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2.1 Evolution A Scientific Theory

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Presentation on theme: "2.1 Evolution A Scientific Theory"— Presentation transcript:

1 2.1 Evolution A Scientific Theory
Must make _____________________. Must be in agreement with the ______________ and be the best ________________model. Must be _____________________ – potentially falsifiable (capable of being tested).

2 A Scientific Theory is not “flawed” or invalid when . . .
it cannot account for an __________________ it is __________________ a particular __________of evidence can not be found ________Scientific Theories are Incomplete

3 The Theory of Evolution
Who believes in evolution?.... This is not a ________ question, our understanding of evolution is not a belief! Evolution has been well documented using __________ bodies of evidence. Why is evolution considered a THEORY? A theory is accepted as a valid explanation of our observations, however, it can still be revised and as new ______________is gathered.

4 Does evolution prove there is no God?
Many people, from evolutionary biologists to important religious figures like ________________, contend that the time-tested theory of evolution does not refute the presence of God. They acknowledge that evolution is the description of a _____________ that governs the development of life on Earth. Like other scientific theories, including Copernican theory, atomic theory, and the germ theory of disease, evolution deals only with ________, _________, and _____________in the material world. Science has ______________ to say one way or the other about the existence of God or about people's spiritual beliefs.

5 Types of Evidence What we are going to look at:
_____________________________ (the branch of biology that deals with the geographical distribution of plants and animals)

6 Fossil Record Most common and easy recognized fossils are such hard body parts as __________, __________and _____________ Also includes ____________of burrows, ____________and even ___________remains Commonly formed when bodies of organisms become trapped in sediments, which become _______________into strata, or layers, and eventually harden into ______________rock

7 Museum of Nature

8 How Do Fossils Form? Fossils are formed when the remains of a buried organism are gradually replaced by _______________ deposits. After an organism dies, the body usually decomposes. However, if it sinks to bottom of a body of water and is quickly buried by ______________, the resulting lack of oxygen can prevent decomposition. As sediments accumulate over time the body becomes ________________, and very gradually chemical changes occur that result in the body being mineralized

9

10 Other rare conditions prevent most decomposition, organisms may be preserved nearly intact; such fossils have been found in _______ pits, __________ash, ________bogs, permanently _______________ground and _____________.

11 Fossil of a Teloceras in volcanic ash.

12 _____________________________________; they simply decayed and were lost from the fossil record. Paleontologists estimate that only a small percentage of the dinosaur genera that ever lived have been or will be found as fossils. Paleontologists estimate that ________ than ______ of all the organisms alive today will be preserved as fossils. Think about it…… Would soft body organisms fossilize?

13 Age of Earth Physicist Lord William Thomson Kelvin in 1866 earth was 400 million years old (calculations). Revised it to 15 to 20 million years Pierre Curie 1903 – discovered __________ decay (provided geologists with means to estimate the age of Earth with greater precision). Earth about ________________ years old

14 Radiometric Dating Radioisotopes are atoms that undergo radioactive decay and there decay can be measured very accurately. The decay of radioactive material changes a ___________ isotope into a _____________ isotope. Radioisotopes decay at there own constant rate

15 Radioisotopes Used in Radiometric Dating
Parent Isotope Daughter Isotopes Half-life (years) Effective dating (range) Carbon 14 Nitrogen 14 5730 100 to Uranium 235 Lead 207 713 million 10 million to 4.6 billion Potassium 40 Argon 40 and calcium 40 1.3 billion to 4.6 billion


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