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Fossils and Earth’s History Notes
CP Biology Ms. Morrison
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The Fossil Record Provides evidence about history of life on Earth and how different organisms have changed over time 99% of all species have become extinct Is incomplete because not all organisms become fossils Fossils formed in sedimentary rock One of most important pieces of info = fossil’s age
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Dating Fossils Two techniques for dating fossils
Relative dating = estimating fossil’s age by comparing to other fossils (index fossils) Radioactive dating = calculate age of fossil based on amount of remaining radioactive isotopes in it (uses half-life)
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Geologic Time Scale Precambrian Time - represents 88% of Earth’s history After Precambrian Time – scale divided into eras and periods 3 Eras Paleozoic (544 – 245 million years ago) – invertebrates and vertebrates Mesozoic (245 – 65 million years ago) – dinosaurs, mammals began evolving Cenozoic (65 million years ago – present) – Age of Mammals
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Earth’s Early History Early atmosphere contained: hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen, hydrogen sulfide, and water (toxic to life, no oxygen) Too hot to have liquid water (oceans)
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Evolution of Early Life
Miller and Urey – conduct experiments using gases found in early atmosphere, found that mixtures of organic compounds necessary for life could have arisen Precursor to cells = proteinoid microspheres – tiny bubbles formed from organic molecules Microfossils = microscopic fossils, single-celled prokaryotic organisms
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Early Life Evolves Presence of photosynthetic bacteria – added oxygen to atmosphere Some life forms go extinct while others evolve to use oxygen for respiration Endosymbiotic theory – proposes that eukaryotic cells arose from living communities formed from prokaryotes Eventually sexual reproduction evolves which produces greater genetic variation and organisms become multicellular which allows for more diversity
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Evolution of Multicellular Life
Precambrian Time – rise of oxygen, eukaryotes, multicellular organisms, few fossils, life only in seas Paleozoic Era Cambrian Period – shells, outer skeletons, invertebrates (“Cambrian explosion”) Ordovician and Silurian Periods – 1st vertebrates, insects, 1st plants on land Devonian Period – Age of Fishes, amphibians on land Carboniferous and Permian Periods – life on the continents Era ends with mass extinction – 95% of all life in oceans disappeared, many fish and reptiles survived
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Multicellular Life, pg 2 Mesozoic Era
Triassic Period – Age of Reptiles, fish, insects, reptiles, cone-bearing plants, 1st dinosaurs and mammals appear Jurassic Period – dinosaurs become dominant, 1st birds appear Cretaceous Period – flying reptiles go extinct, leafy shrubs and small flowering plants appear Era ends with mass extinction – more than half plants and animal groups including dinosaurs wiped out
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Multicellular Life, pg 3 Cenozoic Era - Age of Mammals
Tertiary Period – climate warm and mild, marine animals and grasses evolved Quaternary Period – climate cooled, ice ages, human ancestors appeared
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Patterns of Evolution Macroevolution = large scale evolutionary changes that take place over long periods of time Six patterns of macroevolution Mass extinctions: huge numbers of species die out together, often results in burst of new species appearing Adaptive radiation: single species or small group of species evolve into several different forms that live in different ways
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Patterns of Evolution, pg 2
Six patterns of macroevolution, cont’d Convergent evolution: process by which unrelated organisms come to resemble one another (have analogous structures = similar structures that have different evolutionary histories) Coevolution: two species evolve in response to changes in each other over time, ex. Flowers and insects
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Patterns of Evolution, pg 3
Six patterns of macroevolution, cont’d Punctuated equilibrium: pattern of long, stable periods interrupted by brief periods of more rapid change Different from graduation = slow, steady change over time Some biologists say new species produced by periods of rapid change Developmental genes: control how organism develops from embyro; homologous hox genes, activation of genes, and timing of genetic controls – all influence development of organism from embryo
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