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The first evidence of land plants also appeared (see evolutionary history of life). In the Middle Ordovician, the trilobite-dominated Early Ordovician communities were replaced by generally more mixed ecosystems, in which brachiopods, bryozoans, molluscs, cornulitids, tentaculitids and echinoderms all flourished, tabulate corals diversified and ...
The evidence of plant evolution changes dramatically in the Ordovician with the first extensive appearance of embryophyte spores in the fossil record. The earliest terrestrial plants lived during the Middle Ordovician around 470 million years ago , based on their fossils found in the form of monads and spores, with resistant polymers in their ...
Ordovician plants (6 P) T. Ordovician life by Linnaean taxonomic rank (3 C) This page was last edited on 1 November 2023, at 10:18 (UTC). ...
Land plants evolved from a group of freshwater green algae, perhaps as early as 850 mya, [3] but algae-like plants might have evolved as early as 1 billion years ago. [2] The closest living relatives of land plants are the charophytes, specifically Charales; if modern Charales are similar to the distant ancestors they share with land plants, this means that the land plants evolved from a ...
The Early Ordovician is the first epoch of the Ordovician period, corresponding to the Lower Ordovician series of the Ordovician system. It began after the Age 10 of the Furongian epoch of the Cambrian and lasted from 486.85 to 471.3 million years ago, until the Dapingian age of the Middle Ordovician .
Pages in category "Ordovician plants" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Casterlorum; Chaetocladus;
Evidence suggests that an algal scum formed on the land , but it was not until the Ordovician period, around , that land plants appeared. These began to diversify in the late Silurian period, around 420 million years ago , and the fruits of their diversification are displayed in remarkable detail in an early Devonian fossil assemblage known as ...
The fossil history of flowering plants records the development of flowers and other distinctive structures of the angiosperms, now the dominant group of plants on land.The history is controversial as flowering plants appear in great diversity in the Cretaceous, with scanty and debatable records before that, creating a puzzle for evolutionary biologists that Charles Darwin named an "abominable ...