Ages of Life

Ages of Life
Ages of Life
Developer: Atabase
Category: Education

Ages of Life Summary

Ages of Life is a mobile Android app in Education by Atabase. Released in Mar 2026 (recently released ago). Store metadata: updated Mar 20, 2026.

Store info: Last updated on Google Play on Mar 20, 2026 .


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Screenshots

App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot
App screenshot

App Description

Explore geological eras, dinosaurs, and prehistoric life.

Ages of Life

Explore Earth’s complete geological timeline — from the earliest life in the Archean to the rise of mammals in the Cenozoic.

Ages of Life is a comprehensive geological time atlas covering all major eras of Earth’s history, including the Archean, Proterozoic, Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic. Each era is presented with its periods and representative life forms, allowing you to explore how life evolved across billions of years.

Travel through deep time:

• Archean – The earliest evidence of life
• Proterozoic – The rise of complex cells
• Paleozoic – Marine expansion and early land vertebrates
• Mesozoic – The age of dinosaurs
• Cenozoic – The age of mammals

Discover species from each era, from early microorganisms and trilobites to iconic dinosaurs and prehistoric mammals. Every species includes structured scientific information:

• Scientific name
• Geological time range
• Habitat
• Key characteristics
• Paleontological importance

The app features an interactive timeline selector, detailed era and period pages, fast search functionality, and a favorites system. Designed with a minimal and professional dark interface, Ages of Life delivers a focused and educational experience without distractions.

Key Features:

• Complete geological eras and periods
• Dinosaurs and prehistoric species catalog
• Structured scientific descriptions
• Interactive time navigation
• Favorites and search
• English & Turkish language support
• Clean, professional dark theme

Ages of Life is designed for students, educators, paleontology enthusiasts, and anyone interested in Earth’s 4.6-billion-year history.

Earth’s deep time — organized, accessible, and beautifully presented.