Miocene Epoch
Miocene Epoch
Notable in the development of primates and human evolution , are fossilized remains of Ardipithecus ramidus, perhaps one of the earliest identifiable ancestors of man. Fossilized remains found in Ethiopia date to approximately six million years ago, near the end of the Miocene Epoch. Importantly, the fossilized bones found provide evidence that Ardipithecus ramidus could walk upright. Anthropologists assert that the ancestral line between apes and humans diverged six to eight million years ago from a common ancestor that lived during the Miocene Epoch.
In geologic time , the Miocene Epoch occurs during the Tertiary Period (65 million years ago to 2.6 million years ago—and is also sometimes divided or referred to in terms of a Paleogene Period from 65 million years ago to 23 million years ago) and a Neogene Period (23 million years ago to 2.6 million years ago) instead of a singular Tertiary Period—of the Cenozoic Era of the Phanerozoic Eon . The Miocene Epoch is the fourth epoch in the Tertiary Period (in the alternative, the earliest epoch in the Neogene Period).
The Miocene Epoch ranges from approximately 23 million years ago (mya) to 5 mya. The Miocene Epoch was preceded by the Oligocene Epoch and was followed by the Pliocene Epoch .
The Miocene Epoch is further subdivided into (from earliest to most recent) Aquitanian (23 mya to 21 mya), Burdigalian (21 mya to 16 mya), Langhian (16 mya to 14 mya), Serravallian (14 mya to 10 mya), Tortonian (10 mya to 7 mya), and Messinian (7 mya to 5 mya) stages.
Craters dating to the end of the Oligocene Epoch and start of the Miocene Epoch can be studied in Northwest Canada and in Logancha, Russia. Smaller impact craters dating to the end of the middle of the Miocene Epoch are evident in Russia and Germany.
Other notable finds in the fossil record that date to the Miocene Epoch include evidence of the continued extensive development of grasslands initiated during the preceding Eocene and Oligocene Epochs. The grassland development offered a chance for grazing animals to become well established. Many of the modern migratory patterns date to the Miocene Epoch. The fusion of the Arabian plate to the Eurasian plate provided a land bridge from Africa to Asia allowing migration of species and mixing of genetic traits among reproductively compatible sub-species.
The paleobotanical record provides evidence that kelp forests also became well developed during the Miocene Epoch as the climate cyclically warmed and cooled, but more generally became less humid.
See also Archean; Cambrian Period; Cretaceous Period; Dating methods; Devonian Period; Evolution; Evolution, evidence of; Evolutionary mechanisms; Fossils and fossilization; Historical geology; Holocene Epoch; Jurassic Period; Mesozoic Era; Miocene Epoch; Mississippian Period; Ordovician Period; Paleocene Epoch; Paleozoic Era; Pennsylvanian Period; Pleistocene Epoch; Precambrian; Proterozoic Eon; Quaternary Period; Silurian Period; Triassic Period
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Culture Minister defers export of portrait of British Diplomat by Rosalba Carriera.
M2 Presswire; 1/23/2009; 700+ words
; ...portrait of British Diplomat by Rosalba Carriera(C)1994-2009 M2 COMMUNICATIONS...British diplomat Sir James Gray by Rosalba Carriera. This will provide a last chance...Grand Tour on British taste. Rosalba Carriera (1675-1757) was the pre...
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Guerrilla Girls fight war against discrimination
Newspaper article from: The Topeka Capital-Journal; 11/30/1999; ; 669 words
; ...tonight to Washburn call themselves Rosalba Carriera, an 18th-century Venetian...masks," Thomas said. To which Carriera later countered, "But we look...it's hard to complain." Rosalba Carriera and Alma Thomas, of the Guerrilla...
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The art of pastel
Magazine article from: Southwest Art; 4/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...is attributed to the German artist and chemist Johann Alexander Thiele [1685-1752], it was Rosalba Carriera who was its real pioneer. Carriera [1675-1758], a Venetian woman, painted beautiful, fully finished pastel portraits. In 1720...
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Who was Henrietta Johnston? (unknown painter)
Magazine article from: The Magazine Antiques; 11/1/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...that Johnston was an associate of the Venetian artist Rosalba Carriera (1675-1757), arguing that Johnston was already established in Charleston by the time Carriera popularized pastel drawing. On the basis of two pastels...
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The demand drains market Going, going, gone: art's disappearing act
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 3/25/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...another portrait of a Scottish duke drawn in pastel around 1730 by the Venetian artist Rosalba Carriera. The Gerard sold for $1.87 million and the Carriera for $621,000. Both went to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which made known...
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Going, going, gone: art's disappearing actThe demand drains market
Newspaper article from: International Herald Tribune; 3/23/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...another portrait of a Scottish duke drawn in pastel around 1730 by the Venetian artist Rosalba Carriera. The Gerard sold for $1.87 million and the Carriera for $621,000. Both went to New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which made known...
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Travesias/ Venecia sin ti.(Primera Fila)
Newspaper article from: Reforma (México D.F., México); 2/22/2002; 700+ words
; ...autores como Tintoreto, Tiepolo, Canaleto, Belloto, Carriera, Veronese, Bella, quienes establecieron una relacin...exposicin sobresale la participacin de una mujer, Rosalba Carriera, pionera en explorar las posibilidades de la pintura...
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Picture galleries outside London: the Bath and Bristol galleries.
Magazine article from: Contemporary Review; 5/1/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...overposed Head of a Young Girl contrasts with the severe honesty of the portrait of Catherine the Great, attributed to Rosalba Carriera, in which Catherine's imperious porcine face is tricked out in incongruous baubles. The Victoria Gallery, although...
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The Sun Sets on Venice
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 2/3/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...languish in lonely garrets; to the deserving, fame and fortune came early and in abundance. Zanetti's associate Rosalba Carriera, for instance, studied widely in Italy and Paris and established what amounted to a mail-order business. Her...
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Exhibitions: The pleasures of the flash
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 10/20/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...Redford's new book, Venice and the Grand Tour (Yale, pounds 20), which draws attention to the individual art of Rosalba Carriera. Her portrait of Walpole in the Tate show is quite lovely, and surely her use of pastel in formal portraiture...
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Carriera, Rosalba
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
CARRIERA, ROSALBA CARRIERA, ROSALBA (1675 – 1757), Italian painter, known for miniatures on ivory. The eighteenth-century Venetian painter Rosalba Carriera was the first woman painter in history to be credited by many with the...
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Rosalba Carriera
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Rosalba Carriera , 1675-1757, Italian portrait and miniature painter, one of the greatest of her day. At 24 she had achieved a reputation throughout...
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Pastel
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...in oil. The pastel portraits of the Venetian painter Rosalba Carriera (1675 – 1757) reflect most completely the...Piles (1635 – 1709). See also Carriera, Rosalba ; Huygens Family ; Portrait Miniatures . BIBLIOGRAPHY...
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Pellegrini, Giovanni Antonio
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Art
...Giovanni Antonio ( b Venice, 29 Apr. 1675; d Venice, 5 Nov. 1741). Venetian painter, the brother-in-law of Rosalba Carriera . Pellegrini played a major part in the spread of the Venetian manner of large-scale decorative painting in northern...
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miniature painting
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...precise, sometimes precious style. Two artists of the 18th cent., the Swede Peter Adolphe Hall and the Venetian Rosalba Carriera, introduced a new freedom of brushstroke, even within the small format. Among those who executed elegant and intimate...
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