P688:8, 60:3.1 The great Cretaceous period derives
its name from the predominance of the prolific
chalk-making foraminifers
in the seas. This period brings Urantia to near the end of the long reptilian
dominance and witnesses the appearance of flowering plants and bird life
on land. These are also the times of the termination of the westward and
southward drift of the continents, accompanied by tremendous crustal deformations
and concomitant widespread lava flows and great volcanic activities.
P689:1, 60:3.2 Near the
close of the preceding geologic period much of the continental land was
up above water, although as yet there were no mountain peaks. But as the
continental land drift continued, it met with the first great
obstruction
on the deep floor of the Pacific. This contention of geologic forces gave
impetus to the formation of the whole vast north and south mountain range
extending from Alaska down through Mexico to Cape Horn.
P689:2, 60:3.3 This period
thus becomes the modern
mountain-building stage of geologic history.
Prior to this time there were few mountain peaks, merely elevated land
ridges of great width. Now the Pacific coast range was beginning to elevate,
but it was located seven hundred miles west of the present shore line.
The Sierras were beginning to form, their
gold-bearing quartz strata being
the product of lava flows of this epoch. In the eastern part of North America,
Atlantic sea pressure was also working to cause land elevation.
P689:3, 60:3.4 100,000,000
years ago the North American continent and a part of Europe were well above
water. The warping of the American continents continued, resulting in the
metamorphosing of the South American Andes and in the gradual elevation
of the western plains of North America. Most of Mexico sank beneath the
sea, and the southern Atlantic
encroached on the eastern coast of South
America, eventually reaching the present shore line. The Atlantic and Indian
Oceans were then about as they are today.
P689:4, 60:3.5 95,000,000
years ago the American and European land masses again began to sink. The
southern seas commenced the invasion of North America and gradually extended
northward to connect with the Arctic Ocean, constituting the second greatest
submergence of the continent. When this sea finally withdrew, it left the
continent about as it now is. Before this great submergence began, the
eastern Appalachian highlands had been almost completely worn down to the
water's level. The many colored layers of pure clay now used for the manufacture
of earthenware were laid down over the Atlantic coast regions during this
age, their average thickness being about 2,000 feet.
P689:5, 60:3.6 Great volcanic
actions occurred south of the Alps and along the line of the present California
coast-range mountains. The greatest crustal deformations in millions upon
millions of years took place in Mexico. Great changes also occurred in
Europe, Russia, Japan, and southern South America. The climate became increasingly
diversified.
P689:6, 60:3.7 90,000,000
years ago the angiosperms emerged from these early Cretaceous seas and
soon overran the continents. These land plants suddenly appeared
along with fig trees, magnolias, and
tulip trees. Soon after this time
fig trees,
breadfruit trees, and palms overspread Europe and the western
plains of North America. No new land animals appeared.
P689:7, 60:3.8 85,000,000
years ago the Bering Strait closed,
shutting off the cooling waters of
the northern seas. Theretofore the marine life of the
Atlantic-Gulf waters
and that of the Pacific Ocean had differed greatly, owing to the temperature
variations of these two bodies of water, which now became uniform.
P689:8, 60:3.9 The deposits of chalk
and
greensand
marl give name to this period. The sedimentations of these
times are variegated, consisting of chalk, shale, sandstone, and small
amounts of limestone, together with inferior coal or
lignite, and in many
regions they contain oil. These layers vary in thickness from 200 feet
in some places to 10,000 feet in western North America and numerous European
localities. Along the eastern borders of the Rocky Mountains these deposits
may be observed in the
uptilted foothills.
P690:1, 60:3.10 All over
the world these strata are permeated with chalk, and these layers of porous
semirock pick up water at upturned
outcrops and convey it downward to furnish
the water supply of much of the earth's present arid regions.
