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Learn about the characteristics of life, the organization of science, the scientific method, and the debate between science and pseudoscience. Explore various fields of physical and biological sciences. Improve your understanding of observations, inferences, theories, and laws.
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Biology Introduction Characteristics of Life
Science • Science vs Psuedoscience • Psuedo = ????????
Science • Science vs Psuedoscience • Psuedo = false/fake • Science is either : • Physical or Biological
Organization of Science • Physical Science is: remember last year • Non-living • Earth Science • Meteorology – Weather • Oceanography – Oceans • Geology – Rocks and Minerals • Astronomy – Stars and Planets • Chemistry – Make-up of matter and it’s changes • Physics – Study of Energy: heat, light, electrical, mechanical, and nuclear
Organization of Science • Biological Science is: • Living – Biology is the study of life • Botany • Plants • Zoology • Animals • Environmental: Botany and Zoology • Anatomy: Zoology • Organism – an individual capable of life processes
Organization of Science • The Goal of Science is: • The process of gaining new knowledge about the world (nature) living and non-living through data collection • Data- information gathered from observations • 1. Quantitative -numbers -count (1,2,3, etc…) -measure (1g, 2 cups) • 2. Qualitative -descriptive characteristics the dog looks old
Vocabulary to know before we start • A. Variable- one factor being tested • 1. Manipulated Variable (independent) • -deliberately changed • 2. Responding Variable (dependent) • -observed • changes in response to manipulated variable • B. Control-experiment w/out variable • It’s the part you DON’T change in experiment
How Scientists Work • Designing an Experiment SCIENTIFIC METHOD • State the problem • Form a hypothesis • If……….and ……..then • Set up experiment • Record data • Analyze results • Draw a conclusion
Hypothesis Writing • The true nature of science and experimentation lies in the hypothesis • Three parts • IF…. Problem part of experiment CONTROL • AND…contains INDEPENDENT maninipulated variable • THEN…. Contains the DEPENDENT responding variable
A long time ago ……………. • people made observations and said that some living things could suddenly appear: • -Maggots on meat (no refrigerators then) • -Mice on grain • -Beetles on cow dung • Thought: live arose (came) from nonliving • -maggots arose from meat • -beetles arose from dung • Spontaneous Generation- idea that life could arise from nonliving matter
REDI • 1668- Redi • -propose a different hypothesis for why maggots appear on meat • Question: Do flies produce maggots? • The idea that life only comes from other life • Disproved spontaneous generation by putting meat into jars • Published result in a book that other scientist read.
Francisco Redi • Redi’s Experiment: • Some jars were covered with a mesh cloth • Others were left open • Several days later maggots were on the meat in open jars, no maggots were on the covered meat
About the same time as Redi…… • Anton van Leeuwenhoek • -discovered tiny moving objects in pond water, rainwater, and dust • -objects “alive” • -called them animolecules or “tiny animals” • -made drawings • -shared with other scientists
Later on in the mid 1700’s……. • Needham • -challenged Redi’s work • -Remember: Redi= no spontaneous generation • -Needham = spontaneous generation could occur under the right conditions
Needham’s Experiment • -sealed bottle of gravy and heated it • -claimed heat killed any living organisms • -waited a few days • -observed tiny organisms (microorganisms) • -conclusion: organisms could have only come from juice of gravy
Spallanzazni • -Thought Needham didn’t heat gravy long enough- improved experiment • -2 bottles of gravy • -both boiled • -1 open, 1 sealed • -waited a few days • Conclusions: • -open bottle= many microorganisms • -closed bottle = none • life only comes from life
The debate continued….. • Pasteur (mid 1800’s) • Repeated past experiments • Designed a curved (swan neck) flask • Flask remained open but air could not make it through the neck in to the flask • Showed as long as broth was protected from microorganisms, it remained free of living things • Year after experiment began • Broke flask • Organisms grew
Observation vs Inference • Observations use senses to gather information • Inference is logical interpretation (not always fact) based on prior knowledge
Over time theories develop • Theory-most logical explanation for an event in nature • -time-tested • -dependable prediction If a theory survives time and experimentation it becomes a: • Scientific Law- summarizes facts • -does NOT explain • -states what always happens under given circumstances • **Both Laws and Theories are tentative • -they may change as new information is provided
Characteristics of Life • Nine (9) Characteristics all living things have in common FRED H GARC
Characteristics of Life • FRED • F – Use and need Food • R – Must be capable of Reproduction • E – Must be able to transfer Energy • D – Develop and Grow • Undergo a series of stages to reach maturity • Infant – Toddler – Young Adult – Adult • And an increase in living material
Characteristics of Life • H • H – Homeostasis • Steady internal state • H+ • Blood Pressure • Respiration • Body Temperature • Ect.
Characteristics of Life • GARC • G – Genetic code • Based on universal genetic code • A – Adapt to change • Structural – wings, arms, ect. • Physiological – internal body processes • Behavioral – innate, learned • R – Respond to stimuli • C – Made of at least one (1) Cell
Levels of Biological Organization • Populations • Community • Ecosystems • Biosphere • molecules • cells • groups of cells (tissues, organs & organ systems) • organisms
Key Terms • Biotic • Living factors • Abiotic • Non-living factors • Adaptation • A feature that enable survival • Species • A group of similar looking organisms that can breed and produce offspring • Evolution • A gradual change in a species over time
Biology Introduction Characteristics of Life