The story of the earth from the beginning
of the Cambrian period to the present day was long
ago divided by geologists into four great eras.
The periods we have already covered the
Cambrian, Ordovician, Silurian, Devonian, Carboniferous,
and Permian form the Primary or Palaeozoic
Era, to which the earlier Archaean rocks were prefixed
as a barren and less interesting introduction.
The stretch of time on which we now enter, at the
close of the Permian, is the Secondary or Mesozoic
Era. It will be closed by a fresh upheaval of
the earth and disturbance of life-conditions in the
Chalk period, and followed by a Tertiary Era, in which
the earth will approach its modern aspect. At
its close there will be another series of upheavals,
culminating in a great Ice-age, and the remaining
stretch of the earth’s story, in which we live,
will form the Quaternary Era.
In point of duration these four eras
differ enormously from each other. If the first
be conceived as comprising sixteen million years a
very moderate estimate the second will
be found to cover less than eight million years, the
third less than three million years, and the fourth,
the Age of Man, much less than one million years; while
the Archaean Age was probably as long as all these
put together. But the division is rather based
on certain gaps, or “unconformities,” in
the geological record; and, although the breaches
are now partially filled, we saw that they correspond
to certain profound and revolutionary disturbances
in the face of the earth. We retain them, therefore,
as convenient and logical divisions of the biological
as well as the geological chronicle, and, instead
of passing from one geological period to another, we
may, for the rest of the story, take these three eras
as wholes, and devote a few chapters to the chief
advances made by living things in each era. The
Mesozoic Era will be a protracted reaction between
two revolutions: a period of low-lying land,
great sea-invasions, and genial climate, between two
upheavals of the earth. The Tertiary Era will
represent a less sharply defined depression, with
genial climate and luxuriant life, between two such
upheavals.
The Mesozaic ("middle life”)
Era may very fitly be described as the Middle Ages
of life on the earth. It by no means occupies
a central position in the chronicle of life from the
point of view of time or antiquity, just as the Middle
Ages of Europe are by no means the centre of the chronicle
of mankind, but its types of animals and plants are
singularly transitional between the extinct ancient
and the actual modern types. Life has been lifted
to a higher level by the Permian revolution.
Then, for some millions of years, the sterner process
of selection relaxes, the warm bosom of the earth
swarms again with a teeming and varied population,
and a rich material is provided for the next great
application of drastic selective agencies. To
a poet it might seem that nature indulges each succeeding
and imperfect type of living thing with a golden age
before it is dismissed to make place for the higher.
The Mesozoic opens in the middle of
the great revolution described in the last chapter.
Its first section, the Triassic period, is at first
a mere continuation of the Permian. A few hundred
species of animals and hardy plants are scattered
over a relatively bleak and inhospitable globe.
Then the land begins to sink once more. The seas
spread in great arms over the revelled continents,
the plant world rejoices in the increasing warmth
and moisture, and the animals increase in number and
variety. We pass into the Jurassic period under
conditions of great geniality. Warm seas are
found as far north and south as our present polar
regions, and the low-lying fertile lands are covered
again with rich, if less gigantic, forests, in which
hordes of stupendous animals find ample nourishment.
The mammal and the bird are already on the stage,
but their warm coats and warm blood offer no advantage
in that perennial summer, and they await in obscurity
the end of the golden age of the reptiles. At
the end of the Jurassic the land begins to rise once
more. The warm, shallow seas drain off into the
deep oceans, and the moist, swampy lands are dried.
The emergence continues throughout the Cretaceous
(Chalk) period. Chains of vast mountains rise
slowly into the air in many parts of the earth, and
a new and comparatively rapid change in the vegetation comparable
to that at the close of the Carboniferous announces
the second great revolution. The Mesozoic closes
with the dismissal of the great reptiles and the plants
on which they fed, and the earth is prepared for its
new monarchs, the flowering plants, the birds, and
the mammals.
How far this repeated levelling of
the land after its repeated upheavals is due to a
real sinking of the crust we cannot as yet determine.
The geologist of our time is disposed to restrict
these mysterious rises and falls of the crust as much
as possible. A much more obvious and intelligible
agency has to be considered. The vast upheaval
of nearly all parts of the land during the Permian
period would naturally lead to a far more vigorous
scouring of its surface by the rains and rivers.
