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The Oxygen Revolution
The
Earth is roughly four billion years old, a conglomeration
of leftovers from the cloud of gas and dust that gave birth
to the sun. The Earthıs primeval, or original, atmosphere
probably consisted of carbon dioxide, nitrogen and water vapor.
But as the Earth cooled, oceans formed and much of the atmospheric
carbon dioxide dissolved into the water, leaving the Earth
blanketed in mostly nitrogen.
Photosynthetic
life
- primarily in the form of phytoplankton
- arose on Earth about 3.3 billion
years ago. Photosynthesis is a metabolic process by which
some organisms use sunlight, carbon dioxide and water to make
energy. Oxygen is a waste product of photosynthesis, but it
also happens to be necessary for the metabolic process used
by animals. Bacteria and single-celled animals appear in the
fossil record relatively soon after free oxygen began to accumulate
in the atmosphere. But it was not until about 500 million
years ago, not long after plants and trees had colonized the
land, that larger, multi-cellular animals exploded onto the
scene.
Today,
oxygen makes up roughly 21% of the Earthıs atmosphere and
nitrogen makes up about 78%. Carbon dioxide, methane, water
vapor and other compounds each account for a tiny percentage
of todayıs atmosphere. Natural processes maintain the Earth
in this delicate balance. But as weıve seen, small changes
can make a big difference.
Click
on a thumbnail picture to learn about another
great moment in global climate change:
      

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