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How much do you know about Paleontology?
JOURNAL # 1 What is a fossil? (YOUR DEFINITION)
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Geology: Paleontology & Geologic Time
Created in 2008 by Tim F. Rowbotham
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Geology is the study of the origin, history, and structure of the earth.
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Paleontology is the study of prehistoric life, particularly through fossil remains.
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Fossils are the remains, imprints, or traces of prehistoric organisms.
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Fossil Formation Requires shelter from scavengers, decay, and physical destruction.
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Fossil Formation Most commonly occurs through quick burial by sediment. Is more likely to occur with hard parts such as bone, shells, and teeth.
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Types of Fossils
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Types of Fossils Permineralized remains Carbon films Molds & Casts
Original Remains Trace Fossils
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Permineralized Remains
occur when parts of the original remains are replaced by minerals flowing through ground water. This process is called petrification.
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Permineralized Remains
Fossil turtle shell
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Permineralized Remains
Fossil dimetrodon
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Permineralized Remains
Petrified wood
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Permineralized Remains
Baby protoceratops
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Permineralized Remains
Whale fossil
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Permineralized Remains
Fossil tyrannosaurus
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Carbon Films occur when pressure from layers of sediment leaves only a thin carbon residue.
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Carbon Films Beech leaf
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Carbon Films Ancient salamander
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Carbon Films Fossil fish
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Molds & Casts Formation of fossil shell molds
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Molds are hollow areas left in sediment that show the shape of the original organism.
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Molds & Casts External mold of shell
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Molds & Casts Internal mold of shell
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Casts are copies of the shape of original organism that form from minerals deposited into the mold.
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Molds & Casts Cast of trilobite
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Molds & Casts Formation of fossil shell molds
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Original Remains including the soft parts of the organism are sometimes found in hardened tree resin, frozen ground, or tar pits.
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Original Remains Bee encased in amber
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Original Remains Scorpion in amber
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Original Remains Mammoth hair
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Trace Fossils provide evidence of an organism’s activity. They include footprints, trails, burrows, and excrement.
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Trace Fossils Dinosaur tracks
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Trace Fossils Fossil trails of climactichnites
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Trace Fossils Fossil burrows
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Journal #2 List 3 types of fossils and give a brief description of each. READY YOUR REMOTES
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How fossils form VIDEOS
How Fossils are Formed 2 How Fossils are Formed 1
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Fun Facts about Sue Sue Wiki
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Relative Age is the age of a rock or fossil compared to the ages of other rocks or fossils.
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Catastrophism is the belief that the earth’s geological features were formed rapidly as a result of large catastrophes.
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Catastrophes that could cause rapid geologic change include landslides, volcanic eruptions, floods, and earthquakes.
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Uniformitarianism is the idea that the processes occurring on earth today are similar to those that occurred in the past.
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Uniformitarianism basically says “The present is the key to the past.”
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Uniformitarianism is the idea that geological features formed slowly over long periods of time.
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Catastrophism vs. Uniformitarianism
Geologic Features Form slowly over time Form rapidly due to major forces & events Age of the earth Billions of years Thousands of years
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Catastrophism & a Young Earth
Where would dinosaurs fit in? DRAGONS or DINOSAURS VIDEO (FULL VIDEO 1:24) 3:09 – ?
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Principle of Superposition
as sedimentary rocks form, they are deposited on older rock layers.
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Principle of Superposition
in undisturbed layers, the oldest is on the bottom and higher layers are younger.
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Principle of Superposition
Oldest layer is on bottom (1)
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Principle of Superposition
The Grand Canyon
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Principle of Superposition
The Grand Canyon
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Principle of Superposition
Younger Layers of Rock Older Layers of Rock The Grand Canyon
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Extrusions are igneous rocks layers that form on the surface when lava hardens.
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Extrusions are always younger than the layers over which they form.
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Extrusion Kubu Rock – Botswana, Africa
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Intrusions are igneous rocks that form when magma pushes up into rock layers.
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Intrusions are always younger than the rock layers they invade.
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Intrusion Devil’s Tower, WY
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Intrusions & Extrusions
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Journal #3 Draw the following geologic cross-section:
1.) 2 layers of sedimentary rock form. 2.) An extrusion forms on top of the two layers. 3.) A 3rd layer of sedimentary rock forms. 4.) An intrusion cuts through the all the rock layers, but not to the surface. 5.) A 4th layer of sedimentary rock forms.
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Faults are breaks in the earth’s crust. A fault is always younger than the rock it cuts through.
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Faults
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Faults Shoshone Fault, CA
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Folds occur when rock layers are compressed together and bend or curve.
