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History of the Earth. A matter-of-time scale… If the age of the Earth (4.6 billion years) were condensed into one year ...
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History of the Earth A matter-of-time scale… If the age of the Earth (4.6 billion years) were condensed into one year ... Jan. 1… Earth was born Early Feb… Oldest known rocks formed Late Mar… First primitive life formed Mid-Nov... First complex life with shells or skeletons formed Late-Nov… First land animals Dec 25… Extinction of the dinosaurs Dec 31… Humans evolved in the evening Dec 31… One second before midnight, humans first set foot on the Moon
BIG Ideas: • Scientists use several methods to learn about Earth’s long history. • The oceans and atmosphere formed and life began during the three eons of the Precambrian, which spans nearly 90% of Earth’s history. • Complex life developed and diversified during the three eras of the Phanerozoic as the continents moved into their present positions.
HOW have scientists investigated and understood the history of Earth and the ages of rocks?
Uniformitarianism: • geologic processes occurring today have been occurring since Earth formed • the present is the key to the past
I. Determining Relative Age Relative Age: • The age of a rock or an event as compared with some other rock or event • A comparison (older vs. younger); does NOT indicate an exact age
Principle of Original Horizontality: most sedimentary layers of rock are deposited in a horizontal position
A. Law of Superposition: an undeformed sedimentary rock layer is older than the one above it and younger than the layer below it.
B. Unconformities: breaks in the geologic record
An UNCONFORMITY is… • a GAP in the sedimentary rock record (like missing pages from a book). • a BURIED erosional surface.
Law of Crosscutting Relationships:a fault or intrusion is always youngerthan the rock layer it cuts through.
II. DeterminingAbsolute Age Absolute Age: • The actual age of the rock.
A. Varve Count How can you tell how old this tree is?
Varves: annual layers of sedimentary rock- consist of a light-colored band of coarse particles- and a darker band of fine particles
B. Radioactive Decay • As elements age, they change into new elements… • Uranium (U) will decay into lead (Pb) - in about 4.5 billion years
1. Half Life: the time it takes for half the mass of a given amount of a radioactive element to decay into its daughter elements.
U-238 decays into Pb-206 U-238 has a half-life of 4.5 billion years If we were to begin with 10g of U-238, after 4.5 billion years you would have 5g of U-238 left After another 4.5 billion years, how much U-238 would remain? How much Pb-206 would you have?
2. Carbon Dating • Organic materials (remains of once-living things) decay at a measurable rate • Can be used to estimate the ages of samples from 0 to 70,000 years old
Would you use half life or carbon dating to date this tooth? Why?
III. The Fossil Record Paleontologist: Scientist that studies fossils. Fossils: the remains or traces of animals or plants from a previous geologic time.
Fossils may be preserved in a number of ways: • Molds: sediment preserves the form of a fossil • Casts: created by filling a mold with mineral or other material • Imprints (trace fossils): tracks or footprints • Original bone or shell
Amber: • the fossilized remaining part of tree resin (which is very thick and sticky when it first flows from a tree) • resin runs down the trunk and may trap insects, spiders, and sometimes larger organisms (like lizards) • these organisms can be preserved for millions of years with details of their soft tissue, such as muscles and hair-like bristles, still intact
Most Virginia fossils are of marine organisms. What does this suggest about the past environment of our state?
Large areas of the state have been periodically covered by seawater.
Coastal Plain Valley and Ridge Appalachian Plateau
Index Fossils: fossils found exclusively in rock layers of a particular geologic age. Phacops (a species of Trilobite): lived 400 million years ago in oceans
Requirements for Index Fossils: • Must be present in rocks scattered over a wide area of Earth’s surface • Must have unique, distinguishing features • Organisms must have lived during a relatively short span of geologic time • Must occur in fairly large numbers within the rock layers