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| Precambrian |
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| Geologic timescale |
| (millions of years ago) |
| ImageSize = height:255 PlotArea = left:40 right:5 bottom:45 top:5 AlignBars = early Period = from:0 till:4500 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:500 start:0 ScaleMinor = unit:year increment:100 start:0 Colors = id:epoch value:rgb(0.7,0.7,1) # light yellow id:period value:rgb(1,0.7,0.7) # light red id:age value:rgb(0.7,1,0.7) # light green id:era value:rgb(1,1,0.7) # light blue id:eon value:rgb(1,0.7,1) legend:Precambrian_eons # light purple id:black value:black Legend = left:15 top:25 PlotData= align:center textcolor:black mark:(line,black) bar:eon color:eon from:542 till:2500 text:"Proterozoic~(542-2500)" from:2500 till:3800 text:"Archaean~(2500-3800)" from:3800 till:end text:"Hadean~(3800-ca 4500)" at:100 mark:none text:"Phanerozoic~(since 542)" (expand) |
The Precambrian (Pre-Cambrian) is an informal name for the supereon comprising the eons of the geologic timescale that came before the current Phanerozoic eon. It spans from the formation of Earth around 4500 Ma (million years ago) to the evolution of abundant macroscopic hard-shelled animals, which marked the beginning of the Cambrian, the first period of the first era of the Phanerozoic eon, some 542 Ma. It is named after the Roman name for Cymru/Wales - Cambria - where rocks from this age were first studied.
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Remarkably little is known about the Precambrian, despite it making up roughly seven-eighths of the Earth\'s history, and what little is known has largely been discovered in the past four or five decades. The Precambrian fossil record is poor, and what fossils are present (such as those of stromatolites) are of limited use for biostratigraphic work.James Monroe and Reed Wicander, The Changing Earth, 2nd ed, (Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1997), p. 492. Many Precambrian rocks are heavily metamorphosed, obscuring their origins, while others have either been destroyed by erosion, or remain deeply buried beneath Phanerozoic strata.Monroe and Wicander, p. 492.Pamela J.W. Gore, "The Precambrian". Retrieved on 12/6/06.
It is thought that the Earth itself coalesced from material in orbit around the sun roughly 4500 Ma and may have been struck by a very large (Mars-sized) planetesimal shortly after it formed, splitting off material that came together to form the Moon (see Giant impact theory). A stable crust was apparently in place by 4400 Ma, since zircon crystals from Western Australia have been dated at 4404 Ma.
The term Precambrian is somewhat dated, but is still in common use among geologists and paleontologists. It was briefly also called the Cryptozoic eon. It seems likely that it will eventually be replaced by the preferred terms Proterozoic, Archaean, and Hadean, and become a deprecated term. (See geologic time scale.)
For more details on this topic, see Origin of life.
It is not known when life originated, but carbon in 3800 million year old rocks from islands off western Greenland may be of organic origin. Well-preserved bacteria older than 3460 million years have been found in Western Australia. Probable fossils 100 million years older have been found in the same area. There is a fairly solid record of bacterial life throughout the remainder of the Precambrian.
Excepting a few contested reports of much older forms from Texas and India, the first complex multicelled life forms seem to have appeared roughly 600 Ma. A quite diverse collection of soft-bodied forms is known from a variety of locations worldwide between 542 and 600 Ma. These are referred to as Ediacaran or Vendian biota. Hard-shelled creatures appeared toward the end of that timespan.
A very diverse collection of forms appeared around 544 Ma, starting in the latest Precambrian with a poorly understood small shelly fauna and ending in the very early Cambrian with a very diverse, and quite modern Burgess fauna, the rapid radiation of forms called the Cambrian explosion of life.
Details of plate motions and such are only hazily known in the Precambrian. It is generally believed that small proto-continents existed prior to 3000 Ma, and that most of the Earth\'s landmasses collected into a single supercontinent around 1000 Ma. The supercontinent, known as Rodinia, broke up around 600 Ma. A number of glacial periods have been identified going as far back as the Huronian epoch, roughly 2200 Ma. The best studied is the Sturtian-Varangian glaciation, around 600 Ma, which may have brought glacial conditions all the way to the equator, resulting in a "Snowball Earth".
The atmosphere of the early Earth is poorly known, but it is thought to have been smothered in reducing gases, containing very little free oxygen. The young planet had a reddish tint, and its seas were thought to be olive green. Many materials with insoluble oxides appear to have been present in the oceans for hundreds of millions of years after the Earth\'s formation.
When evolving life forms developed photosynthesis, oxygen began to be produced in large quantities, causing an ecological crisis sometimes called the Oxygen Catastrophe. The oxygen was immediately tied up in chemical reactions, primarily with iron, until the supply of oxidizable surfaces ran out. After that the modern high-oxygen atmosphere developed. Older rocks contain massive banded iron formations that were apparently laid down as iron and oxygen first combined.
A diverse terminology has evolved covering the early years of the Earth\'s existence, but it is tending to settle out and come into greater use as radiometric dating allows plausible real dates to be assigned to specific formations and features. The terms Archean (older than about 2500 Ma), Proterozoic (2500-600 Ma), and Neoproterozoic (600-542 Ma) appear to have general currency. Some additional terms are included in the geological time line. See Timetable of the Precambrian.
It has been proposed that the Precambrian should be divided into eons and eras that reflect stages of planetary evolution, rather than the current scheme based upon numerical ages. Such a system could rely on events in the stratigraphic record and be demarcated by GSSPs. The Precambrian could be divided into five "natural" eons, characterized as follows.Bleeker, W. [2004]. "Toward a "natural" Precambrian time scale", in Felix M. Gradstein, James G. Ogg, and Alan G. Smith: A Geologic Time Scale 2004. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-78673-8.
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| Precambrian | Phanerozoic | |||
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| (Hadean) | Archean | Proterozoic | ||
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