9.evolution theories essential question: how does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative...

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9.Evolution Theories Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution? Learning Target: I can describe who Charles Darwin was and his inference about life on earth. Learning Task: I will watch short film clips to learn about Charles Darwin and the inferences he made about life on Earth. I can read about two different theories about how evolution occurred..

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Page 1: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

9.Evolution Theories

Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?

Learning Target: I can describe who Charles Darwin was and his inference about life on earth.

Learning Task: I will watch short film clips to learn about Charles Darwin and the inferences he made about life on Earth.

I can read about two different theories about how evolution occurred..

Page 2: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Welcome! Warm Up Friday 4/11/14 Week of 4/7 – 4/11

What is Pangaea?

What does it mean to believe something?

Page 3: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning
Page 4: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

4th Quarter Table of Contents 1

Title Assignment #

Ice Cores 2

Ice Core Webquest 3

Fossil Notes 4

Getting into the Fossil Record 5

Fossil Vocab 6

Fossils over Time (Molds vs Casts) 7

Law of Superposition Vocab 8

Who’s on First? (Wkst) 9

Geologic Time VOCAB 10

Video Evolution Questions Segment 1& 311

Evolution Vocab 12

Page 5: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Belief vs. Understanding

Our beliefs are important to us. They are valid and serve valuable purposes in our life

Science isn’t about telling you what to believe – or about telling you that what you believe is wrong. Rather, Science is about UNDERSTANDING the world around us. You don’t have to believe it, but you should understand it.

Page 6: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Video: Evolution – Evolving Ideas

Today we will watch two video clips from the PBS Series Evolution – Evolving Ideas

You will copy the questions for each section into your lab notebook before watching, and then answer the questions while you watch.

Page 7: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Video: Evolution Questions 11Segment 1: Isn't Evolution Just a Theory?

1. What is a theory?

2. What does Darwin's theory of natural selection aim to explain?

 3. What is an inference?

 4. What was Darwin's inference?

Page 8: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Segment 1: Isn't Evolution Just a Theory?

Full screen/youtube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85diEXbJBIk

Original PBS location:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/11/2/e_s_1.html

Page 9: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Segment 3: How do we know evolution happens?

1. Where is the history of life held?

2. How are whales similar to us? How are they different?

 3. Whales have flippers, but what are the bones similar to on the inside?

 4. What reason do scientists give for a four-legged animal moving closer to water and giving rise to modern whales?

Page 10: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Segment 3: How do we know evolution happens?

Full screen/youtube:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ewtw_nZUIDQ

Original PBS location:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/evolution/library/11/2/e_s_3.html

Page 11: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Most Species that have lived on Earth are now Extinct!

Extinction of species is common.

Extinction of species occurs when the environment changes and the individual organisms of that species do not have the traits necessary to survive and reproduce in the changed environment.

Page 12: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Extinct: The Dodo Bird

The Dodo was a large, flightless bird

It was a relative of pigeons and doves

The last dodo died sometime in the late 17th century

http://science.discovery.com/creatures/10-extinct-species.htm

Page 13: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Extinct: The Dinosaurs

Stegosaurus lived way before Triceratops showed up

Tyrannosaurus wasn't feasting on Apatosaurus (he had been extinct for millions of years by that time)

They were all gone by the time human beings came around

http://science.discovery.com/creatures/10-extinct-species.htm

Page 14: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Extinct: Passenger Pigeon These pigeons once

blackened the sky as it roamed in flocks numbering in the billions

Westward-bound settlers chopped down the birds' habitat at an alarming pace.

In less than 100 years, this species was in a lot of trouble.

The last passenger pigeon died in a Cincinnati zoo in 1914. http://science.discovery.com/creatures/10-extinct-species.htm

Page 15: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Extinct: Saber-Toothed Tiger Has been extinct for over

10,000 years

The cat itself was about the size of a modern-day lion (if not a bit shorter), but far more robust

This fierce predator once roamed freely in the grasslands and forests of North and South America

We should probably be happy we're not living in the Ice Age!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Smilodon_Skeleton.jpg

Page 16: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

In your Lab Notebook: Evolution Vocab 12

Darwin –a naturalist who proposed and provided scientific evidence that all species of life have evolved over time from common ancestors

Natural Selection – survival of the fittest organisms that are the best adapted to their environment and will live long enough to reproduce and pass on those adaptations

• Theory – a explanation that ties together many hypothesis and observations

Create Frayer Models for the words

Page 18: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Google Drive: 9. Inheritance of Acquired Characteristics Vs. Natural Selection ~ Reading & Questions

Page 19: 9.Evolution Theories  Essential Question: How does the evidence of geology, fossils, and comparative anatomy support the theory of evolution?  Learning

Exit Ticket

What theory of evolution was proposed by Charles Darwin?