Back to Paleontology: Early Vertebrate Evolution
University of Alberta

Paleontology: Early Vertebrate Evolution

Paleontology: Early Vertebrate Evolution is a four-lesson course teaching a comprehensive overview of the origin of vertebrates. Students will explore the diversity of Palaeozoic lineages within a phylogenetic and evolutionary framework. This course examines the evolution of major vertebrate novelties including the origin of fins, jaws, and tetrapod limbs. Students also explore key Canadian fossil localities, including the Burgess Shale (British Columbia), Miguasha (Quebec), and Man On The Hill (Northwest Territories). Watch a preview of the course here: https://uofa.ualberta.ca/courses/paleontology-vertebrate-evolution

Status: Environmental Science
Status: Taxonomy
Course7 hours

Featured reviews

DL

5.0Reviewed Jul 8, 2016

I haven't completed this course yet. Self pace and enjoying the lectures and videos. I've taken another Univ of Alberta course on Marine Reptiles which was great! I enjoy the Paleontol

JF

5.0Reviewed Apr 20, 2019

Short but amazing view on fish development with lots of technical terminologies. The very enjoyable way of learning. Thank you for this course and the whole series!

LH

5.0Reviewed Feb 2, 2018

Fabulous for understanding life! I highly recommend this course. Well taught with videos and written notes. Fantastically researched! See how we all began!

RK

4.0Reviewed Jul 20, 2019

Pretty in tense but the quizzes are pretty straightforward and the course goes pretty quickly. The diagrams helped. My first stab at real paleontology and it was a good intro.

TO

5.0Reviewed Jun 20, 2016

WOW, I learned a lot form this and it was fairly educational but not overwhelming or difficult. This instructor really gets the points across without being to easy or hard. A very good class.

AO

5.0Reviewed Sep 10, 2019

Excellent course and good depth for beginners with some general biology background. Hope they continue it for entire evolution of vertebrates. Fantastic. A

CS

5.0Reviewed Sep 15, 2018

This course was very informative and I enjoyed learning about the far past of vertebrates. I would definitely recommend this to anyone interested in paleontology and the history of life.

DO

5.0Reviewed Apr 12, 2016

I thoroughly enjoyed the learning experience on this course. Notes and videos clear and concise, well put together, as expected from University of Alberta.

OV

5.0Reviewed Mar 21, 2020

the course was very interesting even for a 13 year old like me I wold like to encourage more people to do this course and will certainly tell my friends about it

JC

5.0Reviewed Mar 2, 2018

Celebrate your inner fish as you swim along with this awesome course charting our earliest ancestors. Very well constructed and delivered once again by the team at the University of Alberta.

LC

4.0Reviewed Feb 23, 2020

Overall very interesting course and videos. It would be nice to have a page at the end of the course showing the evolution of each fish discussed (along with features and timeline).

LU

5.0Reviewed Apr 26, 2025

Thank you for the opportunity to take this course! I like how closely the lectures follow the readings, and the interactive phylogenetic tree is a great visual learning tool!

All reviews

Showing: 20 of 327

DC
3.0
Reviewed Jun 15, 2018
Ron Odenthal
5.0
Reviewed May 20, 2020
Camilo Mejía Rivera
5.0
Reviewed Jan 18, 2019
Carlo
5.0
Reviewed Sep 9, 2017
Eugene Yanushkevich
5.0
Reviewed Oct 7, 2016
Bruno Leite Pereira Costa
5.0
Reviewed Jul 3, 2018
Jingtian ZHANG
5.0
Reviewed Dec 26, 2020
Steve Marchant
5.0
Reviewed May 18, 2016
Jeff Yeo
5.0
Reviewed Aug 5, 2016
Rohit Pant
5.0
Reviewed Jun 4, 2020
Joanne Osborn
5.0
Reviewed May 25, 2017
Kimberly Krogul
5.0
Reviewed Aug 8, 2016
Llelani Coetzer
5.0
Reviewed Jan 24, 2019
Juan Pirod
5.0
Reviewed Aug 8, 2020
Richard Holmes
2.0
Reviewed Aug 12, 2017
Heather lomond
5.0
Reviewed Dec 17, 2020
Aleksandar Mestric
5.0
Reviewed Jul 13, 2022
Masood Shah
5.0
Reviewed Mar 8, 2025
Ashley Carvalho
5.0
Reviewed Jun 14, 2020
MANIAS ZACHARIAS
5.0
Reviewed Nov 13, 2020