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Core Samples

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Core Samples Unlocking Puzzles of the Past What is a Sediment Core? A sediment core is a long piece of sediment collected from the bottom of a body of water. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Core Samples


1
Core Samples
Unlocking Puzzles of the Past
2
What is a Sediment Core?
  • A sediment core is a long piece of sediment
    collected from the bottom of a body of water.
  • The core is analyzed to reveal evidence of
    organisms that lived during sediment formation.

3
How is a Core Collected?
Pushing the empty tube into the mud
Tube containing sediment core is carried out of
the pond
  • Researchers push an empty tube into the pond
    bottom and use suction to pull out a core of
    sediment

4
How is a Core Collected?
Removing a core from the tube
  • The sediment core is removed from the empty tube
    in one continuous piece

5
How is a Core Collected?
Measuring and describing a core
Wrapping a core
  • The sediment core is described, carefully wrapped
    up, and taken back to the lab for study

6
What Can We Find In Cores?
  • Plant macrofossils are preserved seeds, leaves or
    other plant segments useful in identifying
    plants.
  • Plant microfossils are tiny pollen grains and
    spores that are also useful, but can only be
    identified with a very strong microscope.

Seed
Leaf fragment
Pollen grains
7
What Can We Find In Cores?
  • We also can find signs of human activity such as
    charcoal from fires or metal from industrial
    activities

Industrial particle
8
Relative Dating
? Top of Core ? Older macrofossils are
found at deeper levels ? Bottom of Core
Since shallow layers settled later, macrofossils
found higher are younger than those found in
deeper levels.
9
Relative Dating
Relative dating of fossils doesnt give
information about actual age of the fossils but
it does allow researchers to understand how the
ecological community changed over time.
10
Relative Dating
  • By identifying plant macrofossils throughout the
    core, its possible to tell which plants were
    present when each sediment layer was formed.

11
Compression
  • The correlation between fossil depth and age is
    difficult to determine due to several factors
    including compression.

12
Compression
As sediment layers settle one atop another, top
layers create pressure on lower layers. The
excess weight presses the lower layers tightly
together.
Sediment compression is exaggerated when the core
is pressed into the tube to be withdrawn.
13
Why study Miller Woods?
  • The Miller Woods are home to 150 ponds that are
    the last remnants of a once extensive pond
    system.

14
Why study Miller Woods?
  • The ponds formed in rows as glaciers, and Lake
    Michigan, retreated to the North in a process of
    melting, stalling and melting 15,000 years ago.

Glaciers covered Michigan 20,000 years ago
15
Why study Miller Woods?
  • Henry Cowles, for which Cowles bog is named,
    reported upwards of 50 rows of ponds in the area
    in the early 1900s. Today only a few remain with
    the rest having been taken over by industry and
    housing.

16
Why study Miller Woods?
  • These ponds contain many unique groups of plants
    and animals that need to be protected.
  • We need to understand about how and why the plant
    communities have changed so we can protect them
    for the future

17
In this set of Activities
  • You will collect data from a sediment core to
    better understand how relative dating is used to
    track ecological changes.
  • Youll compare the species that lived there
    through time and explore a connection to these
    changes and the spread of human development.
  • Finally you will collect a core from a local pond
    to appreciate the methods involved.
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