Title: Lesson Overview
1Lesson Overview
2THINK ABOUT IT
- Fossils, the preserved remains or traces of
ancient life, are priceless treasures. They tell
of life-and-death struggles and of mysterious
worlds lost in the mists of time. - Taken together, the fossils of ancient organisms
make up the history of life on Earth called the
fossil record. - How can fossils help us understand lifes
history?
3Fossils and Ancient Life
- What do fossils reveal about ancient life?
4Fossils and Ancient Life
- What do fossils reveal about ancient life?
- From the fossil record, paleontologists learn
about the structure of ancient organisms, their
environment, and the ways in which they lived.
5Fossils and Ancient Life
- Fossils are the most important source of
information about extinct species, ones that have
died out. - Fossils vary enormously in size, type, and
degree of preservation. They form only under
certain conditions. - For every organism preserved as a fossil, many
died without leaving a trace, so the fossil
record is not complete.
6Types of Fossils
- Fossils can be as large and perfectly preserved
as an entire animal, complete with skin, hair,
scales, or feathers. - They can also be as tiny as bacteria, developing
embryos, or pollen grains. -
7Types of Fossils
- Many fossils are just fragments of an
organismteeth, pieces of a jawbone, or bits of
leaf.
8Types of Fossils
- Sometimes an organism leaves behind trace
fossilscasts of footprints, burrows, tracks, or
even droppings.
9Types of Fossils
- Although most fossils are preserved in
sedimentary rocks, some are preserved in other
ways, like in amber.
10Fossils in Sedimentary Rock
- Most fossils are preserved in sedimentary rock.
- Sedimentary rock usually forms when small
particles of sand, silt, clay, or lime muds
settle to the bottom of a body of water. - As sediments build up, they bury dead organisms
that have sunk to the bottom.
11Fossils in Sedimentary Rock
- As layers of sediment continue to build up over
time, the remains are buried deeper and deeper. - Over many years, water pressure gradually
compresses the lower layers and turns the
sediments into rock.
12Fossils in Sedimentary Rock
- The preserved remains may later be discovered
and studied.
13Fossils in Sedimentary Rock
- Usually, soft body structures decay quickly
after death, so usually only hard parts like
wood, shells, bones, or teeth remain. These hard
structures can be preserved if they are saturated
or replaced with mineral compounds. -
14Fossils in Sedimentary Rock
- Sometimes, however, organisms are buried so
quickly that soft tissues are protected from
aerobic decay. When this happens, fossils may
preserve imprints of soft-bodied animals and
structures like skin or feathers. - This fish fossil was formed in sedimentary rock.
15What Fossils Can Reveal
- The fossil record contains an enormous amount of
information for paleontologists, researchers who
study fossils to learn about ancient life. - By comparing body structures in fossils to body
structures in living organisms, researchers can
infer evolutionary relationships and form
hypotheses about how body structures and species
have evolved. - Bone structure and trace fossils, like
footprints, indicate how animals moved.
16What Fossils Can Reveal
- Fossilized plant leaves and pollen suggest
whether the area was a swamp, a lake, a forest,
or a desert. - When different kinds of fossils are found
together, researchers can sometimes reconstruct
entire ancient ecosystems.
17Dating Earths History
- How do we date events in Earths history?
18Dating Earths History
- How do we date events in Earths history?
- Relative dating allows paleontologists to
determine whether a fossil is older or younger
than other fossils. - Radiometric dating uses the proportion of
radioactive to nonreactive isotopes to calculate
the age of a sample.
19Relative Dating
- Lower layers of sedimentary rock, and fossils
they contain, are generally older than upper
layers. - Relative dating places rock layers and their
fossils into a temporal sequence.
20Relative Dating
- To help establish the relative ages of rock
layers and their fossils, scientists use index
fossils. Index fossils are distinctive fossils
used to establish and compare the relative ages
of rock layers and the fossils they contain. - If the same index fossil is found in two widely
separated rock layers, the rock layers are
probably similar in age.
