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Encyclopedia > Historical period

This is a list of named time periods defined in various fields of study.


This list is under construction: the eventual aim is for it to be a compendium of names of eras and epochs in all fields of study


To do:

  • periods should have approximate dates added in the format (start - finish)
  • lists should be in chronological order of the start of their period.

See

Contents

Cosmological time periods

The cosmological timescale is the longest imaginable. It covers the entire extent of the universe - many billions of years. A short first period is measured in tiny fractions of seconds, but thereafter most things happen on the scale of billion years. It is used to consider events noticeable on a universal scale, such as the formation of matter, stars, and galaxies.

Geologic time periods

The geologic timescale covers the extent of the existence of Earth, from about 4600 million years ago to the present day. It is used to consider the formation and change of the Earth itself, and large-scale changes in the planet's inhabitants.


Dates are given as Millions of Years Ago (MYA).

Eon Era Period Epoch
Precambrian (4600-544 MYA) Hadean (4600-3800 MYA)
Archaean (3800-2500 MYA)
Proterozoic (2500-544 MYA)
Phanerozoic (544 MYA - now) Paleozoic (544-245 MYA) Cambrian (544-505 MYA)
Ordovician (505-440 MYA)
Silurian (440-410 MYA)
Devonian (410-360 MYA)
Carboniferous (360-286 MYA) Mississippian (360-325 MYA)
Pennsylvanian (325-286 MYA)
Permian (286-245 MYA)
Mesozoic (245-65 MYA) Triassic (245-208 MYA)
Jurassic (208-146 MYA)
Cretaceous (146-65 MYA)
Cenozoic (65 MYA - now) Tertiary (65-1.8 MYA) Paleocene (65-54 MYA)
Eocene (54-38 MYA)
Oligocene (38-23 MYA)
Miocene (23-5 MYA)
Pliocene (5-1.8 MYA)
Quaternary (1.8 MYA - now) Pleistocene (1.8-0.01 MYA)
Holocene (0.01 MYA - now)


The Paleocene, the Eocene, and the Oligocene are also collectively known as the Paleogene. The Miocene and the Pliocene are also collectively known as the Neogene.


These names differ across different countries; in particular, the division of the Carboniferous period into Mississippian and Pennsylvanian is purely a North American distinction.


Human time periods

The "human" timescale covers the time that humans have existed, usually taken to be from about 250,000 years ago - when Homo Sapiens began to develop. It is broadly divided into prehistorical (before history began to be recorded) and historical periods (when written records began to be kept).


Calendar systems

Human prehistorical periods

Human prehistory is usually divided by stages in development. However, different parts of the world entered these developmental stages at different times, so it is impossible to put firm dates on these periods.

Human historical periods

Specialist human periods

There are many fields which have their own associated historical periods. These include:


Not yet in any particular order


  Results from FactBites:
 
1.1.2 periods, phases (802 words)
It is only for convenience and for the sake of highlighting history that we encapsulate historical process into discrete events: the founding of a city, the death of an emperor, the fall of an empire.
Yet, except in cases of violent termination of physical structures or in the death of an individual, historical events cannot be contained in brief chronologies and in each case, including the sacking of cities or the death of leaders, the significance of the historical event extends both before and beyond its discrete chronology.
Historical periods, phases of culture and epochs of civilization are interpretive tools which we use to make sense of discerned patterns of meaning.
What Is Historical Fiction? (933 words)
It may have something to do with the public's on-again, off-again appreciation of history in general, or a general perception that historical fiction is simply another flavor of history, a subject many learned to dread in school.
The writer of historical fiction is first a writer not of history, but of fiction, and fiction is about characters, not events.
So historical fiction is a close relative of history, but not simply a retelling of the lectures we learned to dread in high school.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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