Final Exam: The Early Age of Mammals Flashcards

1
Q

The mass extinction event that ended the Age of Dinosaurs happened at the end of what ERA?

A

Mesozoic

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2
Q

When on the geologic time scale was the “Age of Mammals”?

A

Cenozoic Era

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3
Q

Why did the “Age of Mammals” matter (3 big themes)?

A
  1. Big changes in the climate
  2. Major extinctions
  3. Humans enter (and change) the environment
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4
Q

The first evidence of human fossils and activity comes from what era?

A

Cenozoic era

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5
Q

What is a mammal?

A

vertebrates that make milk

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6
Q

It is easy to tell what a mammal is today, but why would it be hard to find evidence of mammals then?

A

Not likely to see evidence of this (fossil milk), because we aren’t looking at bones and shells, we’re looking at soft parts that are hard to fossilize.

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7
Q

What are 2 other unique features of mammals besides the fact they make milk?

A
  1. Three middle ear bones in each ear (in other vertebrates, there is just one)
  2. Lower jaw is just one bone
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8
Q

When did mammals first evolve/appear? (era and period)

A

During the Mesozoic era, in the late Triassic period

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9
Q

Why is the Cenozoic era called the “Age of Mammals”?

A

Because the largest land animals have been mammals during that time. (Mammals became dominant)

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10
Q

What was the primary reason mammals became dominant in the Cenozoic Era?

A

The extinction of non-avian dinosaurs allowed mammals to flourish and become the dominant animals on Earth

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11
Q

What were mammals like during the Age of Dinosaurs (mesozoic era)?

A

They were small and lived alongside dinosaurs for over a hundred million years

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12
Q

What is an ancestor of mammals?

A

Cynogathus (a therapsid)

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13
Q

What’s an example of a mammal from the triassic period?

A

Morganucodon

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14
Q

T or F: Dinosaurs and mammals both appear at the same time.

A

True

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15
Q

T or F: Mammals drove the dinosaurs extinct.

A

False; did not

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16
Q

When did most major groups of mammals first appear?

A

early Cenozoic

17
Q

Only about ____% of mammals go extinct during the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction. So, there was something going on with them that made them survive this extinction better. (This is why they are able to become so dominant after the extinction)

A

50%

18
Q

What era are we in today?

A

Cenozoic era

19
Q

What are the 3 periods of the Cenozoic era?

A
  1. Paleogene
  2. Neogene
  3. Quaternary
20
Q

Paleogene and Neogene together

A

Tertiary period

21
Q

What period was the “time of recovery” from the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction?

A

Paleogene period

22
Q

What are 3 major mammal groups that appear in the early Cenozoic?

A
  1. Primates
  2. Bats
  3. Early horses
23
Q

Largest meat-eating mammal:

A

Andrewsarchus

24
Q

Largest land mammal of all time

A

Paraceratherium

25
Q

The first whales come from _____ ______.

A

land mammals

26
Q

How were the earliest whales different from whales today? (6 things)

A
  1. limbs more adapted for walking on land (evolved from four-legged land animals)
  2. had holes in their skills from predators
  3. generally smaller and more elongated body shape
  4. teeth were like land mammals, adapted for catching and chewing prey
  5. tails more suited for walking motion
  6. spent more time on land and may have been semi-aquatic
27
Q

state fossil of Alabama (whale)

A

Basilosaurus Cetoides

28
Q

3 things to describe the Early Cenozoic life:

A
  1. Palm trees (tropical)
  2. Alligators
  3. More rain
29
Q

What was the climate like in the early Cenozoic era?

A

tropical, hot climate and lack of glaciers, causing the sea level to still be higher than it is today.

30
Q

How did the climate change during the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum?

A

It got way hotter (raised global temp by more than 5 degrees C, causing mammals to shrink and reptiles to thrive)

31
Q

hottest time during the age of mammals

A

Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum

32
Q

There was volcanic activity _____ the North American plate due to _______ _______.

A

within; Yellowstone Hotspot

33
Q

hot spot in mantle beneath continent, far away from tectonic plates.

A

Yellowstone Hotspot

34
Q

What evidence did the Yellowstone supervolcano eruption leave behind? (4 things)

A
  1. CALDERAS (biggest thing of evidence)
  2. Volcanic Deposits (volcanic ash and rocks)
  3. Lava Flows
  4. Geothermal Features (geysers, hot springs)
35
Q

a large, bowl-shaped depression in the Earth’s surface that forms following a volcanic eruption. (supervolcano creates _____)

A

caldera

36
Q

Why is it important to study ancient lava flows and historical volcanic activity?

A

So we can predict if they’ll erupt again and how big the eruptions may be, and analyze patterns.

37
Q

What causes the area around Yellowstone to be volcanically active today?

A

There is hot mantle material coming up through the mantle; as North America moves west, the volcano will move over a hot spot and erupt. (due to the presence of a hotspot)

38
Q

Could Yellowstone erupt again? What would happen if it did?

A

Yes; it would be very powerful and have potentially devastating consequences for people living in the area and beyond.