Islands in the Cosmos , livre ebook

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The evolution of life on Earth from its origins to the present day


How is it that we came to be here? The search for answers to that question has preoccupied humans for millennia. Scientists have sought clues in the genes of living things, in the physical environments of Earth from mountaintops to the depths of the ocean, in the chemistry of this world and those nearby, in the tiniest particles of matter, and in the deepest reaches of space. In Islands of the Cosmos, Dale A. Russell traces a path from the dawn of the universe to speculations about our future on this planet. He centers his story on the physical and biological processes in evolution, which interact to favor more successful, and eliminate less successful, forms of life. Marvelously, these processes reveal latent possibilities in life's basic structure, and propel a major evolutionary theme: the increasing proficiency of biological function. It remains to be seen whether the human form can survive the dynamic processes that brought it into existence. Yet the emergence of the ability to acquire knowledge from experience, to optimize behavior, to conceptualize, to distinguish "good" from "bad" behavior all hint at an evolutionary outcome that science is only beginning to understand.


Foreword by Simon Conway Morris
Preface
Acknowledgments

1. Time Travel
2. The Extraterrestrial Pre-Hadean
3. The Hadean Eon
4. The Archean Eon
5. The Proterozoic Eon
6. Phanerozoic Marine Life
7. Origin of Complex Terrestrial Ecosystems
8. Toward the Coal Age
9. Ascendancy of Life on Land
10. Bridging the Eras
11. The Natural History of Natural Selection
12. An Age of Giants
13. One Earth, Two Worlds
14. The Modern Earth
15. Synthesis
Epilogue: The Way of Life

References
Index

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Date de parution

14 juillet 2009

Nombre de lectures

0

EAN13

9780253023919

Langue

English

Poids de l'ouvrage

1 Mo

This book is a publication of
Indiana University Press 601 North Morton Street Bloomington, IN 47404-3797 USA
http://iupress.indiana.edu
Telephone orders 800-842-6796 Fax orders 812-855-7931 Orders by e-mail iuporder@indiana.edu
2009 by Dale A. Russell Foreword 2009 by Simon Conway Morris All rights reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. The Association of American University Presses Resolution on Permissions constitutes the only exception to this prohibition.
This book is printed on acid-free paper.
Manufactured in China
Russell, Dale A.
Islands in the cosmos : the evolution of life on land / Dale A. Russell ; foreword by Simon Conway Morris.
p. cm. - (Life of the past)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-253-35273-6 (cloth : alk. paper)
1. Evolution (Biology) 2. Life-Origin. 3. Biotic communities. 4. Natural selection. 5. Paleoecology. 6. Paleontology-Mesozoic. I. Title.
QH366.2.R87 2009
576.8-dc22
2008055797
1 2 3 4 5 14 13 12 11 10 09
For my wife, Janice, our families, and our children s families -my universe

