No, the first vertebrates evolved long before the Mesozoic. The first vertebrates, small jawless fish, evolved around 520 million years ago. Land animals had even evolved long before the Mesozoic Era.
The mammals.
No. The 1st vertebrates appeared in the fossil record about 525 million years ago during the Cambrian Period. This was in the Paleozoic Era.
MAMMALS
The phylum Cnidaria was not present during the Cambrian period. Cnidarians, which include jellyfish and corals, appeared later in the fossil record during the Ediacaran period and diversified in the subsequent periods.
The first vertebrates evolved during the Cambrian Explosion about 525 million years ago. The Cambrian Explosion, obviously, occurred during the Cambrian period. The Cambrian period was part of the Paleozoic era.
What happened to the earth's continents during permian period is pangea
precambrian era
One is that the first reptiles (not dinosaurs!) appeared. The land during this peiod was swamp-forests.
The period, you mean? They first appeared during the Devonian Period.
No, Technically cordata were introduced in the late Camrian period in the form of small fish.. But The Devonian period is when the first large sharks and fish began to apear, I also believe that amphibians were on land in the mid-late devonian, and were abundant in the Carboniferous.
Jurassic
there was no quarternary period, so make up a climate for your made up time period.