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Geology 1023. Fossils and fossilization. Importance of fossils. Examination of fossils over Earth history shows the evolution of life through time
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Geology 1023 Fossils and fossilization
Importance of fossils • Examination of fossils over Earth history shows the evolution of life through time • Because fossils show a continuous change through time and no fossils disappear and reappear later, they can be used to give relative ages of fossil-bearing strata • Strata bearing the same fossil assemblage can be correlated (even without knowing their age) • Fossils indicate environment of deposition • Fossils can constitute most of a rock
Kinds of fossils • Body fossil: a part of an organism, such as a bone, tooth, scale, etc. • Trace fossil: evidence of organism’s activity, such as a footprint, burrow, feeding trace, etc.
Modes of preservation • Body fossils are commonly replaced or “altered” in some way. • Replacement: substitution of the original material by inorganic mineral precipitation (most easily seen when new material cannot be organically produced, such as pyrite, silica etc.). Often destroys fine details of a fossil (e.g., the fine internal laminar structure of shells)
Modes of preservation • Permineralization: a form of replacement with near-cellular level of replacement of original material preserving details down to the cellular level (e.g., fossil wood in which tree-ring and cell structure is preserved) • Mold: an impression left by a fossil in a rock/sediment (with “negative” geometry) • Cast: results when a mold is infilled by new material (producing the same symmetry as the original)
Likelihood of preservation • Not all organisms are equally likely to be preserved in the fossil record. • Factors that increase the likelihood of preservation include: • Hard parts: organisms with mineralized elements of their bodies, such as shells, skeletons, teeth, scales, etc., are more likely to be preserved than “soft-bodied” organisms like jelly-fish, sea anemones, etc.
Likelihood of preservation • Abundance: the more abundant an organism the greater the likelihood of preservation. Factors that influence overall abundance include: • Size: The smaller an organism the greater the number of fossils (microfossils are much more abundant than large dinosaurs) • Geographic distribution: the more widely distributed the greater the overall numbers • Species time span: The longer an organism has lived the greater the numbers
Likelihood of preservation • Environment: Organisms that live in depositional environments are more likely to be preserved than those in erosive ones • Marine organisms are far more abundant than non-marine (fresh water) forms which outnumber terrestrial (land-based) or aerial ones. • Also, the detailed living conditions also play a role, burrowing marine organisms (“infauna”) are better preserved than organisms that crawl or swim around (“epifauna”)
Likelihood of preservation • Rapid deposition environments preserve both the largest number of individual specimens and also the variety of specimens. It also commonly improves the quality of preservation.
Naming of fossils • Follow the same classification scheme developed initially for living organisms. • 7 major categories: • Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Family,Genus, Species • Each category contains one or more members of the subsequent category. (I.e., kingdoms contain one or more phyla, which contain one or more classes, etc.) • In detail there are often other divisions such as sub- or super-classes, families, etc.
Conventions for naming fossils • Classification scheme invented by Carl Linneus and still called the Linnean classification scheme. • Each organism has a 2-fold name, the genus and species • When written down the genus is ALWAYS capitalized, and both genus and species are underlined when writing by hand. (In printed works they are italicized). It is also common when repeatedly referring to an organism to abbreviate the genus to its initial, hence T. rex(when written by hand) or T. rex (when printed)
Doing the lab. • Q 1 and Q 2 relate to the Linnean classification scheme (familiarization exercise) and the conventions of nomenclature • Q 3 and Q 4 get you thinking about the factors that increase likelihood of preservation. In each case there is a clear “winner” and “loser”.
Doing the lab. • Q 5. Look at the examples of different kind of preservation (back left of lab), labeled “Collection #1”. • Compare “collection 2” (2 sets to help with number of people in lab) to collection 1 examplesto determine the mode of preservation.
Doing the lab. • Q 6. Look at the fossils for the Windsor and Horton groups at the back of the lab (“Collection # 3” and “Collection 4”) and think about environment of deposition. Indicate why.
Doing the lab. • Fossil assemblages in a rock are like a snapshot of life at the time • You can “date” a photograph to a particular era and place. For example, a photograph of Adolph Hitler in Nazi uniform must date from the 1930s or ‘40s, and most likely was taken in Germany.
Doing the lab • Q 7. Using the example of a fictitious photograph, and knowing information about the items shown in the photograph you can “date” the photography by filling in the table with the time range for each item and then noting the time common to all 3
Photo to rock analogy • Though one can determine a possible range for the photo (such as 1990 to 1992) that does not mean the the photo took 2 years to take. It represents an instant in that time period. • Likewise, though fossils give a possible range for a bed containing them, it does not mean that the bed took that entire time to be deposited. It too represents an “instant” in that time period.
Working with real fossils • For Q 8 and Q 9, use the fossils one of the six drawers labeled “Rocks and Fossils” at the back of the lab. • Identify the fossils using the simple identification handout. This takes a little time but you’ll get faster at it with practice. • Note that for each fossil shown in the handout the label given is the genus. Also shown is its time range. L. stands for lower, M. stands for middle and U. stands for upper.
Using the handout • Imagine that you’ve identified a fossil with this image. The handout has two images to show the fossil in different orientations. • Write down Schizophoria as the genus (i.e., capitalized and underlined). • Its age is Silurian to Permian (X in the squares, including Sil. & Perm. ) Note also that the image is half the actual size (x ½)
Ages determined using fossils • In Q 10 you will use the fossil ages determined in Q 8 and Q 9 to “bracket” the age of another unit. • Keep in mind that a fossil age (range) represents a span of time within which the unit was laid down.
Final points • Take the entire drawer to your table. Don’t remove the vials, bring them to the table and then replace them in the drawer. This leads to misplaced fossils. • You may take the fossil out of the plastic vial, but do so one-at-a-time and replace it before opening another. • When you write down the genus in the tables in Q 8 and 9 remember that you MUST underline it. You WILL lose marks for not underlining in this lab and any future lab or lab test.