The higher the land, the more effectively it would
be worn down. The cooler summits would condense
the moisture, and the rains would sweep more energetically
down the slopes of the elevated continents. There
would thus be a natural process of levelling as long
as the land stood out high above the water-line, but
it seems probable that there was also a real sinking
of the crust. Such subsidences have been known
within historic times.
By the end of the Triassic a
period of at least two million years the
sea had reconquered a vast proportion of the territory
wrested from it in the Permian revolution. Most
of Europe, west of a line drawn from the tip of Norway
to the Black Sea, was under water generally
open sea in the south and centre, and inland seas
or lagoons in the west. The invasion of the sea
continued, and reached its climax, in the Jurassic
period. The greater part of Europe was converted
into an archipelago. A small continent stood
out in the Baltic region. Large areas remained
above the sea-level in Austria, Germany, and France.
Ireland, Wales, and much of Scotland were intact,
and it is probable that a land bridge still connected
the west of Europe with the east of America. Europe
generally was a large cluster of islands and ridges,
of various sizes, in a semi-tropical sea. Southern
Asia was similarly revelled, and it is probable that
the seas stretched, with little interruption, from
the west of Europe to the Pacific. The southern
continent had deep wedges of the sea driven into it.
India, New Zealand, and Australia were successively
detached from it, and by the end of the Mesozoic it
was much as we find it to-day. The Arctic continent
(north of Europe) was flooded, and there was a great
interior sea in the western part of the North American
continent.
This summary account of the levelling
process which went on during the Triassic and Jurassic
will prepare us to expect a return of warm climate
and luxurious life, and this the record abundantly
evinces. The enormous expansion of the sea a
great authority, Neumayr, believes that it was the
greatest extension of the sea that is known in geology and
lowering of the land would of itself tend to produce
this condition, and it may be that the very considerable
volcanic activity, of which we find evidence in the
Permian and Triassic, had discharged great volumes
of carbon-dioxide into the atmosphere.
Whatever the causes were, the earth
has returned to paradisiacal conditions. The
vast ice-fields have gone, the scanty and scrubby
vegetation is replaced by luscious forests of cycads,
conifers, and ferns, and warmth-loving animals penetrate
to what are now the Arctic and Antarctic regions.
Greenland and Spitzbergen are fragments of a continent
that then bore a luxuriant growth of ferns and cycads,
and housed large reptiles that could not now live
thousands of miles south of it. England, and
a large part of Europe, was a tranquil blue coral-ocean,
the fringes of its islands girt with reefs such as
we find now only three thousand miles further south,
with vast shoals of Ammonites, sometimes of gigantic
size, preying upon its living population or evading
its monstrous sharks; while the sunlit lands were
covered with graceful, palmlike cycads and early yews
and pines and cypresses, and quaint forms of reptiles
throve on the warm earth or in the ample swamps, or
rushed on outstretched wings through the purer air.
It was an evergreen world, a world,
apparently, of perpetual summer. No trace is
found until the next period of an alternation of summer
and winter no trees that shed their leaves
annually, or show annual rings of growth in the wood and
there is little trace of zones of climate as yet.
It is true that the sensitive Ammonites differ in the
northern and the southern latitudes, but, as Professor
Chamberlin says, it is not clear that the difference
points to a diversity of climate. We may conclude
that the absence of corals higher than the north
of England implies a more temperate climate further
north, but what Sir A. Geikie calls (with slight exaggeration)
“the almost tropical aspect” of Greenland
warns us to be cautious. The climate of the mid-Jurassic
was very much warmer and more uniform than the climate
of the earth to-day. It was an age of great vital
expansion. And into this luxuriant world we shall
presently find a fresh period of elevation, disturbance,
and cold breaking with momentous evolutionary results.
Meantime, we may take a closer look at these interesting
inhabitants of the Middle Ages of the earth, before
they pass away or are driven, in shrunken regiments,
into the shelter of the narrowing tropics.
