Eocene Epoch
Eocene Epoch
The Eocene Epoch, second of the five epochs into which the Tertiary Period is divided, lasted from 54 to 38 million years ago. Mammals became the dominant land animals during this epoch.
The Eocene Epoch (meaning dawn of the recent period, from the Greek eos, dawn, and koinos, recent), like the other epochs of the Tertiary Period, was originally defined in 1833 by the English geologist Charles Lyell (1797–1875) on the basis of how many modern species are found among its fossils . The Eocene Epoch was defined by Lyell as that time where 1–5% of the species were modern (i.e., are still alive today). The Eocene Epoch's boundaries are therefore arbitrary, not set by mass extinctions or other clear-cut events.
For most of the Eocene Epoch, the global climate was warm and rainy. Ice caps were small or nonexistent. Early Eocene Epoch sea levels were low, creating land bridges between Asia and North America via the Bering Strait, North America and Europe via Greenland, and Australia and Antarctica . Late in the epoch Antarctica drifted south, opening a deep-water channel between it and Australia that caused a global cooling trend by allowing the formation of the circum-Antarctic current.
The Eocene Epoch saw the replacement of older mammalian orders by modern ones. Hoofed animals first appeared, including the famous Eohippus (dawn horse) and ancestral rhinoceroses and tapirs. Early bats, rabbits, beavers, rats, mice, carnivorous mammals, and whales also evolved during the Eocene Epoch. The earliest Eocene Epoch mammals were all small, but larger species, including the elephant-sized titanothere, evolved toward the end of the epoch.
Many flowering plants evolved in the Eocene Epoch. Especially important are the grasses, which had first appeared in the late Cretaceous Period but did not become diverse and ubiquitous until the Eocene Epoch. Abundant grass encouraged the evolution of early grazing animals, including Eohippus. Familiar tree species such as birch, cedar, chestnut, elm, and beech flourished during the Eocene Epoch; aquatic and insect life were much the same as today.
See also Archean; Cambrian Period; Carbon dating; Cenozoic Era; Dating methods; Devonian Period; Fossil record; Geologic time; Historical geology; Holocene Epoch; Jurassic Period; Mesozoic Era; Miocene Epoch; Mississippian Period; Oligocene Epoch; Ordovician Period; Paleozoic Era; Pennsylvanian Period; Phanerozoic Eon; Pleistocene Epoch; Pliocene Epoch; Precambrian; Proterozoic Era; Quaternary Period; Silurian Period
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FOOTBALL: Byrom comeback secures title; ANFIELD.(Sport)
Newspaper article from: Liverpool Echo (Liverpool, England); 1/13/2004; 458 words
; BYROM STREET have been crowned league champions...League secretary Steve O'Reilly said: ``Byrom Street are a very good side who have played...thanks to goals from Joey Fleet (3) and John Kinsella. Oakfield gained revenge for last...
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Ticket firm insists: Don't blame us for finals fiasco; Sport The most controversial aspect of this World Cup was the ticketing shambles. DAVID BOND puts Byrom, the company in charge, on the spot over its handling of the issue.
Newspaper article from: The Evening Standard (London, England); 7/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...Sport asks Gerard Holmes, the Byrom official at the centre of the...the ground? A: The BBC and John Motson are partly to blame...fans. We asked the BBC and John Motson to put the record straight...decided yet. But FIFA has said "Byrom rescued the ticketing situation...
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Ten Questions: Tom Byrom
Newspaper article from: Evening News - Scotland; 12/20/2007; 545 words
; Tom Byrom 37, from Trinity, is a business and resource manager with The Rock Trust...achievement? Convincing my wife to marry me. I've also cycled from Lands End to John O'Groats, and this year trekked to Everest Base Camp (although I think...
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A downside to coding Phil Byrom joins our 'pessimism versus optimism in programming' debate. 'Surely John Hamling has it wrong?' he says. 'If he coded expecting valid values, it implies that he assumed anything else would be in error - which is a pretty.
