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Chapter 5 THE AGE OF THE COAL SWAMPS

Word Count: 1283    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

sun and rain. There was no real soil-for as yet there were no earthworms which help to make a soil, and no plants

o have been phases of great internal activity in the world's history, when in the course of a few million years accumulated upthrusts would break out in lines of volcanic eruption and upheaval and rearrange the mountain and continental outlines of the globe, increasing the depth of the sea and the height of the mountains and exaggerating the extremes of climate. And these would be followed by vast ages of comparative quiescence, when frost, rain and river would wear down the mountain heights and carry great masses of silt to fill and r

in any effectual way from the waters on to the land. No doubt the earlier types of the forms that now begin to appear in great abun

NIFEROU

eam in t

y ground below to the tissues of the plant, now that it was no longer close at hand. The two problems were solved by the development of woody tissue which both sustained the plant and acted as water carrier to the leaves. The Record of the Rocks is suddenly crowded by a vast variety of woody swamp plants, many of them of great size, big tree mosses, tree ferns, gigan

BYRINTHODONT,

Hist.

There were dragon flies in this period with

pment of a cover to the old-fashioned gills to stop evaporation, or in the development of tubes or other new breathing organs lying deep inside the body and moistened by a watery secretion. The old gills with which the ancestral fish of the vertebrated line had breathed were inadaptable to breathing upon land, and in the case of this division of the animal kingdom it is the swimming bladder of the fish which becomes a new, deep-seated breathing organ, the lung. The kind of animals known as amphibia, the frogs and newts of to-day,

LABYRINTHODO

Hist.

were land animals, it is true, but they were land animals needing to live in and near moist and swampy places, and all the great trees of this period were equally amphibious in their habits. None of them had yet devel

all the higher vertebrated animals above the fishes, up to and including man, pass through a stage in their development in the egg or before birth in which they have gill slits which are obliterated before the young emerge. The bare, water-washed eye of the fish is protected i

se waters. Thus far life had now extended. The hills and high lands were still quite barren and lifeless. Life had learnt to

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Contents

Chapter 1 THE WORLD IN SPACE Chapter 2 THE WORLD IN TIME Chapter 3 THE BEGINNINGS OF LIFE Chapter 4 THE AGE OF FISHES Chapter 5 THE AGE OF THE COAL SWAMPS Chapter 6 THE AGE OF REPTILES Chapter 7 THE FIRST BIRDS AND THE FIRST MAMMALS Chapter 8 THE AGE OF MAMMALS Chapter 9 MONKEYS, APES AND SUB-MEN Chapter 10 THE NEANDERTHALER AND THE RHODESIAN MAN Chapter 11 THE FIRST TRUE MEN
Chapter 12 PRIMITIVE THOUGHT
Chapter 13 THE BEGINNINGS OF CULTIVATION
Chapter 14 PRIMITIVE NEOLITHIC CIVILIZATIONS
Chapter 15 SUMERIA, EARLY EGYPT AND WRITING
Chapter 16 PRIMITIVE NOMADIC PEOPLES
Chapter 17 THE FIRST SEAGOING PEOPLES
Chapter 18 EGYPT, BABYLON AND ASSYRIA
Chapter 19 THE PRIMITIVE ARYANS
Chapter 20 THE LAST BABYLONIAN EMPIRE AND THE EMPIRE OF DARIUS I
Chapter 21 THE EARLY HISTORY OF THE JEWS
Chapter 22 PRIESTS AND PROPHETS IN JUDEA
Chapter 23 THE GREEKS
Chapter 24 THE WARS OF THE GREEKS AND PERSIANS
Chapter 25 THE SPLENDOUR OF GREECE
Chapter 26 THE EMPIRE OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
Chapter 27 THE MUSEUM AND LIBRARY AT ALEXANDRIA
Chapter 28 THE LIFE OF GAUTAMA BUDDHA
Chapter 29 KING ASOKA
Chapter 30 CONFUCIUS AND LAO TSE
Chapter 31 ROME COMES INTO HISTORY
Chapter 32 ROME AND CARTHAGE
Chapter 33 THE GROWTH OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
Chapter 34 BETWEEN ROME AND CHINA
Chapter 35 THE COMMON MAN'S LIFE UNDER THE EARLY ROMAN EMPIRE
Chapter 36 RELIGIOUS DEVELOPMENTS UNDER THE ROMAN EMPIRE
Chapter 37 THE TEACHING OF JESUS
Chapter 38 THE DEVELOPMENT OF DOCTRINAL CHRISTIANITY
Chapter 39 THE BARBARIANS BREAK THE EMPIRE INTO EAST AND WEST
Chapter 40 THE HUNS AND THE END OF THE WESTERN EMPIRE
Chapter 41 THE BYZANTINE AND SASSANID EMPIRES
Chapter 42 THE DYNASTIES OF SUY AND TANG IN CHINA
Chapter 43 MUHAMMAD AND ISLAM
Chapter 44 THE GREAT DAYS OF THE ARABS
Chapter 45 THE DEVELOPMENT OF LATIN CHRISTENDOM
Chapter 46 THE CRUSADES AND THE AGE OF PAPAL DOMINION
Chapter 47 RECALCITRANT PRINCES AND THE GREAT SCHISM
Chapter 48 THE MONGOL CONQUESTS
Chapter 49 THE INTELLECTUAL REVIVAL OF THE EUROPEANS
Chapter 50 THE REFORMATION OF THE LATIN CHURCH
Chapter 51 THE EMPEROR CHARLES V
Chapter 52 THE AGE OF POLITICAL EXPERIMENTS; OF GRAND MONARCHY AND PARLIAMENTS AND REPUBLICANISM IN EUROPE
Chapter 53 THE NEW EMPIRES OF THE EUROPEANS IN ASIA AND OVERSEAS
Chapter 54 THE AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE
Chapter 55 THE FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE RESTORATION OF MONARCHY IN FRANCE
Chapter 56 THE UNEASY PEACE IN EUROPE THAT FOLLOWED THE FALL OF NAPOLEON
Chapter 57 THE DEVELOPMENT OF MATERIAL KNOWLEDGE
Chapter 58 THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Chapter 59 THE DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN POLITICAL AND SOCIAL IDEAS
Chapter 60 THE EXPANSION OF THE UNITED STATES
Chapter 61 THE RISE OF GERMANY TO PREDOMINANCE IN EUROPE
Chapter 62 THE NEW OVERSEAS EMPIRES OF STEAMSHIP AND RAILWAY
Chapter 63 EUROPEAN AGGRESSION IN ASIA AND THE RISE OF JAPAN
Chapter 64 THE BRITISH EMPIRE IN 1914
Chapter 65 THE AGE OF ARMAMENT IN EUROPE, AND THE GREAT WAR OF 1914-18
Chapter 66 THE REVOLUTION AND FAMINE IN RUSSIA
Chapter 67 THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL RECONSTRUCTION OF THE WORLD
Chapter 68 No.68
Chapter 69 No.69
Chapter 70 No.70
Chapter 71 No.71
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