The principal change in the aspect
of the earth, as the cold, arid plains and slopes
of the Triassic slowly yield the moist and warm ow-lying
lands of the Jurassic, to consists in the character
of the vegetation. It is wholly intermediate
in its forms between that of the primitive forests
and that of the modern world. The great Cryptogams
of the Carboniferous world the giant Club-mosses
and their kindred have been slain by the
long period of cold and drought. Smaller Horsetails
(sometimes of a great size, but generally of the modern
type) and Club-mosses remain, but are not a conspicuous
feature in the landscape. On the other hand,
there is as yet apart from the Conifers no
trace of the familiar trees and flowers and grasses
of the later world. The vast majority of the
plants are of the cycad type. These now
confined to tropical and subtropical regions with
the surviving ferns, the new Conifers, and certain
trees of the ginkgo type, form the characteristic
Mesozoic vegetation.
A few words in the language of the
modern botanist will show how this vegetation harmonises
with the story of evolution. Plants are broadly
divided into the lower kingdom of the Cryptogams (spore-bearing)
and the upper kingdom of the Phanerogams (seed-bearing).
As we saw, the Primary Era was predominantly the age
of Cryptogams; the later periods witness the rise
and supremacy of the Phanerogams. But these in
turn are broadly divided into a less advanced group,
the Gymnosperms, and a more advanced group, the Angiosperms
or flowering plants. And, just as the Primary
Era is the age of Cryptogams, the Secondary is the
age of Gymnosperms, and the Tertiary (and present)
is the age of Angiosperms. Of about 180,000 species
of plants in nature to-day more than 100,000 are Angiosperms;
yet up to the end of the Jurassic not a single true
Angiosperm is found in the geological record.
This is a broad manifestation of evolution,
but it is not quite an accurate statement, and its
inexactness still more strongly confirms the theory
of evolution. Though the Primary Era was predominantly
the age of Cryptogams, we saw that a very large number
of seed-bearing plants, with very mixed characters,
appeared before its close. It thus prepares the
way for the cycads and conifers and ginkgoes of the
Mesozoic, which we may conceive as evolved from one
or other branch of the mixed Carboniferous vegetation.
We next find that the Mesozoic is by no means purely
an age of Gymnosperms. I do not mean merely that
the Angiosperms appear in force before its close,
and were probably evolved much earlier. The fact
is that the Gymnosperms of the Mesozoic are often of
a curiously mixed character, and well illustrate the
transition to the Angiosperms, though they may not
be their actual ancestors. This will be clearer
if we glance in succession at the various types of
plant which adorned and enriched the Jurassic world.
The European or American landscape indeed,
the aspect of the earth generally, for there are no
pronounced zones of climate is still utterly
different from any that we know to-day. No grass
carpets the plains; none of the flowers or trees with
which we are familiar, except conifers, are found
in any region. Ferns grow in great abundance,
and have now reached many of the forms with which we
are acquainted. Thickets of bracken spread over
the plains; clumps of Royal ferns and Hartstongues
spring up in moister parts. The trees are conifers,
cycads, and trees akin to the ginkgo, or Maidenhair
Tree, of modern Japan. Cypresses, yews, firs,
and araucarias (the Monkey Puzzle group) grow
everywhere, though the species are more primitive than
those of today. The broad, fan-like leaves and
plum-like fruit of the ginkgoales, of which the temple-gardens
of Japan have religiously preserved a solitary descendant,
are found in the most distant regions. But the
most frequent and characteristic tree of the Jurassic
landscape is the cycad.
The cycads the botanist
would say Cycadophyta or Cycadales, to mark them off
from the cycads of modern times formed a
third of the whole Jurassic vegetation, while to-day
they number only about a hundred species in 180,000,
and are confined to warm latitudes. All over
the earth, from the Arctic to the Antarctic, their
palm-like foliage showered from the top of their generally
short stems in the Jurassic. But the most interesting
point about them is that a very large branch of them
(the Bennettiteae) went far beyond the modern Gymnosperm
in their flowers and fruit, and approached the Angiosperms.
Their fructifications “rivalled the largest
flowers of the present day in structure and modelling”
(Scott), and possibly already gave spots of sober colour
to the monotonous primitive landscape. On the
other hand, they approached the ferns so much more
closely than modern cycads do that it is often impossible
to say whether Jurassic remains must be classed as
ferns or cycads.
We have here, therefore, a most interesting
evolutionary group. The botanist finds even more
difficulty than the zoologist in drawing up the pedigrees
of his plants, but the general features of the larger
groups which he finds in succession in the chronicle
of the earth point very decisively to evolution.
