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  2. Geologic time scale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geologic_time_scale

    The geologic time scale is a way of representing deep time based on events that have occurred throughout Earth's history, a time span of about 4.54 ± 0.05 Ga (4.54 billion years). [3] It chronologically organises strata, and subsequently time, by observing fundamental changes in stratigraphy that correspond to major geological or ...

  3. Geologic Calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geologic_Calendar

    A variation of this analogy instead compresses Earth's 4.6 billion year-old history into a single day: While the Earth still forms at midnight, and the present day is also represented by midnight, the first life on Earth would appear at 4:00 am, dinosaurs would appear at 10:00 pm, the first flowers 10:30 pm, the first primates 11:30 pm, and ...

  4. Age of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Earth

    The age of Earth is estimated to be 4.54 ± 0.05 billion years ... This 50 million year time span allows for accretion of the planets from the original solar dust and ...

  5. bya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bya

    It is commonly used as a unit of time to denote length of time before the present in 10 9 years. This initialism is often used in the sciences of astronomy , geology , and paleontology . The "billion" in bya is the 10 9 "billion" of the short scale of the U.S. , [ 1 ] not the long-scale 10 12 "billion" of some European usage.

  6. Orders of magnitude (time) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orders_of_magnitude_(time)

    The largest realized amount of time, based on known scientific data, is the age of the universe, about 13.8 billion years—the time since the Big Bang as measured in the cosmic microwave background rest frame. [2] Those amounts of time together span 60 decimal orders of magnitude.

  7. History of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Earth

    Earth formed in this manner about 4.54 billion years ago (with an uncertainty of 1%) [25] [26] [4] and was largely completed within 10–20 million years. [27] In June 2023, scientists reported evidence that the planet Earth may have formed in just three million years, much faster than the 10−100 million years thought earlier.

  8. Land of the lost: Hidden lagoon network found with ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/land-lost-hidden-lagoon-network...

    Ancient giant stromatolites used to be widespread in Earth’s Precambrian era, which encompasses the early time span of around 4.6 billion to 541 million years ago, but now they are sparsely ...

  9. Geological history of Earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geological_history_of_Earth

    The Precambrian includes approximately 90% of geologic time. It extends from 4.6 billion years ago to the beginning of the Cambrian Period (about 539 Ma).It includes the first three of the four eons of Earth's prehistory (the Hadean, Archean and Proterozoic) and precedes the Phanerozoic eon.