the rock & fossil record

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THE ROCK & FOSSIL RECORD Chapter 3 Our World in One Minute!!` http :// www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSt9tm3RoUU

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Chapter 3. The Rock & Fossil Record. Our World in One Minute!!` http :// www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSt9tm3RoUU. Section 1: Earth’s Story and Those Who First Listened. The Principle of Uniformitarianism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The Rock & Fossil Record

The Rock & Fossil RecordChapter 3Our World in One Minute!!`

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZSt9tm3RoUU

Section 1: Earths Story and Those Who First ListenedThe Principle of UniformitarianismFor 30 years a Scottish farmer and scientist named James Hutton studied rock formations in Scotland and England.

He was trying to answer questions like, how do mountains form, how is new rock created, and how old is the Earth

His observations led to the foundation of modern geology the study of the Earth, the materials of which it is made, the structure of those materials, and the processes acting upon them

In 1788, Hutton collected his notes and wrote Theory of the Earth.

In this book he stated that the key to understanding Earths history was all around us.

What he meant was that the processes that we observe today, such as erosion and deposition, remain uniform, or do not change, over time.

Uniformitarianism is the idea that the same geologic processes shaping Earth today have been at work throughout Earths history.

Uniformitarianism Versus Catastrophism

Catastrophism is the principle that states that all geologic change occurs suddenly.

Supporters thought that Earths features, such as mountains, canyons, and seas, formed during rare, sudden events called catastrophesIn Huttons time most people thought the world was only a few thousand years old.

A few thousand years was not enough time for the gradual geologic processes that Hutton described to have shaped our planet.

A Victory for Uniformitarianism

Despite Huttons work, Catastrophism remained geologys guiding principle for decades.

From 1830 1833 a British Geologist named Charles Lyell published three volumes, collectively titled Principles of Geology, in which he reintroduced Uniformitarianism.

Armed with Huttons notes and new evidence of his own, Lyell saw no reason to doubt that major geologic change happened at the same rate in the past as it happens in the present gradually.

Modern Geology A Happy Medium

During the late 20th century, scientists such as Stephen J. Gould challenged Lyells Uniformitarianism. They believed that catastrophies do, at times, play an important role in shaping Earths history.

Today, scientists realize that neither Uniformitarianism nor catastrophism accounts for all geologic change throughout Earths history

Although most geologic change is gradual and uniform, catastrophies that cause geologic change have occurred during Earths history

Huge craters have been found where asteroids and comets are thought to have struck Earth in the past

One being the asteroid that could have potentially killed off the dinosaurs.

Paleontology The Study of Past LifeThe study of past life is called paleontology.

Scientists who study this are called paleontologists.

The data these scientists use are called fossils.

Fossils are the remains of organisms preserved by geologic processes.

Edwin Colbert was a 20th-century vertebrate paleontologist who made important contributions to the study of dinosaurshttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g_pUwYbFgpY

Section 2: Relative Dating: Which Came First?Geologists try to determine the order in which events have happened during Earths history.

They rely on rocks and fossils to do so.

Determining whether an object or event is older or younger than other objects or events is called relative dating.

The Principle of Superposition

Layers of sedimentary rock provide a sequence of history. As you move to the bottom, the layers are older.

Superposition is the principle that states that younger rocks lie above older rocks in undisturbed sequences.

Some rock layers are disturbed by forces within the Earth; these forces can push other rocks into a sequence, tilt or fold rock layers, and break sequences into movable parts.

When rocks sequences are disturbed, or out of order, geologists can use the geologic column as a tool to help.

The Geologic Column

The geologic column is an ideal sequence of rock layers that contains all the known fossils and rock formations on Earth, arranged from oldest to youngest.

Geologists use this column to identify the layers in puzzling rock sequences.

Constructing the Geologic ColumnDisturbed Rock Layers

4 Ways Rock Layers become disturbed:

Fault: a fault is a break in the Earths crust along which blocks of the crust slide relative to one another

Intrusion: An intrusion is molten rock from the Earths interior that squeezes into existing rock and cools

Folding: Folding occurs when rock layers bend and buckle from Earths internal forces

Tilting: Tilting occurs when internal forces in the Earth slant rock layers.

Gaps in the Record UnconformitiesSometimes layers of rock are missing altogether, creating a gap in the geologic record.

An unconformity is a surface that represents a missing part of the geologic column.