The seed-bearing ferns of the Coal-forest point upward
to the later stage, and downward to a common origin
with the ordinary spore-bearing ferns. Some of
them are “altogether of a cycadean type”
(Scott) in respect of the seed. On the other hand,
the Bennettiteae of the Jurassic have the mixed characters
of ferns, cycads, and flowering plants, and thus,
in their turn, point downward to a lower ancestry
and upward to the next great stage in plant-development.
It is not suggested that the seed-ferns we know evolved
into the cycads we know, and these in turn into our
flowering plants. It is enough for the student
of evolution to see in them so many stages in the evolution
of plants up to the Angiosperm level. The gaps
between the various groups are less rigid than scientific
men used to think.
Taller than the cycads, firmer in
the structure of the wood, and destined to survive
in thousands of species when the cycads would be reduced
to a hundred, were the pines and yews and other conifers
of the Jurassic landscape. We saw them first
appearing, in the stunted Walchias and Voltzias, during
the severe conditions of the Permian period. Like
the birds and mammals they await the coming of a fresh
period of cold to give them a decided superiority
over the cycads. Botanists look for their ancestors
in some form related to the Cordaites of the Coal-forest.
The ginkgo trees seem to be even more closely related
to the Cordaites, and evolved from an early and generalised
branch of that group. The Cordaites, we may recall,
more or less united in one tree the characters of
the conifer (in their wood) and the cycad (in their
fruit).
So much for the evolutionary aspect
of the Jurassic vegetation in itself. Slender
as the connecting links are, it points clearly enough
to a selection of higher types during the Permian revolution
from the varied mass of the Carboniferous flora, and
it offers in turn a singularly varied and rich group
from which a fresh selection may choose yet higher
types. We turn now to consider the animal population
which, directly or indirectly, fed upon it, and grew
with its growth. To the reptiles, the birds,
and the mammals, we must devote special chapters.
Here we may briefly survey the less conspicuous animals
of the Mesozoic Epoch.
The insects would be one of the chief
classes to benefit by the renewed luxuriance of the
vegetation. The Hymenopters (butterflies) have
not yet appeared. They will, naturally, come
with the flowers in the next great phase of organic
life. But all the other orders of insects are
represented, and many of our modern genera are fully
evolved. The giant insects of the Coal-forest,
with their mixed patriarchal features, have given
place to more definite types. Swarms of dragon-flies,
may-flies, termites (with wings), crickets, and cockroaches,
may be gathered from the preserved remains. The
beetles (Coleopters) have come on the scene in the
Triassic, and prospered exceedingly. In some strata
three-fourths of the insects are beetles, and as we
find that many of them are wood-eaters, we are not
surprised. Flies (Dipters) and ants (Hymenopters)
also are found, and, although it is useless to expect
to find the intermediate forms of such frail creatures,
the record is of some evolutionary interest.
The ants are all winged. Apparently there is
as yet none of the remarkable division of labour which
we find in the ants to-day, and we may trust that
some later period of change may throw light on its
origin.
Just as the growth of the forests for
the Mesozoic vegetation has formed immense coal-beds
in many parts of the world, even in Yorkshire and
Scotland explains this great development
of the insects, they would in their turn supply a
rich diet to the smaller land animals and flying animals
of the time. We shall see this presently.
Let us first glance at the advances among the inhabitants
of the seas.
The most important and stimulating
event in the seas is the arrival of the Ammonite.
One branch of the early shell-fish, it will be remembered,
retained the head of its naked ancestor, and lived
at the open mouth of its shell, thus giving birth
to the Cephalopods. The first form was a long,
straight, tapering shell, sometimes several feet long.
In the course of time new forms with curved shells
appeared, and began to displace the straight-shelled.
Then Cephalopods with close-coiled shells, like the
nautilus, came, and such a shell being an
obvious advantage displaced the curved
shells. In the Permian, we saw, a new and more
advanced type of the coiled-shell animal, the Ammonite,
made its appearance, and in the Triassic and Jurassic
it becomes the ogre or tyrant of the invertebrate
world. Sometimes an inch or less in diameter,
it often attained a width of three feet or more across
the shell, at the aperture of which would be a monstrous
and voracious mouth.
