P696:5, 61:3.1 Land elevation and sea segregation
were slowly changing the world's weather, gradually cooling it, but the
climate was still mild.
Sequoias and magnolias grew in Greenland, but the
subtropical plants were beginning to migrate southward. By the end of this
period these
warm-climate plants and trees had largely disappeared from
the northern latitudes, their places being taken by more hardy plants and
the
deciduous trees.
P696:6, 61:3.2 There was
a great increase in the varieties of grasses, and the teeth of many mammalian
species gradually altered to conform to the present-day grazing type.
P696:7, 61:3.3 25,000,000
years ago there was a slight land submergence following the long epoch
of land elevation. The Rocky Mountain region remained highly elevated so
that the deposition of erosion material continued throughout the lowlands
to the east. The Sierras were well re-elevated; in fact, they have been
rising ever since. The great
four-mile vertical fault in the California
region dates from this time.
P696:8, 61:3.4 20,000,000
years ago was indeed the golden age of mammals. The Bering Strait land
bridge was up, and many groups of animals migrated to North America from
Asia, including the
four-tusked mastodons,
short-
legged rhinoceroses, and
many varieties of the cat family.
P696:9, 61:3.5 The first deer appeared,
and North America was soon overrun by
ruminants -- deer, oxen, camels,
bison, and several species of rhinoceroses -- but the giant pigs, more
than six feet tall, became extinct.
P697:1, 61:3.6 The huge
elephants of this and subsequent periods possessed large brains as well
as large bodies, and they soon overran the entire world except Australia.
For once the world was dominated by a huge animal with a brain sufficiently
large to enable it to carry on. Confronted by the highly intelligent life
of these ages, no animal the size of an elephant could have survived unless
it had possessed a brain of large size and superior quality. In intelligence
and adaptation the elephant is approached only by the horse and is surpassed
only by man himself. Even so, of the fifty species of elephants in existence
at the opening of this period, only two have survived.
P697:2, 61:3.7 15,000,000
years ago the mountain regions of Eurasia were rising, and there was some
volcanic activity throughout these regions, but nothing comparable to the
lava flows of the Western Hemisphere. These unsettled conditions prevailed
all over the world.
P697:3, 61:3.8 The Strait
of Gibraltar closed, and Spain was connected with Africa by the old land
bridge, but the Mediterranean flowed into the Atlantic through a narrow
channel which extended across France, the mountain peaks and highlands
appearing as islands above this ancient sea. Later on, these European seas
began to withdraw. Still later, the Mediterranean was connected with the
Indian Ocean, while at the close of this period the
Suez region was elevated
so that the Mediterranean became, for a time, an inland salt sea.
P697:4, 61:3.9 The Iceland
land bridge submerged, and the arctic waters commingled with those of the
Atlantic Ocean. The Atlantic coast of North America rapidly cooled, but
the Pacific coast remained warmer than at present. The great ocean currents
were in function and affected climate much as they do today.
P697:5, 61:3.10 Mammalian
life continued to evolve. Enormous herds of horses joined the camels on
the western plains of North America; this was truly the age of horses as
well as of elephants. The horse's brain is next in animal quality to that
of the elephant, but in one respect it is decidedly inferior, for the horse
never fully overcame the deep-seated propensity to flee when frightened.
The horse lacks the emotional control of the elephant, while the elephant
is greatly handicapped by size and lack of agility. During this period
an animal evolved which was somewhat like both the elephant and the horse,
but it was soon destroyed by the rapidly increasing cat family.
P697:6, 61:3.11 As Urantia
is entering the so-called "
horseless age," you should pause and
ponder what this animal meant to your ancestors. Men first used horses
for food, then for travel, and later in agriculture and war. The horse
has long served mankind and has played an important part in the development
of human civilization.
P697:7, 61:3.12 The biologic
developments of this period contributed much toward the setting of the
stage for the subsequent appearance of man. In central Asia the true types
of both the primitive monkey and the gorilla evolved, having a common ancestor,
now extinct. But neither of these species is concerned in the line of living
beings which were, later on, to become the ancestors of the human race.
P697:8, 61:3.13
The dog
family was represented by several groups, notably wolves and foxes; the
cat tribe, by
panthers and large saber-toothed tigers, the latter first
evolving in North America. The modern cat and dog families increased in
numbers all over the world. Weasels, martens, otters, and
raccoons thrived
and developed throughout the northern latitudes.
P698:1, 61:3.14 Birds continued to
evolve, though few marked changes occurred. Reptiles were similar to modern
types -- snakes, crocodiles, and turtles.
P698:2, 61:3.15 Thus
drew to a close a very eventful and interesting period of the world's history.
This age of the elephant and the horse is known as the
Miocene.