Unconformities also represent missing time time that was not recorded in layers of rock.

Unconformities are created by:

Nondeposition the stoppage of deposition when a supply of sediment is cut off

Erosion

Types of Unconformities

Disconformities

The most common type

Are found where part of a sequence of parallel rock layers is missing

Can form when a sequence of rock layers is uplifted. Younger layers at the top of the material is deposited elsewhere. At some future time, deposition resumes, and sediment buries the old erosion surface. The disconformity that results shows where erosion has taken place and rock layers are missing

Represents thousands to millions of years of missing time

Nonconformities

Are found where horizontal sedimentary rock layers lie on top of an eroded surface of older intrusive igneous or metamorphic rock

Represent millions of years of missing time

Angular Unconformities

Are found between horizontal layers of sedimentary rock and layers of rock that have been tilted or folded.

The tilted or folded layers were eroded before horizontal layers formed above them.

Represent millions of years of missing time

Rock Layer Puzzles

Geologists often find rock-layer sequences that have been affected by more than one of the events and features mentioned in this section

Determining the order of events that led to such a sequence is like piecing together a jigsaw puzzle

Section 3Absolute Dating: A Measure of TimeThe process of establishing the age of an object by determining the number of years it has existed is called absolute dating.

Radioactive Decay

To determine absolute ages of fossils and rocks, scientists analyze isotopes of radioactive elements.

Atoms of the same element that have the same number of protons but have different numbers of neutrons are called isotopes.

Most isotopes are stable, but some are unstable and referred to as radioactive.

Radioactive isotopes tend to break down into stable isotopes of the same or other elements in a process called radioactive decay.

Radioactive decay occurs at a steady rate so it can be used to calculate an objects true age.

The Process of Dating Rocks:

An unstable radioactive isotope (the parent isotope) of one element breaks down into a stable isotope (daughter isotope)

The decay of the parent isotope into the daughter isotope can occur in one step or a series of steps, but in either case the rate of decay is constant.

Therefore, to date a rock, scientists compare the amount of parent materials with the amount of daughter material.

The more daughter material there is, the older the rock is.

Radiometric Dating

Radiometric dating is determining the absolute age of a sample, based on the ratio of parent material to daughter material

A half-life is the time that it takes one-half of a radioactive sample to decay.

Example: Lets say a rock contains an isotope with a half-life of 10,000 years. So for this rock, in 10,000 years half of the parent material will have decayed and become daughter material. If you analyze the sample and it has equal amounts of parent and daughter material, then that rock is about 10,000 years old.

After every half-life, the amount of parent material decreases by one-half.

Example: With a 10,000 year half life, after 10,000 years you would still have of the parent material. After 20,000 years, you would have of the parent material (half of is ). After 30,ooo years you would have 1/8 of the parent material (half of is 1/8), etc.

Effigy MoundsImagine traveling back through time before Columbus arrived in America.You are standing on what will be the bluffs of the Mississippi River.You see dozens of people, Native Americans, building large moundsThey are building burial mounds, now an archaeological site called Effigy Mounds National Monument

People lived at Effigy from 2,500 to 600 years ago.

How do we know these dates????Types of Radioactive Dating

Scientists use different radiometric dating techniques based on the estimated age of the object. The older the object is the greater half-life of an isotope you will need.

1. Potassium-Argon MethodIsotope used is Potassium-40

Half-life of 1.3 billion years

Decays to argon and calcium, measuring argon as the daughter material

Used to date rocks older than 100,000 years

2. Uranium-Lead Method

Uranium-238 decays in a series of steps to Lead-206

Half life is 4.5 billion years

The older the rock is the more daughter material (lead-206) there will be in the material

Can be used for rocks more than 10 million years old

Younger rocks do not contain enough daughter material to be accurately measured by this method

3. Rubidium-Strontium method

Rubidium-87 is an isotope that forms the stable daughter isotope strontium-87

Half life is 49 billion years

Used to date rocks older than 10 million years

4. Carbon-14 Method

Carbon is found in three forms: Carbon-12, Carbon-13 and the radioactive form Carbon-14

These carbons combine with oxygen to form the gas carbon dioxide, which is taken in by plants to perform photosynthesis

As long as a plant is alive, new carbon dioxide with a constant carbon-14 to carbon-12 ratio is continually taken in

Animals then eat the plants and contain the same ratio of carbon isotopes

When a plant or animal dies, no new carbon is taken in.

