Pennsylvania is a habitat for many species of animals.
i cannot possibly tell you every animal that lives in Pennsylvania , but there are animals in Pennsylvania, of the sqame species and origins as there are in any part of the world, therer are nam species.
During the Pennsylvanian period, Earth's landmasses were consolidated into the supercontinent Pangea. The climate was warm and humid, leading to extensive swamp forests that eventually formed the coal deposits we extract as fossil fuels today. The period was characterized by the diversification of early reptiles and the emergence of the first insects to fly.
During the Carboniferous period, dominant species included early amphibians, insects, and vast forests of primitive plants. This period is often referred to as the "Age of Amphibians" due to the diverse amphibian species that thrived in swampy environments.
the dominant plants in the Triassic period was seedplants, Glossopteris(southern hemisphere), in the northern hemisphere, conifers Want more info about the triassic period?www.kidcyber.com.au/topics/dino_Triassic.htm
Plants produce oxygen during photosynthesis by using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen. Animals, including humans, consume oxygen during respiration to produce energy and release carbon dioxide. This continuous cycle of oxygen production by plants and consumption by animals helps maintain the levels of oxygen in the atmosphere.
The earliest stage of growth and development in both plants and animals is the embryonic stage. In plants, this stage begins with the germination of the seed, while in animals it starts with fertilized egg development. During this stage, the cells divide rapidly and differentiate to form the basic structures of the organism.
Cambrian Period Actually the correct answer to this question is the "Pennsylvanian Period".
The common subject for art during the ancient period were plants and animals because concrete figures did not exist them.
The plants lived around and among the inland sea
In the Paleozoic period, animals such as trilobites, brachiopods, ammonites, and early vertebrates flourished. Plants included ferns, horsetails, and early seed plants. During the Mesozoic period, dinosaurs, marine reptiles like ichthyosaurs and plesiosaurs, as well as early mammals and birds were prevalent. Plants such as conifers, cycads, and ginkgoes thrived during this time.
The agricultural revolution
During the Pennsylvanian period, Earth's landmasses were consolidated into the supercontinent Pangea. The climate was warm and humid, leading to extensive swamp forests that eventually formed the coal deposits we extract as fossil fuels today. The period was characterized by the diversification of early reptiles and the emergence of the first insects to fly.
they did not travel as much or as far
The sun caused the plants to grow that fed the animals that made the oil during the Carboniferous period.
There were fungi, arthropods, and varied types of ofterapods (these are types of plants). Animals from this time period include several types of mollusks, echinoderms, brachiopods, fusulinids, ammonoids, and shelled cephlapods.
The first plants with spores, which indicates that they were land plants, appeared in the Middle Ordovician period, about 470 million years ago. First records of tetrapods, or land animals, show up in the fossil record around 370 million years ago.
There were simple plants in the Cambrian Period(542 - 488.3Ma). Fossil algae has been found in Cambrian Rocks. Evidence of primitive algae from the Precambrian Super-Eon has also been found but exact classification has not been established. It is true that embryophytes (Plants we most recognise) did not evolve until the Ordovician Period(488.3 - 443.7Ma).
during the devonian period early amphibians developed also ferns, seed plants, and bearing plants appear on land