I would leave them be. The ediacarian is a time of peace, of ethics, and justice. They had no need for our wars and cruelty. Were we only so lucky to spend our lives grazing the seafloor bacteria carpet.
If I had a time machine the first era I'd visit would be the one where trees existed but wood-digesting bacteria didn't. Must be a real vista seeing intact logs all over the landscape.
Depending on the eon your choices are actually hell, sulfur mountain, or some grass and jellyfish; there really wasn't a ton going on in the precambrian.
>Were we only so lucky to spend our lives grazing the seafloor bacteria carpet.
Filter feeding is the life.
If I had a time machine the first era I'd visit would be the one where trees existed but wood-digesting bacteria didn't. Must be a real vista seeing intact logs all over the landscape.
>If I had a time machine the first era I'd visit would be the one where trees existed but wood-digesting bacteria didn't.
Most of wood degradation is done by fungus though and land was already readily colonized by various types of fungi. This is the reason the first land plants could colonize land to begin with, an organic strata of soil was already there composed of whatever dead fungi colonized it first. >Must be a real vista seeing intact logs all over the landscape.
You wouldn't see that. Woody plants are pretty new when comparing them to their previous, green stemmed ancestors. What little plants you would see are either tiny shoots no bigger than a few centimeters, never far from water. At most what you would see is a small fern-like plant with no leaves, with around 8 equally long branches ending in a discolored club-like structure.
Don't worry though, the scenery would be completely taken over by fungi, of all sizes, as far as the eye can see. Large fungal monoliths rise up 20 meters into the air. Most of it would be near rivers or the ocean though, most of the soil on earth is iron rich sand.
That's more or less what I remember from university.
what is it?
Grandpop, homie.
Nah, frick that. That thing ain’t my relative.
Roasted lunch meat.
Dickinsonia, potentially the earliest animal life to ever exist.
Dicksonia your face nigguh
The absolute state of prehistoric creatures.
Could be worse
My ancestor 🙂
a warrior awakens
lovely
I-is that a 1.85m long tail butt plug?
Dickinsonia??? I don't even know anybody names Sonia.
>what is it?
Amy Brooke, 1,500,000,000 B. C. E.
I don't know but it looks like it's ready to settle down
I would leave them be. The ediacarian is a time of peace, of ethics, and justice. They had no need for our wars and cruelty. Were we only so lucky to spend our lives grazing the seafloor bacteria carpet.
If I had a time machine the first era I'd visit would be the one where trees existed but wood-digesting bacteria didn't. Must be a real vista seeing intact logs all over the landscape.
honestly the landscape of the precambrian earth would probably be stunning, especially with how different the flora and fauna would be.
Depending on the eon your choices are actually hell, sulfur mountain, or some grass and jellyfish; there really wasn't a ton going on in the precambrian.
that sound amazing and tasty
>Were we only so lucky to spend our lives grazing the seafloor bacteria carpet.
Filter feeding is the life.
>If I had a time machine the first era I'd visit would be the one where trees existed but wood-digesting bacteria didn't.
Most of wood degradation is done by fungus though and land was already readily colonized by various types of fungi. This is the reason the first land plants could colonize land to begin with, an organic strata of soil was already there composed of whatever dead fungi colonized it first.
>Must be a real vista seeing intact logs all over the landscape.
You wouldn't see that. Woody plants are pretty new when comparing them to their previous, green stemmed ancestors. What little plants you would see are either tiny shoots no bigger than a few centimeters, never far from water. At most what you would see is a small fern-like plant with no leaves, with around 8 equally long branches ending in a discolored club-like structure.
Don't worry though, the scenery would be completely taken over by fungi, of all sizes, as far as the eye can see. Large fungal monoliths rise up 20 meters into the air. Most of it would be near rivers or the ocean though, most of the soil on earth is iron rich sand.
That's more or less what I remember from university.
>Large fungal monoliths rise up 20 meters into the air
WEALTH BEYOND MEASURE, OUTLANDER
im sick of this planet as it is today
take me back to the golden era
Puddle hell
train them to succ dick.
is it ready to settle down?
Whether it could move at all is questionable
Graptolites will rise again
You don’t
If I remember correctly dickinsonia had no weapons at all