HelpSitemapSearchThe Field Museumwww.fieldmuseum.org
Evolving Planet Geological Time Scale
Tour Through Time
top image
Exhibition Highlights
All About Evolution
Tour Through Time
Precambrian
Cambrian and Ordovician
Silurian and Devonian
Carboniferous
Permian
Mesozoic Era
Tertiary
Hominids
Quaternary
Interactives
Educational Resources
Planning Your Visit
Events and Programs
bottom image





Evolutionary Essentials

When the Permian Period began 290 million years ago, the continents were drifting together to form one enormous landmass called Pangaea. A patchwork of different environments, Pangaea contained climate zones that included everything from dry deserts to tropical forests.

New tetrapods—four-legged vertebrates—roamed these diverse habitats. A key development in their reproductive process affected the evolution of life in the coming eras:

The development of the amniote egg let tetrapods reproduce and live full-time on dry land.

With this development, animals no longer need to remain near the water’s edge to lay their eggs. They could now survive further inland in drier parts of Pangaea.


Continue to The Amniote Egg. >>











Exhibition Highlights | All About Evolution | Tour Through Time | Interactives| Educational Resouces | Planning Your Visit | Events and Programs


© 2007 The Field Museum, All Rights Reserved
1400 S. Lake Shore Dr. Chicago, IL 60605-2496
312.922.9410

Copyright Information | Linking Policy

Technical Support
webmaster@fieldmuseum.org