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3.2 Fossils and the Evolution of life. Major stages in evolution of life The changing atmosphere Other ideas about origins of life. Outcomes.
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3.2 Fossils and the Evolution of life Major stages in evolution of life The changing atmosphere Other ideas about origins of life
Outcomes • Describe key steps in evolution of life, including the development of organic molecules, membranes, procaryotic and eurcaryotic organisms, colonial cells and multicellular organisms • Identify evidence that present-day organisms have evolved from ancestral organisms • Identify the geological and palaeontological evidence that suggests when the earliest life forms appeared on Earth • Explain the importance of the change from an anoxic to an oxic atmosphere on the evolution of living things • Outline how scientific knowledge may be in conflict with cultural understandings in relation to the origins of life
Major stages in evolution of life • Formation of organic molecules • Formation of membranes • Procaryotic cells (earliest type of fossil found; no nucleus) • Eucaryotic organisms( membrane-bound organelles and cell organelles • Colonial cells: daughter cells became bound together after division eg stromatolites • Multicellular organisms: cells showing specialisation within one organisms
Evolution of organisms • Starting from present-day diversity, we can trace back the evolutionary pathways of living organisms • Some appear to have changed greatly eg horses • Others did not change over time eg ; horseshoe crab • Some became extinct eg: dinosaur
Palaeontological and geological evidence of early life • Oldest sedimentary rocks on earth are 3800 million yrs old • Fossils found in sedimentary rocks Fossil evidence in very ancient rocks RARE compared with the abundance of fossils found in rocks over the 600 million yrs • Earliest fossils: 2 types:found in rocks 3400-3500 million yrs old in WA, Sth Africa and North America – microfossils (similar to present-day single-celled anaerobic procaryotes) - Stromatolites : layers of photosynthetic procaryotic cyanobacteria
Stromatolites • Thought to be extinct: only fossils found before 1990’s • 1990’s living stromatolites found in Shark Bay, WA. • Cells form a mat which traps a layer of sediment. • Cyanobacteria grow up through the sediment to forma new mat layer • Grow at a rate of about 1mm per year
Heterotroph to Autotroph • 1st primitive cells were heterotrophic • Cells containing pigments formed .. Able to capture light and use it as energy source to make organic compounds (photosynthesis) • This led to massive reduction in carbon dioxide and increase oxygen which was taken up by rocks : oxidised rocks can be seen in ancient banded iron and red bed rock formations
The changing Atmosphere • All oxidised surface rock saturated with oxygen, oxygen began to build up in atmosphere. • UV radiation reacted with some of it to form ozone until a layer formed around earth, high in atmosphere • Shielded earth from UV rays so less reached earth: decrease in radiation =decrease in heat….. New organisms could form • Change from anoxic to oxic atmosphere meant that anaerobic organisms declined and as oxygen levels increases, more photosynthetic organisms flourished • Today, anaerobic organisms can only survive in low oxygen / high carbon dioxide environments eg: mud swamps, bogs, deep underground or in deep ocean hydrothermal vents
Oxygen increased, organisms developed that could directly use the oxygen : aerobic organisms now using RESPIRATION • This allowed increase in their size and complexity • EUCARYOTIC cells evolved, as did multicellular plants and animals • CONDITIONS changed!!!! • Protection from UV radiation • Free oxygen in atmosphere • Liquid water
Other ideas about origins of life • Ideas often linked to religious or spiritual beliefs of a community/ culture • Creationism • Evolution • Chinese culture: P’an Ku 1st living being • Aboriginal culture: Dreaming • Greek cosmogenies • Others?