North America
Phanerozoic Time
North America experienced the sea washing over its boundaries many times during the three billion-plus years of its Archean and Proterozoic history. Life had flourished in the shallow tidewater. Algae, a long-term resident of North America, was joined later by worms and other soft-bodied animals. Little is known of early soft-bodied organisms, because they left no skeletons to become fossils. Only a handful of good fossils remain from the entire world's immense Precambrian rock record.
Then, about 570 million years ago, several unrelated lineages of shell-bearing sea animals appeared. This was the beginning of the Phanerozoic eon of Earth history, which has lasted from 570 million years ago to the present day. Vast seas covered much of North America in the early Phanerozoic, their shorelines changing from one million-year interval to the next. The seas teemed with creatures whose bones and shells we have come to know in the fossil record. These oceanic events are memorialized in the layers of stone each sea left behind, lying flat in the continent's heartland and folded and broken in the cordilleras. Geologists have surveyed the stacked sheets of stone left by ancient North American seas and have made maps of the deposits of each continental sea. The stacked layers are divided into sequences, each named for the sea that laid it down. Each sequence consisted of a slow and complex flooding of the continent. Sea level mountain uplift, the growth of deltas, and other factors continually changed the shape of the continental sea.
Additional topics
- North America - Eastern And Southern Borders Of North America
- North America - North America In The Proterozoic Eon
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Science EncyclopediaScience & Philosophy: Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADP) to Ockham's razorNorth America - North America In The Proterozoic Eon, Phanerozoic Time, Eastern And Southern Borders Of North America - Geologic history