The amount of carbon-14 begins to decrease as the organism decays, and the ratio to carbon-12 to carbon-14 decreases.

This decrease can be measured in a lab

Because the half-life of carbon-14 is only 5,730 years, this dating method is used mainly for dating things that lived within the last 50,000 years

Section 4: Looking at Fossils40The remains or physical evidence of an organism preserved by geologic processes is called a fossil.

Fossils are most often preserved in sedimentary rock, but other materials can also preserve evidence of past life.

7 Types of Fossils:

1. Fossils in Rocks

Usually when an organism dies, it immediately begins to decay or is eaten by another organism

Sometimes though organisms are quickly buried by sediment when they die

The sediment slows down decay. Hard parts like shells and bones are more resistant to decay than soft tissues

When sediments become rock, the hard parts of animals are much more commonly preserved than are soft tissues

2. Fossils in Amber

Hardened tree sap is called Amber

Sometimes organisms, usually types of insects, are trapped in tree sap which hardens over time.

Organisms are fully preserved inside that tree sap, DNA and all

3. Petrifacation

Petrifaction is a process in which minerals replace an organisms tissues

Permineralization is a process in which the pore space in an organisms hard tissue (bone or wood) is filled up with mineral

Replacement is a process in which the organisms tissues are completely replaces by minerals

4. Fossils in Asphalt

There are places on Earth where asphalt wells up at the Earths surface in thick, sticky pools (are also called tar pits)

The La Brea asphalt deposits in Los Angeles are at least 38,000 years old

These pools have trapped and preserved many kinds of organisms from the past 38,000 years

From these fossils scientists have learned about the past environment of southern California

Early excavations at the La Brea tar pits of central Los Angeles during the period 19131915 unearthed roughly a million bones from nearly a hundred sites. Photo courtesy of the George C. Page Museum. Source:

Fossils discovered in the tar pits of La Breahttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7FK59waeo0

6:09475. Frozen Fossils

Cold temperatures slow decay

Many types of frozen fossils are preserved from the last ice age

In October 1999, scientists recovered a complete 20,000 year old woolly mammoth frozen in the Siberian tundra woolly mammoths became extinct approximately 10,000 years ago.

http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=FDCCD32E-D697-408B-8EA3-28F781244276&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US#

6. Trace Fossils

Any naturally preserved evidence of animal activity is called a trace fossil

Examples are tracks, burrows, coprolite

Footprints that fill with sediment and become preserved in rock reveal a lot about the animal that made them, including how big it was, how fast it moved. Parallel track ways showing dinosaurs moving in the same direction have led scientist to hypothesize that dinosaurs moved in herds

Burrows are shelters made by animals such as clams, that burry in the sediment. Burrows are preserved when they are filled in with sediment and buried quickly

Footprints from the Triassic Period

Cross-section of Mammoth footprints

Burrows7. Molds and Casts

A cavity in rock where a plant or animal was buried is called a mold

A cast is an object created when sediment fills a mold and becomes a rock

A cast shows what the outside of the organism looked like

This photograph shows two molds from an ammonite. The image on the left is the internal mold of the ammonite, which formed when sediment filled the ammonites shell, which later dissolved away. The image on the right is the external mold of the ammonite, which preserves the external features of the shell.

MOLDCASThttp://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=289d834f-99b5-44d2-be32-80a6846af348

United Streaming: The Formation of Fossils 3:16Using Fossils to Interpret the Past

The fossil record offers only a rough sketch of the history of life on Earth. There are huge gaps in the fossil record.

The fossil record contains more information about organisms with hard parts, and organisms that lived in locations that favor the production of fossils.

The record is incomplete because most animals have never become fossils, and those that have, have yet to be discovered.

History of Environmental Change

The fossil record reveals a history of environmental change.

Marine fossils help scientists reconstruct ancient coastlines and the deepening and shallowing of ancient seas.

Using the fossils of plants and land animals, scientists can reconstruct past climates.

This scientist has found marine fossils on mountaintops in the Yoho National Park in Canada. The fossil of Marrella, shown above, tells the scientist that these rocks were pushed up from below sea level millions of years ago.History of Changing Organisms

By studying the relationships between fossils, scientists can interpret how life has changed over time.