Magazine article from: Computing; 10/27/2005; 698 words
; ...Tim Phillips A downside to coding Phil Byrom joins our 'pessimism versus optimism in programming' debate. 'Surely John Hamling has it wrong?' he says...situation.' Phil's contention that John has become more optimistic by coding...
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Guests arent quite ready for total war; In deep: Paul Byrom (Nick) and Mary Tobin (Honey) struggle amid George and Marthas fireworks.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 9/7/2007; 700+ words
; Byline: John McKeown Whos Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? (Mill Theatre, Dundrum) Verdict...thehostess herself. The middle-aged couples two young guests, Nick (Paul Byrom) and Honey (MaryTobin), dont quite see it that way. Nick, a new professor...
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GOAL boss in greatest giveaway of his life; Happy families: John OShea with Karen and Marc Lyons. Inset: Guests Paul Byrom and Dominique Coulter.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 1/3/2009; 654 words
; ...Third World aid agency GOAL, John OShea spends his life encouraging...afternoon. Singing star Paul Byrom performed at the reception in...UCD track in Belfield where John OShea started events. Participants...on humanitarian aid. Since John OShea founded GOAL in 1977...
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The Byrom Shield is still up for grabs!(Sport)
Newspaper article from: Huddersfield Daily Examiner (Huddersfield, England); 9/5/2005; 700+ words
; ...safely into the play-offs. Rastrick were denied runners-up spot despite beating Primrose Hill by 79 runs at Cross Lane. John Edge made 51 and David Bottomley 48, but the most notable aspect of the first innings was Joe Lumb Cup player Mohammed Usman...
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Sports active: Skateboarding - Move over Dogtown, the new board lords are our friends in the north Skateboarding may have been invented in California, says Howard Byrom, but its future looks decidedly Scottish
Newspaper article from: The Independent on Sunday; 10/2/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...skateboarding gains ground at a phenomenal rate north of the border. John Rattray from Aberdeen led the way five years ago when Zero...and very, very high-octane. The company's star rider, John Cardiel, is recovering after breaking his spine during a road...
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Sun shining on solar industry Green Cove Springs company survives chill, now growing.(Business)
Newspaper article from: The Florida Times Union; 7/12/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...approximately 10,000 panels a year," said John W. "Billy" Byrom, chairman and CEO. Some 60 percent of Byrom's production goes overseas. His...McParland/staff Photo: (b/w) John W. "Billy" Byrom's image is reflected in a solar panel...
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Deaths.
Newspaper article from: Liverpool Echo (Liverpool, England); 5/4/2009; 700+ words
; BYROM ELIZABETH (BETTY) (N [sup.3]ee ROWLANDS...to Cancer Research UK c/o Peter Coyne. BYROM - ELIZABETH. April 30, 2009. ( Nanna Betty...Your grandchildren Louise and Michael xxx. BYROM - ELIZABETH ( BETTY). April 30, 2009...
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Byrom, John
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Byrom, John (1692–1763), had many varied literary, linguistic, religious...accounts in his Private Journals and Literary Remains (1854–7). Byrom had Jacobite sympathies and was, like Law, a non-juror; he was the...
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John Byrom
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
John Byrom , 1692-1763, English shorthand expert and poet, educated at Trinity College...great admirer of William Law, and much information about Law is found in Byrom's Private Journal and Literary Remains (1854-57). He wrote Seasonably...
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Hartley, David
Dictionary entry from: Complete Dictionary of Scientific Biography
...the stone (from which he had suffered as a young man), John Byrom ’ s shorthand system, and Nicholas Saunderson...experience. This concept had been elaborated by the Reverend John Gay in his “ Preliminary Dissertation Concerning...
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Steppenwolf
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
...the era. He acquired the name John from a gym teacher who couldn...died July 1, 1981), drums; John Kay (born Joachim Krauledat...George Biondo , bass; Larry Byrom , guitar;, Bobby Cochran...drums; Danny Johnson , guitar John Russell Morgan , bass; Nick...
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Tweedledum and Tweedledee
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
...Tweedledee originally names applied to the composers Bononcini (1670–1747) and Handel, in a 1725 satire by John Byrom (1692–1763), ‘Strange all this difference should be, 'Twixt Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee...
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