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We reckon the history of Urantia as beginning about one billion years ago
and extending through five major eras:
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1. The prelife era extends over the initial four hundred and fifty
million years, from about the time the planet attained its present size to
the time of life establishment. Your students have designated this period
as the Archeozoic.
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2. The life-dawn era extends over the next one hundred and fifty million
years. This epoch intervenes between the preceding prelife or
cataclysmic
age and the following period of more highly developed marine life. This era
is known to your researchers as the Proterozoic.
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3. The marine-life era covers the next two hundred and fifty million
years and is best known to you as the Paleozoic.
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4. The early land-life era extends over the next one hundred million
years and is known as the Mesozoic.
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5. The mammalian era occupies the last fifty million years. This recent-times
era is known as the Cenozoic.
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The marine-life era thus covers about one quarter of your planetary history.
It may be subdivided into six long periods, each characterized by certain
well-defined developments in both the geologic realms and the biologic domains.
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As this era begins, the sea bottoms, the extensive continental shelves, and
the numerous shallow
near-shore basins are covered with prolific vegetation.
The more simple and primitive forms of animal life have already developed
from preceding vegetable organisms, and the early animal organisms have gradually
made their way along the extensive coast lines of the various land masses
until the many inland seas are teeming with primitive marine life. Since so
few of these early organisms had shells, not many have been preserved as fossils.
Nevertheless the stage is set for the opening chapters of that great "stone
book" of the
life-record preservation which was so methodically laid
down during the succeeding ages.
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The continent of North America is wonderfully rich in the fossil-bearing deposits
of the entire marine-life era. The very first and oldest layers are separated
from the later strata of the preceding period by extensive erosion deposits
which clearly segregate these two stages of planetary development.