland continental water bodies begin to dry up actively. The depressions remaining from them are gradually filled with rock deposits. New mountain heights and volcanoes appear, which show increased activity. A huge part of the land is also occupied by desert zones with weather conditions unsuitable for the life of most species of living beings. Salt levels in water bodies are rising. During this time period, representatives of birds, mammals and dinosaurs appear on the planet.

Jurassic period (Jura)- the most famous period of the Mesozoic era. It got its name thanks to the sedimentary deposits of that time found in the Jura (mountains of Europe). The average period of the Mesozoic era lasts about 69 million years. The formation of modern continents begins - Africa, America, Antarctica, Australia. But they are not yet in the order to which we are accustomed. Deep bays and small seas appear, separating the continents. The active formation of mountain ranges continues. The Arctic Sea floods the north of Laurasia. As a result, the climate is humidified, and vegetation forms on the site of deserts.

Cretaceous (Cretaceous). The final period of the Mesozoic era takes a time interval of 79 million years. Angiosperms appear. As a result of this, the evolution of representatives of the fauna begins. The movement of the continents continues - Africa, America, India and Australia are moving away from each other. The continents of Laurasia and Gondwana begin to disintegrate into continental blocks. Huge islands are formed in the south of the planet. Expanding Atlantic Ocean. The Cretaceous period is the heyday of flora and fauna on land. Due to the evolution of the plant world, fewer minerals enter the seas and oceans. The number of algae and bacteria in water bodies is reduced.

Mesozoic life

The diversity of plant life in the Mesozoic reaches its climax. Many forms of reptiles have developed, new larger and smaller species have formed. This is also the period of the appearance of the first mammals, which, however, could not yet compete with dinosaurs, and therefore remained at the back of the food chain.

At the beginning of the Mesozoic, a very significant event occurred - the earth's crust was dissected by deep cracks. As before, these faults were channels for the exit of molten magma to the surface. When the riot of the earth's interior stopped, the formed deep depressions filled with water.

The warm climate contributed to the rapid development of the biosphere.

Plants of the Mesozoic Era

The increased humidity of the climate of the Jurassic period led to the rapid formation of the plant mass of the planet. The forests consisted of ferns, conifers and cycads. Tui and araucaria grew near water bodies. In the middle of the Mesozoic era, two belts of vegetation formed:

  1. Northern, dominated by herbaceous ferns and ginkgo trees;
  2. Southern. Tree ferns and cicadas reigned here.

AT modern world ferns, cycads (palms reaching 18 meters in size) and cordaites of that time can be found in tropical and subtropical forests. Horsetails, club mosses, cypresses and spruce trees practically did not have any differences from those that are common in our time.

The Mesozoic era began about 250 and ended 65 million years ago. It lasted 185 million years. The Mesozoic is known primarily as the era of the dinosaurs. These giant reptiles obscure all other groups of living beings. But don't forget about others. After all, it was the Mesozoic - the time when real mammals, birds, flowering plants appeared - that actually formed modern biosphere. And if in the first period of the Mesozoic - the Triassic, there were still many animals from the Paleozoic groups on Earth that could survive the Permian catastrophe, then in the last period - the Cretaceous, almost all those families that flourished in the Cenozoic era were already formed.

In the Mesozoic, not only dinosaurs arose, but also other groups of reptiles, which are often mistakenly considered dinosaurs - aquatic reptiles (ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs), flying reptiles (pterosaurs), lepidosaurs - lizards, among which were aquatic forms - mosasaurs. Snakes originated from lizards - they also appeared in the Mesozoic - the time of their occurrence is generally known, but paleontologists argue about the environment in which this happened - in water or on land.

Sharks flourished in the seas, they also lived in freshwater reservoirs. Mesozoic is the heyday of two groups of cephalopods - ammonites and belemnites. But in their shadow, the nautiluses, which arose in the early Paleozoic and still exist, lived well, the squids and octopuses familiar to us arose.

In the Mesozoic, modern mammals arose, first marsupials, and then placental. In the Cretaceous period, groups of ungulates, insectivores, predators and primates already stood out.

Interestingly, modern amphibians - frogs, toads and salamanders - also arose in the Mesozoic, presumably in the Jurassic period. So, despite the antiquity of amphibians in general, modern amphibians are a relatively young group.

Throughout the Mesozoic, vertebrates sought to master a new environment for themselves - air. The reptiles were the first to fly - first small pterosaurs - rhamphorhynchus, then larger pterodactyls. Somewhere on the border of the Jurassic and Cretaceous, reptiles rose into the air - small feathered dinosaurs capable, if not of flight, then certainly of planning, and the descendants of reptiles - birds - enanciornis and real fan-tailed birds.

A real revolution in the biosphere occurred with the advent of angiosperms - flowering plants. This entailed an increase in the diversity of insects that became pollinators of flowers. The gradual spread of flowering plants has changed the face of terrestrial ecosystems.

The Mesozoic ended with the famous mass extinction, better known as the "extinction of the dinosaurs." The reasons for this extinction are not clear, but the more we learn about the events that took place at the end of the Cretaceous, the less convincing the popular hypothesis of a meteorite catastrophe becomes. The biosphere of the Earth was changing and the ecosystems of the Late Cretaceous were very different from the ecosystems of the Jurassic period. A huge number of species died out throughout the Cretaceous period, and not at all at its end - but they simply did not survive the catastrophe. At the same time, there is evidence that in some places a typical Mesozoic fauna still existed at the very beginning of the next era - the Cenozoic. So for the time being, it is not possible to unambiguously answer the question about the causes of the extinction that occurred at the end of the Mesozoic. It is only clear that if some kind of catastrophe happened, it only pushed the changes that had already begun.

Looking through the new photographs of the Ammonite finds today, I saw a beautifully preserved and in general in all respects tooth of a pliosaurus, which, in my opinion, was absolutely correctly identified as Polyptychodon. Crowns with a similar morphology are not uncommon in the Albian-Cenomanian deposits of Russia, and as early as the middle of the century before last, V.A. Kipriyanov attributed such finds to the genus Poltptychodon. However, an hour later, I learned that an article was published today with a revision of materials previously attributed to this genus. ... >>>