The Ammonites are not merely interesting
as extinct monsters of the earth’s Middle Ages,
and stimulating terrors of the deep to the animals
on which they fed. They have an especial interest
for the evolutionist. The successive chambers
which the animal adds, as it grows, to the habitation
of its youth, leave the earlier chambers intact.
By removing them in succession in the adult form we
find an illustration of the evolution of the elaborate
shell of the Jurassic Ammonite. It is an admirable
testimony to the validity of the embryonic law we have
often quoted that the young animal is apt
to reproduce the past stages of its ancestry that
the order of the building of the shell in the late
Ammonite corresponds to the order we trace in its development
in the geological chronicle. About a thousand
species of Ammonites were developed in the Mesozoic,
and none survived the Mesozoic. Like the Trilobites
of the Primary Era, like the contemporary great reptiles
on land, the Ammonites were an abortive growth, enjoying
their hour of supremacy until sterner conditions bade
them depart. The pretty nautilus is the only
survivor to-day of the vast Mesozoic population of
coiled-shell Cephalopods.
A rival to the Ammonite appeared in
the Triassic seas, a formidable forerunner of the
cuttle-fish type of Cephalopod. The animal now
boldly discards the protecting and confining shell,
or spreads over the outside of it, and becomes a “shell-fish”
with the shell inside. The octopus of our own
time has advanced still further, and become the most
powerful of the invertebrates. The Belemnite,
as the Mesozoic cuttle-fish is called, attained so
large a size that the internal bone, or pen (the part
generally preserved), is sometimes two feet in length.
The ink-bags of the Belemnite also are sometimes preserved,
and we see how it could balk a pursuer by darkening
the waters. It was a compensating advantage for
the loss of the shell.
In all the other classes of aquatic
animals we find corresponding advances. In the
remaining Molluscs the higher or more effective types
are displacing the older. It is interesting to
note that the oyster is fully developed, and has a
very large kindred, in the Mesozoic seas. Among
the Brachiopods the higher sloping-shoulder type displaces
the square-shoulder shells. In the Crustacea
the Trilobites and Eurypterids have entirely
disappeared; prawns and lobsters abound, and the earliest
crab makes its appearance in the English Jurassic rocks.
This sudden arrival of a short-tailed Crustacean surprises
us less when we learn that the crab has a long tail
in its embryonic form, but the actual line of its
descent is not clear. Among the Echinoderms we
find that the Cystids and Blastoids have gone, and
the sea-lilies reach their climax in beauty and organisation,
to dwindle and almost disappear in the last part of
the Mesozoic. One Jurassic sea-lily was found
to have 600,000 distinct ossicles in its petrified
frame. The free-moving Echinoderms are now in
the ascendant, the sea-urchins being especially abundant.
The Corals are, as we saw, extremely abundant,
and a higher type (the Hexacoralla) is superseding
the earlier and lower (Tetracoralla).
Finally, we find a continuous and
conspicuous advance among the fishes. At the
close of the Triassic and during the Jurassic they
seem to undergo profound and comparatively rapid changes.
The reason will, perhaps, be apparent in the next
chapter, when we describe the gigantic reptiles which
feed on them in the lakes and shore-waters. A
greater terror than the shark had appeared in their
environment. The Ganoids and Dipneusts dwindle,
and give birth to their few modern representatives.
The sharks with crushing teeth diminish in number,
and the sharp-toothed modern shark attains the supremacy
in its class, and evolves into forms far more terrible
than any that we know to-day. Skates and rays
of a more or less modern type, and ancestral gar-pikes
and sturgeons, enter the arena. But the most
interesting new departure is the first appearance,
in the Jurassic, of bony-framed fishes (Teleosts).
Their superiority in organisation soon makes itself
felt, and they enter upon the rapid evolution which
will, by the next period, give them the first place
in the fish world.
Over the whole Mesozoic world, therefore,
we find advance and the promise of greater advance.
The Permian stress has selected the fittest types
to survive from the older order; the Jurassic luxuriance
is permitting a fresh and varied expansion of life,
in preparation for the next great annihilation of
the less fit and selection of the more fit. Life
pauses before another leap. The Mesozoic earth to
apply to it the phrase which a geologist has given
to its opening phase welcomes the coming
and speeds the parting guest. In the depths of
the ocean a new movement is preparing, but we have
yet to study the highest forms of Mesozoic life before
we come to the Cretaceous disturbances.