P690:2, 60:3.11 80,000,000
years ago great disturbances occurred in the earth's crust. The western
advance of the continental drift was coming to a standstill, and the enormous
energy of the sluggish momentum of the hinter continental mass upcrumpled
the Pacific shore line of both North and South America and initiated profound
repercussional changes along the Pacific shores of Asia. This circumpacific
land elevation, which culminated in present-day mountain ranges, is more
than twenty-five thousand miles long. And the upheavals attendant upon
its birth were the greatest surface distortions to take place since life
appeared on Urantia. The lava flows, both above and below ground, were
extensive and widespread.
P690:3, 60:3.12 75,000,000
years ago marks the end of the continental drift. From Alaska to Cape Horn
the long Pacific coast mountain ranges were completed, but there were as
yet few peaks.
P690:4, 60:3.13 The
backthrust
of the halted continental drift continued the elevation of the western
plains of North America, while in the east the
worn-down Appalachian Mountains
of the Atlantic coast region were projected straight up, with little or
no tilting.
P690:5, 60:3.14 70,000,000
years ago the crustal distortions connected with the maximum elevation
of the Rocky Mountain region took place. A large segment of rock was overthrust
fifteen miles at the surface in British
Columbia; here the Cambrian rocks
are
obliquely thrust out over the Cretaceous layers. On the eastern slope
of the Rocky Mountains, near the Canadian border, there was another spectacular
overthrust; here may be found the prelife stone layers
shoved out over
the then recent Cretaceous deposits.
P690:6, 60:3.15 This was
an age of volcanic activity all over the world, giving rise to numerous
small isolated volcanic cones.
Submarine volcanoes broke out in the submerged
Himalayan region. Much of the rest of Asia, including Siberia, was also
still under water.
P690:7, 60:3.16 65,000,000
years ago there occurred one of the greatest lava flows of all time. The
deposition layers of these and preceding lava flows are to be found all
over the Americas, North and South Africa, Australia, and parts of Europe.
P690:8, 60:3.17 The land
animals were little changed, but because of greater continental emergence,
especially in North America, they rapidly multiplied. North America was
the great field of the land-animal evolution of these times, most of Europe
being under water.
P690:9, 60:3.18 The climate
was still warm and uniform. The arctic regions were enjoying weather much
like that of the present climate in central and southern North America.
P690:10, 60:3.19 Great plant-life
evolution was taking place. Among the land plants the angiosperms predominated,
and many present-day trees first appeared, including
beech,
birch, oak,
walnut, sycamore,
maple, and modern palms. Fruits, grasses, and cereals
were abundant, and these
seed-bearing grasses and trees were to the plant
world what the ancestors of man were to the animal world -- they were second
in evolutionary importance only to the appearance of man himself. Suddenly
and without previous gradation, the great family of flowering plants
mutated. And this new flora soon overspread the entire world.
P691:1, 60:3.20
60,000,000
years ago, though the land reptiles were on the decline, the dinosaurs
continued as monarchs of the land, the lead now being taken by the more
agile and active types of the smaller leaping kangaroo varieties of the
carnivorous dinosaurs. But sometime previously there had appeared new types
of the herbivorous dinosaurs, whose rapid increase was due to the appearance
of the grass family of land plants. One of these new
grass-eating dinosaurs
was a true
quadruped having two horns and a
capelike shoulder
flange. The
land type of turtle, twenty feet across, appeared as did also the modern
crocodile and true snakes of the modern type. Great changes were also occurring
among the fishes and other forms of marine life.
P691:2, 60:3.21 The
wading
and
swimming
prebirds of earlier ages had not been a success in the air,
nor had the flying dinosaurs. They were a short-lived species, soon becoming
extinct. They, too, were subject to the dinosaur doom, destruction, because
of having too little brain substance in comparison with body size. This
second attempt to produce animals that could navigate the atmosphere failed,
as did the abortive attempt to produce mammals during this and a preceding
age.
P691:3, 60:3.22 55,000,000
years ago the evolutionary march was marked by the sudden appearance
of the first of the true birds, a small
pigeonlike creature which
was the ancestor of all bird life. This was the third type of flying creature
to appear on earth, and it sprang directly from the reptilian group, not
from the contemporary flying dinosaurs nor from the earlier types of toothed
land birds. And so this becomes known as the age of birds as well
as the declining age of reptiles.