The First Bird ■ 253Mesozoic CenozoicPermian Triassic Jurassic Cretaceous Paleogene/Neogene Quaternary300 250 200 145 65
Age of
reptiles beginsLarge plant-eating
dinosaurs thriveDinosaurs evolve
and spreadFlowering plants
increaseHumans
evolveAge of
mammals begins2.6 0.0
Continents come
together to form
Pangaea; reptiles
dominate life on
land by 265 mya;
mass extinction
at end of periodEarly dinosaurs;
first mammals;
mass extinction
at end of periodContinents begin to
separate; diverse
dinosaurs; first birds;
first flowering plantsFlowering plants begin to
dominate life on land; mass
extinction at end of period,
including extinction of the
last non-avian dinosaursContinents near
present positions;
increased diversity
of flowering plants,
birds, mammals,
and pollinating
insectsRepeated advance
and retreat of
glaciers; evolution
of humans;
extinction of large
mammals and birdsQ1: During what geologic period did life on Earth begin?Q2: How long ago did species begin to move from water to land? What period was this?Q3: In what period would Archaeopteryx have been alive?other species, was the dinosaurs. Dinosaurs
first appeared about 230 mya, during the Trias-
sic period, and they took over the planet.
Feathered Friends
Xu Xing may not have wanted to be a pale-
ontologist when he went to college, but by the
time he graduated, he was hooked on dino-
saurs. Over the next 20 years, Xu became one
of the most productive researchers in his field.
To d a t e , h e h a s d i s c o v e r e d a n d n a m e d m o r e
than 60 extinct species—mostly dinosaurs,
but also a reptile and a salamander. And the
majority of those dinosaur fossils have feathers
(Figure 14.4).
As scientists traced back the lineage, or line
of descent, from birds to dinosaurs, it became
clear that birds are most closely related to
theropods—fast-moving dinosaurs that ran
Figure 14.4
A feathered dinosaur tail, trapped in
amber
In 2016, scientists discovered a 99-million-year-
old dinosaur tail, complete with its feathers, in a
piece of amber.