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Published byLily Lorin Powers Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 1: The Science of Life
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Objectives 1. Recognize some possible benefits from studying biology 2. Summarize the characteristics of living things
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Ch. 1 Biology I. What is biology?= the study of life A. Diversity of life 1. Biology = study of all living things and how they interact 2. Organism: anything that posses all of the characteristics of a living thing 3. No species live alone, they all effect one another
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B. Seven Characteristics of Living Things: 1.Living things are organized and made of cells biological molecules -organelles - cells – tissues – organs – organ systems – organism Cells are the basic unit of life
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2. Living things have the ability to reproduce and make fertile offspring –Species= group of organisms that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring in nature
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3. Living things grow (cell division) and develop (mature) throughout their life 4. Living things respond to their environment –Stimulus: a condition that requires an organism to adjust –Response: reaction to the changed condition (stimulus) 5. Living things maintain homeostasis –Maintain stable internal conditions (temp, blood pressure. breathing etc…)
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6. Living things use energy to do work (metabolism) 7. Living things adapt to their environment = EVOLUTION –The strong will survive and populate the area (evolution)
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Objectives sec 2 Identify three important themes that help explain the living world. Summarize why evolution is an important theme in biology.
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II. Themes in Biology A. Diversity= Variety 1. All living things have unique characteristics that make them different 2. All living things also have similarities that can “tie” them together –Ex: genetic code
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B. Domains & Kingdoms of Life –The three domains of life are: Bacteria Archaea Eukarya. –The six kingdoms Archaea Bacteria Protista Fungi, Plantae Animalia.
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Phylogenetic Diagram of Living Organisms
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C. Interdependence of Organisms 1. Organisms live in interdependent communities and interact with both organisms and the environment. –Ecology = study organisms interactions with environment
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Evolution of Life 1. Evolution= descent with modification –The process in which the inherited characteristics within populations change over generations. 2. natural selection: nature “chooses” who survives (fits in best) 3. adaptations = qualities that allow you to survive and reproduce
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Objectives sec 3 Outline the main steps in the scientific method. Summarize how observations are used to form hypotheses. List the elements of a controlled experiment. Describe how scientists use data to draw conclusions. Compare a scientific hypothesis and a scientific theory. State how communication in science helps prevent dishonesty and bias.
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The scientific method 1. State the problem: pose a question 2. Make observations & inferences –Observation: using your senses to gather information –Data: facts, figures, gathered through observations –Inferences: interpretation of an observation
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1. Observe: Is there ever a year in high school when all students are enrolled in physical education? Explain your answer. 2. Infer: Is there a relationship between the number of students enrolled in physical education and their year of high school? Explain your answer. 3. Observe: Can you tell which states in the country have the largest number of students enrolled in physical education? 4. Infer: Based on the graph, can you explain why so few students take physical education in their senior year?
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3. Develop a hypothesis a. Possible explanation or educated guess based on your observations 4. Test hypothesis/experiment a. variables: factors that can change an experiment b. independent variable; variable that is changed
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–C. dependent variable: factor that changes because of the independent variable –D. controlled experiment: all of the variables remain the same Use this as a comparison
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Click below to watch the Visual Concept. Visual Concept Controlled Experiment and Variable
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5. Measuring, collecting and interpreting data –Charts and graphs keep the information well organized
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6. Drawing conclusions –Summing up what you have learned –State evidence that either supports or refutes the hypothesis –Easy to write as an “if then” statement
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7. Communicate = report your results to others! –Others must be able to reproduce your work and get the same results –Share information (especially with health care) to educate others
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Scientific Theory vs. Law (principle) 1. Well-tested concept that explains observations 2. Based on many years of experimentation 3. Nothing is 100% correct, but theories have not been proved wrong yet 4. Laws or principles are known to be true (law of gravity)
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Objectives sec 4 List the function of each of the major parts of a compound microscope. Compare two kinds of electron microscopes. Describe the importance of having the SI system of measurement.
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Section 4. Microscopes A.2 functions – magnify (make bigger) resolution (focus in) B.Compound microscopes have more than one lens and allow you to view living things
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C. Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) – allows the surface of an object to be seen up to 100,000x D. Transmission Electron Microscope – allows the internal parts of an object to be seen up to 200,000x
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Units of Measurement Base and Other Units –Scientists use a single, standard system of measurement, called the metric system. The official name of the metric system is Système International d’Unités or SI.
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Units of Measurement Base and Other Units –The metric system has seven base units.
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