1 / 53

Fossils and the Discovery of Earth History

Explore the evidence of past life through fossils and their importance in understanding Earth's history. Discover the types of fossils, modes of preservation, and early human interest in fossils. Unravel the myths and learn about early scientific contributions to the field.

bartletta
Download Presentation

Fossils and the Discovery of Earth History

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 004 Fossils and the Discovery of Earth History

  2. FOSSIL Evidence of the existence of past life

  3. Problems with using fossils: • only organisms with hard parts will be fossilized and leave a record • if you find a fossil in a certain place, it doesn’t mean it lived there; example-continent moved after extinction • record is uneven in time and area • many fossils that get preserved are a dead end • most of record is lost or unexplored; missing link- look at homonids

  4. Benefits of using fossils: • provides evidence that it once existed • provides minimum ages • documents extinction’s • use them to put together scenarios in paleoclimatology or extinction/immigration scenarios-----complete record with Hyracotherium

  5. Horse Evolution

  6. Horse Evolution Timeline Hyracotherium Pliohippus 55 mya 10 mya Miohippus EOCENE ERA OLIGOCENE ERA 30 mya OLIGOCENE ERA Equus Mesohippus 4 mya MODERN ERA Merychippus 40 mya OLIGOCENE ERA 20 mya OLIGOCENE ERA

  7. Hyracotherium 55 mya Miohippus 35 mya Merychippus 17 mya Equus modern Note: diagram is scaled so organisms appear to be the same size

  8. TYPES OF FOSSILS Body Fossils Remains of the organism itself Trace Fossils Evidence of the movement or activity of the organism

  9. Body Fossils stingray fish

  10. TRACE FOSSILS Tracks and Trails Burrows and Borings Coprolites

  11. Trace Fossils Tracks Trails

  12. Trace Fossils Burrows & Borings This section of fossil conifer wood is Cretaceous of the Antarctic Peninsula.The round holes, filled with brown mudstone or white crystals, were formed by wood-boring bivalves that bored into the log while it was floating on the Cretaceous seas as driftwood.

  13. Trace Fossils Coprolite

  14. Modes of Body Part Preservation • 1. Unaltered fossils • Soft parts (rare) & Hard parts • A. peat bogs • B. amber • C. tar pits • D. mummification or desiccation • E. refrigeration Jellyfish fossil- Precambrian Edicarian Fauna

  15. Modes of Body Part Preservation • 2. Altered fossils • petrifaction • permineralization • replacement • recrystalization • carbonization

  16. Modes of Body Part Preservation • 3. Imprints • molds • impressions

  17. 1. Unaltered Fossil A. Peat bog A variety of fossils preserved by rapid burial in this anaerobic environment.

  18. 1. Unaltered Fossil B. Amber With Insects Amber is the pitch from conifer trees

  19. Mosquito in Amber

  20. 1. Unaltered Fossil C. Tar Pits La Brea Tar Pit Ground Sloth

  21. 1. Unaltered Fossil D. Mummification Leonardo Duck-billed dinosaur 77 myo. Montana

  22. 1. Unaltered Fossil E. Refrigeration Wooly Mammoth frozen in Siberia (found 1987)- 20,000 years old

  23. 2. Altered Fossil Petrifaction Permineralized- original pore space is filled in with minerals Shark’s Tooth

  24. 2. Altered Fossil Petrified wood

  25. 2. Altered Fossil Carbonization coal

  26. 3. Imprints Glossopteris impression Gastropod mold

  27. Other Kinds of Evidence For Past Life Gastroliths Fossil Fuels

  28. Characteristics of Fossils Known to the Ancients • Fossils exhibit great diversity in forms, some resembling living forms, some appearing very different from modern forms. • Physical consistency is usually that of stone rather than of the materials exhibited by comparable living species. • Many fossils are found high in the mountains resembled forms that normally occur in the ocean. • Fossils are often found encased in hard stone.

  29. Evidence for Early Human Interest in Fossils • 80,000 year old Neanderthal site with fossil snail and coral skeletons. • 35,000 year old Cro-Magnon burial site with fossil-shell necklaces. • Early Egyptian site (perhaps 3200 B.C.E.) with fossil mounted in metal. • It is possible, but not certain, that these prehistoric peoples regarded fossils as magical.

  30. Mythical Ideas About Fossils Fossils grew in the rocks No distinction between fossils and crystals and ores Magical and curative powers Artifacts of the Devil

  31. Diluvialism Tertuillian 155 - 222 C.E. The view that great floods were a major contributor to earth evolution Example of catastrophism

  32. Leonardo da Vinci 1452 - 1519 • Observed fossils on mountains • Rejected flood theory • Argued that the earth is old • Grasp concept of superposition

  33. Robert Hooke (1635-1703) Petrified Wood Studied fossils and compared them to living organisms

  34. Nicholaus Steno 1638 - 1686 Compared sharks teeth to “tongue stones” Argued that fossils could be altered in chemical composition without changing their form Steno’s Law of Superposition

  35. Superposition Superposition

  36. Stratigraphic setting of the Cambrian Burgess Shale 505 MYA 540 MYA

  37. Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon 1707 - 1788 Origin of the Earth- collision of a comet with the sun Age of Earth ~75K

  38. Histoire Naturelle

  39. Extinction

  40. Baron Georges Cuvier 1769 - 1832 Catastrophist Species don’t change over time Theory of extinction

  41. Catastrophism • Fossil record provided evidence for catastrophes • Earth is young • E.g. Noah’s flood • Recent: meteor impact & volcanism

  42. William Smith 1769 - 1839 Development of the Geologic Time Scale Principle of faunal succession

  43. Correlating Rock Layers

  44. Geologic Time Scale

  45. James Hutton 1726 - 1797 • The Rock Cycle • Deep Time • Uniformitarianism

  46. The Rock Cycle

  47. Deep Time "we find no vestige of a beginning and no prospect of an end"

  48. Uniformitarianism • The present-day earth has been shaped slowly by everyday forces of erosion and deposition • Earth is old • E.g., erosion & uplifting = mountains

  49. Charles Lyell 1797 - 1875

More Related