Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAubrey McBride Modified over 8 years ago
1
Evolutionary History Chapter 15
2
What you need to know! The age of the Earth and when prokaryotic and eukaryotic life emerged. Characteristics of the early planet and its atmosphere. Methods used to date fossils and rocks. How continental drift can explain the current distribution of species.
3
Earth Earth formed 4.6 billion years ago (bya) Inhospitable conditions made life impossible
4
Earth 3.8 bya the Earth’s surface cooled enough for water to exist in liquid form It rained for millions of years The oceans were born Life emerges 3.8 bya – 3.7 bya
5
Key Events Prokaryotes are the earliest living organisms (3.8 bya – 3.7 bya) Oxygen begins to accumulate (evolution of photosynthesis) 2.7 bya Eukaryotes 2.1 bya (endosymbiotic hypothesis) Multicellular eukaryotes 1.2bya Colonization of Land.5 bya (evolution of plants, fungi, and animals)
6
Continental Drift Giant plates of rock floating on a sea of molten rock Alters habitats (promoting allopatric speciation) Accounts for biogeographical phenomenon (trilobites, marsupials) Causes Mass Extinctions Adaptive radiation on a global scale
7
Precambrian Time All of this time, from the beginning of the earth to the evolution of prokaryotes, eukaryotes, and multicellular organisms is called Precambrian Time Precambrian Time lasts from 4.6 bya to 544 mya (.544 bya) A mass extinction ends Precambrian Time (snowball Earth)
8
Paleozoic 225mya – 544mya Cambrian (Cambrian Explosion) Ordovician Silurian Devonian Carboniferous Permian (Permian Extinction 95% of all life)
9
Paleozoic
12
Mesozoic Age of Reptiles, 65mya – 225mya Triassic Jurassic Cretaceous (mass extinction 50% of all life)
13
Mesozoic
16
Cenozoic Age of Mammals, Today – 65mya Paleogene Neogene
17
Cenozoic
21
Relative Dating Comparison of fossil age to strata age (age of the layer of rock the fossil is found in) Index fossils existed for a short period of time over a wide geographic range Used to help date fossils found in the same strata
22
Radiometric Dating Analysis of radioactive isotopes in fossils Radioactive isotopes have distinctive half-lives Half-life (t 1/2 ) = time period when half the radioactive sample decays into other elements
23
Radiometric Dating Reasoning Living organisms take up small amounts of isotopes with food, air, and water Living organisms always have the same % of isotopes as present in the environment (0.1% of C14) When organisms die, they stop replenishing their isotopes Isotopes slowly degrade over time Measured using half-lives to determine how long ago the organism died
24
Example Carbon 14 degrades into Nitrogen 14 Half-Life = 5,600 years OrganismC14N14 Alive100%0% 5,600 years dead50%50% 11,200 years25%75% A fossil has 1/8 of the normal ratio of C14. Estimate the age of this fossil
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.