CONTENTS
Foreword by Simon Conway Morris
Preface
Acknowledgments
1 TIME TRAVEL
2 THE EXTRATERRESTRIAL PRE-HADEAN
3 THE HADEAN EON
4 THE ARCHEAN EON
5 THE PROTEROZOIC EON
6 PHANEROZOIC MARINE LIFE
7 ORIGIN OF COMPLEX TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS
8 TOWARD THE COAL AGE
9 ASCENDANCY OF LIFE ON LAND
10 BRIDGING THE ERAS
11 THE NATURAL HISTORY OF NATURAL SELECTION
12 AN AGE OF GIANTS
13 ONE EARTH, TWO WORLDS
14 THE MODERN EARTH
15 SYNTHESIS
EPILOGUE: THE WAY OF LIFE
References
Index
FOREWORD
In his famous closing passage in On the Origin of Species Charles Darwin felt moved to write of how his theory might well explain the diversity and fecundity of life, but for him at least, it still invoked a sense of grandeur. Darwinism remains the air all evolutionary biologists breathe, but so too very many of us see in the history of life an almost epic quality: abysses of time, strange and outlandish denizens, unsolved mysteries, vanished worlds. Unsurprisingly this can lead to a tension. After all, in their day-to-day work paleontologists need to be like any other scientist: prosaic, hard-headed, and objective. But behind this, too often unsung, lies inspiration, imagination, and a sense of wonder. Two apparently separate worlds seem to lie ever further apart: the book of poetry lies unopened beside the electron microscope-but not always, and not necessarily. In this book they are reunited in a sweeping and thrilling overview of the ancient past.
The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. L. P. Hartley s well-known words are strangely apposite to this book, as they provide a leitmotif for a journey not only toward irrevocably lost worlds, but ones that are discomfortably unfamiliar, brooding, almost alien. Eschewing the worthy but tired dioramas that used to bedeck the walls of natural history museums and that punctuate the books of instruction, ones populated with shuffling trilobites and puzzled-looking brontosaurs, Dale Russell flings open a series of windows into the worlds of the past. It is an open and generous invitation, unafraid of employing vivid imagery and lyrical phrases. Whether it be to visit the earliest Earth, where he describes emergent fields of semiconsolidated lava rubble . . . punctuated here and there by steaming springs exhaling sterility [and] far into the distance, squat volcanoes might barely be distinguished, projecting from a cold leaden sea along the limb of a blue-gray horizon, or what was in geologic time almost yesterday, where together we can stalk through a dinosaur graveyard. But now the usual trope of bleached bones and grinning skulls is turned into something more fertile, but also more macabre. Here each gigantic corpse serves as a biological oasis, teeming with life, but from which also wafts the unmistakable stench of mortal decay.
Again and again Dale Russell combines the familiar with the unexpected, and to good effect. Ancient scenes are dotted with plants and traversed by great rivers, while beyond the horizon lie vast deserts that dwarf the Sahara and immense mountains that overshadow the Himalayas. But there is always a haunting undertone, because while Dale Russell brings to life these dead communities, at the same time he repeatedly emphasizes their archaic nature. And this he does in two intriguingly different ways. First, even in some living biomes, we find more than echoes of those distant worlds, a departing drumroll of former monsters, a flutelike threnody of extinct organic arabesques. Second, and even more intriguing, is the overwhelming sense that these worlds were not only different, but disorientingly so. Here are realms of silence populated by expressionless eyes, where any memories would exist solely as the repositories of the charnel house, of dust and decay, embalmed in the smell of aromatic resins. For us humans they would have been lonely and infertile places, not locations to linger. Now, paradoxically, they are places to relish when viewed through the spectacles of scientific understanding and when molded by our unique gifts of imagination.
Yet however remote these worlds might be, they were a product of evolution, as of course are we. From our privileged perspective, we see them as pregnant with possibilities, a planet that slowly awakens as the first minds begin to stir. Here, surely, is a saga that is even today incompletely told: awareness flickers into existence and intelligences emerge, culminating in the incredible trajectory of human evolution. Dale Russell is surely correct when he proclaims that ours is a truly special time. And as I do, he insists that within the evolutionary tapestry, there are woven inevitabilities, and here perhaps we begin to depart from one part of the present-day neo-Darwinian consensus. This is because a central tenet of neo-Darwinism is its open-endedness and indeterminacy, famously captured by Stephen Jay Gould s insistence that were we to rerun the tape of life, then the outcome would be totally different. But this is flatly contradicted by what we know as evolutionary convergence-the manner in which unrelated organisms repeatedly arrive at the same solution. Perhaps this is best known by the striking similarity between our eye and that of an octopus; each evolved independently into what is very close to an optimal end point. This, along with innumerable other examples, is one line of evidence that evolution is actually reading an instruction manual to which we have by no means yet gained full access. Birds, for example, evolved from the dromaeosaurian dinosaurs, and we see the evidence before our eyes, in the form of Archaeopteryx; but much less well known is that two other lineages were going in much the same direction. Birds are inevitable, and so most likely are mammals-as well as, I would argue, are humans.
These inevitabilities not only provide a compass to the Darwinian adventure, but also in revealing directionalities allow us to reconsider the concept of evolutionary progress, not as an artifact of human wish fulfillment but as integral to this tapestry of life. And Dale Russell brilliantly captures this sense by a dramatic retelling of von Baer s hypothesis whereby the egg, say of a reptile, hurtles through its equivalent evolutionary history, achieving in a few months what it took billions of years for evolution to achieve. Yes, yes, nod the heads of some world-weary embryologists, that is what happens, but in a few deft strokes, Dale Russell has managed to reignite our sense of wonder: embryology, and indeed all life, is extraordinary, and we should never be embarrassed to proclaim its wonder.
Here we have a perspective that gives evolution a cosmic dimension, as the very small-such as the apparently mundane and humble egg-encounters the unimaginably enormous. In one of her visions, the medieval mystic, Julian of Norwich, famously saw the entire creation like a hazelnut held in the palm of a hand. And perhaps it is not entirely otiose to substitute in our mind s eye that symbol of fertility, the egg. In this telescoping of time and evolution, Dale Russell captures the drama of evolution. While he rightly insists on the continuity of evolution, so too he sees compelling evidence for the emergence of order, of increasingly complex ecosystems, of ever larger brains and the spreading of sentience. But Dale Russell is unembarrassed to write, and just as much I to read, At a basic level evolution is not an explanation; it is a mystery. Both of us are firm believers in evolution, but I know that we also share some decidedly unfashionable views. From whence, we ask, comes not only the mysterious beauty of evolution, but its potentialities and indeed the order of the world and the foundations of Reason? Is it not strange how life has navigated on a knife s edge of evolution, between the Scylla of unstructured chaos and the Charybdis of crystalline immobility? Well, no, in fact-not at all. Evolution is, of course, part of the physical world, but it is one that emerged by the finest of threads-as the Anthropic Principle demonstrates-and now houses minds that glimpse the transcendental. Seen from such a perspective, when I read Dale Russell s words, We tread on hallowed ground, I felt an answering call, a deep resonance. Near the beginning of this wonderful book, Dale Russell simply observes that the Laws written within the structure of the visible universe are not arbitrary. Indeed they are not, and as sentient products of evolution, we should not only salute the vanished worlds from which we emerged, but ponder what the future will hold for us all.
Simon Conway Morris
PREFACE
The Hubble sp

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