21Relative Dating
- A good index fossil species must be easily
recognized and will occur in only a few rock
layers (meaning the organism lived only for a
short time). These layers, however, will be found
in many places (meaning the organism was widely
distributed). - Trilobites, a large group of distinctive marine
organisms, are often useful as index fossils.
22Radiometric Dating
- Relative dating is important, but provides no
information about a fossils absolute age in
years. - One way to date rocks and fossils is radiometric
dating. - Radiometric dating relies on radioactive
isotopes, which decay, or break down, into
nonradioactive isotopes at a steady rate. - Radiometric dating compares the amount of
radioactive to nonreactive isotopes in a sample
to determine its age.
23Radiometric Dating
- A half-life is the time required for half of the
radioactive atoms in a sample to decay. - After one half-life, half of the original
radioactive atoms have decayed. - After another half-life, another half of the
remaining radioactive atoms will have decayed.
24Radiometric Dating
- Different radioactive elements have different
half-lives, so they decay at different rates.
25Radiometric Dating
- The half-life of potassium-40 is 1.26 billion
years.
26Radiometric Dating
- Carbon-14, which has a short half-life, can be
used to directly date very young fossils. - Elements with long half-lives can be used to
indirectly date older fossils by dating nearby
rock layers, or the rock layers in which they are
found.
27Radiometric Dating
- Carbon-14 is a radioactive form of carbon
naturally found in the atmosphere. It is taken up
by living organisms along with regular carbon,
so it can be used to date material that was once
alive, such as bones or wood. - After an organism dies, carbon-14 in its body
begins to decay to nitrogen-14, which escapes
into the air. - Researchers compare the amount of carbon-14 in a
fossil to the amount of carbon-14 in the
atmosphere, which is generally constant. This
comparison reveals how long ago the organism
lived. - Carbon-14 has a half-life of only about 5730
years, so its only useful for dating fossils no
older than about 60,000 years.
28Radiometric Dating
- For fossils older than 60,00 years, researchers
estimate the age of rock layers close to
fossil-bearing layers and infer that the fossils
are roughly same age as the dated rock layers. - A number of elements with long half-lives are
used for dating very old fossils, but the most
common are potassium-40 (half-life 1.26 billion
years) and uranium-238 (half-life 4.5 billion
years).
29Geologic Time Scale
- How was the geologic time scale established,
and what are its major divisions?
30Geologic Time Scale
- How was the geologic time scale established,
and what are its major divisions? - The geologic time scale is based on both
relative and absolute dating. The major divisions
of the geologic time scale are eons, eras, and
periods.
31Geologic Time Scale
- Geologists and paleontologists have built a time
line of Earths history called the geologic time
scale. - The basic divisions of the geologic time scale
are eons, eras, and periods.
32Establishing the Time Scale
- By studying rock layers and index fossils, early
paleontologists placed Earths rocks and fossils
in order according to their relative age. - They noticed major changes in the fossil record
at boundaries between certain rock layers.
33Establishing the Time Scale
- Geologists used these boundaries to determine
where one division of geologic time ended and the
next began. - Years later, radiometric dating techniques were
used to assign specific ages to the various rock
layers.
34Divisions of the Geologic Time Scale
- The time scale is based on events that did not
follow a regular pattern. - The Cambrian Period, for example, began 542
million years ago and continued until 488 million
years ago, which makes it 54 million years long. - The Cretaceous Period was 80 million years long.
35Divisions of the Geologic Time Scale
- Geologists now recognize four eons of unequal
length. - The Hadean Eon, during which the first rocks
formed, began about 4.6 billion years ago. - The Archean Eon, when life first appeared, began
about 4 billion years ago. -
36Divisions of the Geologic Time Scale
- The Proterozoic Eon began 2.5 billion years ago
and lasted until 542 million years ago. - The Phanerozoic Eon began at the end of the
Proterozoic and continues to the present.