Because the fossil record is so incomplete, they look for similarities between fossils, or between fossilized organisms and their closest living relatives, and try to fill in the blanks of the fossil record

Fossil Record of Horses25 Amazing Ancient Beasts!http://www.livescience.com/13670-25-amazing-ancient-beasts-dinosaurs-reptiles.html

Using Fossils to Date Rocks

To be considered an index fossil, a fossil must be found in rock layers throughout the world.

One example of an index fossil is ammonites called Tropites. Tropites was a marine mollusk similar to a modern squid. It lived in a coiled shell. Lived between 230 and 208 million years ago and is an index fossil for that period of time.

Tropites is a genus of coiled ammonites. Tropites existed for only about 20 million years, which makes this genus a good index fossilFossils of Trilobites called Phacops are another example of an index fossil. Trilobites are extinct, and their closest living relative is the horseshoe crab.

By dating rock, paleontologists determined that Phacops lived approximately 400 million years ago. So when they find one in rock layers anywhere on Earth, they assume that these rock layers are also about 400 million years old.

Paleontologists assume that any rock layer containing a fossil of the trilobite Phacops is about 400 million years oldSection 5: Time Marches OnGeologic Time

Using Radioactive Dating to date the oldest rocks on record, scientists have estimated the Earth to be 4.6 billion years old.

One of the best places in North America to see the Earths history recorded in rock layers is in Grand Canyon National Park. The Colorado River has cut the canyon nearly 2 km deep in some places. Over the course of 6 million years, the river has eroded countless layers of rock. These layers represent almost half, or nearly 2 billion years, of Earths history.

Bones of dinosaurs that lived about 150 million years ago are exposed in the quarry wall at Dinosaur National Monument in Utah.

Well-preserved plant and animal fossils are common in the Green River formation. Clockwise from the upper right are a fossil leaf, a dragonfly, a fish, and a turtle.The Geologic Time Scale

The geologic time scale is a scale that divides Earths 4.6 billion year history into distinct intervals.

The largest divisions of geologic time are eons.

There are four eons:

1. The Hadean eon 2. The archean eon 3. The Proterozoic eon 4. The Phanerozoic Eon

The Phanerozoic eon is divided into three eras, which are the second-largest divisions of geologic time

The three eras are further divided into periods, which are the third-largest division of geologic time

Periods are divided into epochs, which are the fourth-largest divisions of geologic time

The boundaries between geologic time intervals represent shorter intervals in which visible changes took place on Earth.

At certain times during Earths history, the number of species has increased or decreased dramatically.

Extinction is the death of every member of a species.

Gradual events such as global climate change and changes in ocean currents, can cause mass extinctions; a combination of these events can also do the same.

The Paleozoic Era Old Life

Lasted from about 542 million to 251 million years ago. It is the first era well represented by fossils.

Marine life flourished at the beginning of the Paleozoic. The oceans became home to a diversity of life.

However, there were few land organisms.

By the middle of the Paleozoic, all modern groups of land plants had appeared.

By the end of the era, amphibians and reptiles lived on the land, and insects were abundant.

The Paleozoic came to an end with the largest mass extinction in Earths history. Some scientists believe that ocean changes were a likely cause of this extinction, which killed nearly 90% of all marine species.

Jungles were present during the Paleozoic era, but there were no birds singing in the trees and no monkeys swinging from the branches. Birds and mammals didnt evolve until much laterThe Mesozoic Era The Age of ReptilesBegan about 251 million years ago.

Is known as the Age of Reptiles, because reptiles, such as the dinosaurs, inhabited the land.

Small mammals appeared about the same time as the dinosaurs, and birds appeared late in the Mesozoic Era.

Many scientists think that birds evolved directly from a type of dinosaur

At the end of the Mesozoic, about 15% to 20% of all species on Earth, including the dinosaurs, became extinct. Global climate change may have been the cause.

http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=1BF96847-DDE3-472F-A940-25D08D033D4E&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US

The Cenozoic Era The Age of MammalsBegan about 65.5 million years ago and continues to the present.

During the Mesozoic, mammals had to compete with dinosaurs and other animals for food and habitat. After the mass extinction, mammals flourished.

Unique traits, such as regulating body temperature internally, and bearing young that develop inside the mother, may have helped mammals survive the environmental changes that probably caused the extinction of the dinosaurs.

http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=1BF96847-DDE3-472F-A940-25D08D033D4E&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US