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Folds Guadalajara, Spain
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Folds Mojave Desert, CA
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Folds South Wales, Australia
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Draw the following geologic cross-section:
Journal #4 Draw the following geologic cross-section: 1.) 2 layers of sedimentary rock form. 2.) The 2 layers of rock are folded. 3.) A 3rd sedimentary layer forms. 4.) A fault cuts through all the layers, shifting some rock up. 5.) A 4th sedimentary layer forms. 6.) An intrusion cuts all the way to the surface forming an extrusion.
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Unconformities are gaps in the rock sequence (caused by the erosion of rock layers).
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Angular Unconformity occur when rock layers are tilted or uplifted, and then worn down by erosion and weathering. Sediments are then deposited on top of these eroded layers.
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Angular Unconformity
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Angular Unconformity
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Angular Unconformity
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Angular Unconformity Grand Canyon
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Angular Unconformity Siccar Point, Scotland
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Angular Unconformity Combs Quarry, Yorkshire, England
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Disconformities are gaps created when erosion occurs on an overlying rock layer.
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Disconformity
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Disconformity
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Disconformity
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Nonconformity are formed when sedimentary rock overlays igneous or metamorphic rocks.
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Nonconformity
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Nonconformity
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Nonconformity Grand Canyon
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Nonconformity Egypt
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Unconformities
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SOME Relative Dating Practice
Write the correct order of events by numbering their occurances. Include any and all cross-cut relationships.
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Relative Dating Example
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Relative Dating
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Relative Dating
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Relative Dating
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Correlation is using rock and fossil evidence to match up dating at different locations.
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Correlation
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Correlation
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Correlation
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Index Fossils are used for dating the rock layers in which they are found. (p. 4 Notes)
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Index Fossils are species that were abundant all over the earth, but existed for shorter periods of time.
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Index Fossil trilobite
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Index Fossil ammonite
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Index Fossil reptaculite
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Index Fossil Correlation using index fossils
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Index Fossil Correlation using index fossils
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Index Fossil Correlation
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Draw a geologic cross-section with the following:
Journal #5 Draw a geologic cross-section with the following: 1.) At least 5 sedimentary rock layers 2.) At least 3 cross-cuts Write a geologic history that explains the order of occurrence of each event.
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Paleontology Notes RETURN YOUR REMOTE Finding Clues to Rock Layers
HW: (Pal Pack) p.18 “The Grandest Canyon of All” p.19 “Relative Order of Geologic Events” p. 20 “Geologic Puzzles”
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Absolute Age is the age in years of a rock or other object (as determined by radiometric dating.
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Radiometric Dating entails finding the amount of certain radioactive elements left in a rock or object.
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Radioactive Decay is the release of particles and energy from the nuclei of unstable atoms.
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Radioactive Elements are elements whose nuclei are unable to hold together, and eject particles and energy.
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The Parent Element is the element whose nucleus radioactively decays into another element.
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The Daughter Element is the new element that is produced after the decay of the parent element.
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Half-Life is the time it takes for half of the atoms in a sample to decay.
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Half-Life is always the same. It does not depend on the amount of atoms.
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Half-Life is unaffected by almost all other outside factors. Decay occurs at a steady rate.
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Sample Half-lives ISOTOPE HALF-LIFE PARENT DAUGHTER URANIUM 238
LEAD 206 4.5 BILLION YEARS POTASSIUM 40 ARGON 40 1.3 BILLION YEARS THORIUM 232 LEAD 208 14.0 BILLION YEARS CARBON 14 NITROGEN 14 5,730 YEARS
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Sample Half-lives Iodine-129 16,000,000 years Carbon-14 5730 years
Strontium years Sodium hours Technetium hours Fluorine minutes Oxygen seconds
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Radiometric Dating As time passes, the amount of a parent isotope in a rock decreases as it decays. It has decayed into the daughter element.
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Radiometric Dating basically involves measuring how much of the daughter element has formed.
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Age Determination can then be made by using the known half-life to determine how much time has passed.
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Age Determination typically, the dating can be estimated only up to a MAX of 10 half-lives.
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Common Types of Radiometric Dating
Potassium-argon dating Uranium-lead dating Rubidium-strontium dating Radiocarbon dating
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Potassium- Argon Dating
Potassium-40 decays to Argon-40. Potassium-40 has a half-life of 1,300,000,000 years. (used on igneous & metamorphic rock)
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(used on igneous & metamorphic rock)
Uranium-Lead Dating Uranium-235 decays to Lead-207 Half-life: 700,000,000 years Uranium-238 decays to Lead-204 Half-life: 4,500,000,000 years (used on igneous & metamorphic rock)
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Rubidium-Strontium Dating
Rubidium-87 decays to Strontium-87 Rubidium has a half-life of 50,000,000,000 years. (used on igneous & metamorphic rock)
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Radiocarbon Dating Carbon-14 decays to Nitrogen-14. Carbon dating is used to measure how long an organism has been dead.
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