37Divisions of the Geologic Time Scale
- Eons are divided into eras. The Phanerozoic Eon,
for example, is divided into the Paleozoic,
Mesozoic, and Cenozoic Eras. - Eras are subdivided into periods, which range in
length from nearly 100 millions of years to just
under 2 million years. The Paleozoic Era, for
example, is divided into six periods.
38Naming the Divisions
- Geologists started to name divisions of the time
scale before any rocks older than the Cambrian
Period had been identified. For this reason, all
of geologic time before the Cambrian is simply
called Precambrian Time.
39Naming the Divisions
- The Precambrian actually covers about 90 percent
of Earths history. - In this figure, the history of Earth is depicted
as a 24-hour clock. Notice the relative length of
Precambrian Timealmost 22 hours.
40Life on a Changing Planet
- How have our planets environment and living
things affected each other to shape the history
of life on Earth?
41Life on a Changing Planet
- How have our planets environment and living
things affected each other to shape the history
of life on Earth? - Building mountains, opening coastlines,
changing climates, and geological forces have
altered habitats of living organisms repeatedly
throughout Earths history. In turn, the actions
of living organisms over time have changed
conditions in the land, water, and atmosphere of
planet Earth.
42Life on a Changing Planet
- Earth and its climate has been constantly
changing, and organisms have evolved in ways that
responded to those new conditions. - The fossil record shows evolutionary histories
for major groups of organisms as they have both
responded to changes on Earth and how they have
changed Earth.
43Physical Forces
- Climate is one of the most important aspects of
Earths physical environment. - Earths climate has undergone dramatic changes
over time. Many of these changes were triggered
by fairly small shifts in global temperature. - During the global heat wave of the Mesozoic
Era, Earths average temperatures were only 6C
to 12C higher than they were during the
twentieth century. - During the ice ages, world temperatures were
only about 5C cooler than they are now. - These relatively small temperature shifts
changed the shape of life on Earth.
44Physical Forces
- Geological forces have transformed life on
Earth, producing new mountain ranges and moving
continents. - Volcanic forces have altered landscapes and even
formed entire islands. - Local climates are shaped by the interaction of
wind and ocean currents with geological features
such as mountains and islands.
45Physical Forces
- The theory of plate tectonics explains how solid
continental plates move slowly above Earths
molten corea process called continental drift. - Over the long term, continents have collided to
form supercontinents. Later, these
supercontinents have split apart and reformed.
46Physical Forces
- Where landmasses collide, mountain ranges often
rise. - When continents change position, major ocean
currents change course. - All of these changes affect both local and
global climate.
47Geological Cycles and Events
- Continental drift has affected the distribution
of fossils and living organisms worldwide. As
continents drifted apart, they carried organisms
with them. - For example, the continents of South America and
Africa are now widely separated. But fossils of
Mesosaurus, a semiaquatic reptile, have been
found in both South America and Africa. - The presence of these fossils on both
continents, along with other evidence, indicates
that South America and Africa were joined at one
time.
48Physical Forces
- Evidence indicates that over millions of years,
giant asteroids have crashed into Earth. - Many scientists agree that these kinds of
collisions would toss up so much dust that it
would blanket Earth, possibly blocking out enough
sunlight to cause global cooling. This could have
contributed to, or even caused, worldwide
extinctions.
49Biological Forces
- The activities of organisms have affected global
environments. - For example, Earths early oceans contained
large amounts of soluble iron and little oxygen. - During the Proterozoic Eon, however,
photosynthetic organisms produced oxygen gas and
also removed large amounts of carbon dioxide from
the atmosphere. - The removal of carbon dioxide reduced the
greenhouse effect and cooled the globe. The iron
content of the oceans fell as iron ions reacted
with oxygen to form solid deposits. - Organisms today shape the landscape by building
soil from rock, and sand and cycle nutrients
through the biosphere.