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The History of Life on Earth. Evidence of the Past. Fossils. Fossils : traces or imprints of once-living things Dead organism is covered by layer of sediment, which presses together to form sedimentary rock. The Ages of Fossils.
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The History of Life on Earth Evidence of the Past
Fossils • Fossils: traces or imprints of once-living things • Dead organism is covered by layer of sediment, which presses together to form sedimentary rock
The Ages of Fossils • Sedimentary rock has layers, with the oldest layers usually on the bottom and newest on the top • Layers where the fossils are found tells a scientist the relative age of fossil • Relative dating: Estimating age of fossil by its position in the rock layers
Absolute Dating • When scientists want to determine the age of a fossil more precisely, they use absolute dating to get an exact age • Absolute dating: method of measuring age of object in years
Scientists examine atoms, which over time, decay by releasing energy • The time it takes for half a sample of atoms to decay is its half-life • Scientists measure the ratio of stable to unstable atoms to determine the age of a sample of rock
The Geologic Time Scale • Scientists use a type of calendar to divide the Earth’s long history • Calendar is divided into very long units of time since the Earth formed so long ago • Geologic Time Scale: the standard method used to divide the Earth’s long natural history into manageable parts
Divisions in Geologic Time Scale • Divided into eras, which are characterized by the type of organisms that dominated the Earth at that time • Precambrian Time: from formation of Earth 4.6 billion years ago to about 543 million years ago • Volcanic eruptions,meteorites, intense radiation from the sun
Early atmosphere had no oxygen—first organisms were prokaryotes (no nucleus) • Cyanobacteria appeared produced own food and released oxygen • Ozone layer forms in upper atmosphere and absorbs radiation from the sun
Paleozoic Era: rocks rich in fossils of animals such as sponges, corals, clams, squids, and trilobites • Fishes appeared, sharks more abundant, forests of giant ferns covered earth
Mesozoic Era: dominated by dinosaurs and other reptiles, referred to as Age of Reptiles • First birds appeared; flowering plants appeared • By end of era, dinosaurs and many other plants and animal species became extinct
Cenozoic Era: sometimes called “Age of Mammals” • Mammals included mastodons, saber-toothed cats, camels, and giant ground sloths • Included some periods known as ice ages
Mass Extinctions • Some of the important divisions in geologic time scale mark times when rapid changes happened on Earth • During these times, many species died out completely, or became extinct • When a species is extinct, is does not reappear
Periods when many species suddenly become extinct are called mass extinctions • Most scientists think that the extinction of the dinosaurs happened because of extreme changes in the climate on Earth
These changes could have resulted from a giant meteorite hitting the earth, or forces within causing major earthquakes and volcanic eruptions
The Changing Earth • Pangaea -German scientist Alfred Wegener noticed that the continents of Earth look like pieces of a puzzle -proposed that long ago the continents formed one landmass surrounded by gigantic ocean
Wegener called the single landmass “Pangaea” which means “all Earth”
Do the Continents Move? • In mid-1960’s, J. Tuzo Wilson came up with idea that continents were not moving by themselves • Wilson thought that huge pieces of Earth’s crust were pushed by forces within the planet
Each piece of crust is called a tectonic plate • Wilson’s theory of how the huge pieces of crust move is called plate tectonics
According to Wilson, outer crust of Earth is broken into seven large plates and several smaller ones • Motion of the plates causes continents to move
Adaptations to Slow Changes • When conditions on Earth change, organisms may become extinct • A rapid change, such as a meteorite impact, may cause mass extinction
Slow changes, such as moving continents, allow time for adaptation • Everywhere on Earth, living things are well adapted to location where they live • Yet in that location, there is evidence that organisms that lived there in the past were very different