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3 Random Tidbits

A Unification Story.

From History:
2.7 Billion Years Ago
2.7 to 2.6 BYA

Stepping back for a moment.

Now, the details…

The Dawn of Photosynthesis and the Oxygenation of Earth: Around 2.4 billion years ago cyanobacteria emerged, the architects of the planet’s first photosynthetic processes. These microscopic prokaryotes harnessed the Sun’s energy, transforming it along with water and carbon dioxide into glucose and, crucially, oxygen. This period, known as the Great Oxidation Event, marked a dramatic increase in atmospheric oxygen levels, fundamentally altering the course of life’s evolution. Before this event, Earth’s atmosphere was largely devoid of oxygen, dominated instead by methane, ammonia, and other gases. 

Most life on Earth today consumes the Sun’s energy directly or indirectly, but not all life. Plants consume the Sun’s energy directly, plant eaters indirectly, and meat eaters one more step away. In addition to this chain of food, some life on Earth do not consume the Sun’s energy at all. Instead they consume nutrients found in extreme environments. Food to them like hydrogen sulfide.

 

 


That Unification Story, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

 

A Unification FAQ.

Ancient Humans < Evolution < Science

Now, to be clear.

Now, the details…

Why is Homo habilis the “handy man?”

They were the first to wield tools, sparking a cognitive revolution that forever altered the course of life on Earth. With ingenious minds and dexterous hands, they paved the way for the development of complex societies, cultures, and technologies. They are the first known species to venture beyond the confines of pure instinct. Flourishing about 2.4 to 1.4 million years ago, this species is credited with being the earliest to show evidence of using stone tools that survived the test of time.

For sure, Homo habilis also utilized other natural resources they could pick up off the ground, such as hand sticks for poking and defense, walking sticks perhaps sharpened at one end for protection and hunting, and small sharpened sticks for detailed work. Around this time, perhaps the first spears and digging sticks were crafted, essential for hunting larger animals at a distance and for accessing water sources, tubers, or creating simple traps. These tools weren’t just crude implements; they represented a fundamental shift in how early humans interacted with their environment, enabling them to cut, scrape, and process food in new ways that likely influenced their diet, survival, and social dynamics. For a new look at what happened to our ancient human species, take the deep dive: A New Look at Human Extinction Events: From Homo habilis to the Neanderthals.

 


That Unification FAQ, 

was first published on TST 2 years ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

 

A Unification Story.

From History:
Subject: Evolution.
From 251.902 to 66.0 million years ago.
186 Million years: Dinosauria reigned from extinction to extinction.
The Mesozoic era starts with the end-Permian mass extinction 252 million years ago. Dinosaurs ruled over all, including us. It ends the reign of dinosaurs with the K–Pg extinction 66 million years ago.

In simple terms.

The Mesozoic era starts with the end-Permian mass extinction 252 million years ago ending the reign of our synapsid ancestors. Within it, it includes the end-Triassic extinction 201 million years ago and the Toarcian environmental crisis 183 million years ago. The Mesozoic era ends the reign of dinosaurs with the K–Pg extinction 66 million years ago.

Now, the details…

The Mesozoic Era begins 251.9 million years ago, at the start of the Triassic Period, right after the catastrophic end-Permian extinction that closed the Paleozoic. The largest mass extinction in Earth history, it wiped out roughly 90 percent of marine species and devastated life on land. The boundary matters because it marks not just a change in rock layers, but a biological reset of the planet after extraordinary volcanic upheaval, greenhouse warming, and environmental collapse. So when we speak of the start of the Mesozoic, we are looking at a world recovering from devastation, with the first chapter of the era defined by survival, rebuilding, and the opening of ecological space that new lineages would eventually fill.

Life during the Mesozoic is why people call it the Age of Dinosaurs, but the era was broader than dinosaurs alone. Dinosaurs rose to dominance on land, while marine reptiles ruled many seas and flying reptiles took to the skies. This was also the era when the first true mammals appeared, birds emerged from theropod dinosaur ancestry, and major plant communities changed over time, with conifers and cycads common early on and flowering plants spreading especially late in the era. In other words, the Mesozoic was not just the age of giant reptiles. It was one of Earth’s great ages of biological innovation.

To frame its roughly 186 million years, it helps to think of the Mesozoic in three grand acts. First comes the Triassic, a recovery world in which ecosystems were still rebuilding and the earliest dinosaurs appeared. Then comes the Jurassic, when dinosaurs expanded into many of their most famous forms and Pangaea began to break apart more clearly. Finally comes the Cretaceous, when dinosaurs remained dominant, birds and mammals continued developing, and flowering plants spread across much of the planet. These three periods—Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous—give the Mesozoic its basic rhythm: rise, expansion, and final flourishing.

 


That Unification Story, 

was first published on TST 2 weeks ago.

By the way, the flashcard inspired by it is this.

Front: What does “Mesozoic” mean?
Back: Middle life.

 

The end. Refresh for another set.

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