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Published byElvin Fox Modified over 9 years ago
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Geologic Time and Relative Dating
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Geologic Time Geologic time—beer goggles for geologists – Ex. geologically recent events Earth is 4.6 billion years old – The passage of this amount of time is difficult for humans to fathom – Let’s think about it in a different way…
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Earth Forms: noon First single celled organism: 4:00 pm First Multi-celled Organisms: 9:00 pm First Dinosaurs: 11:00 pm How about the first Humans?30 seconds before midnight
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Geologic Time Continued… Geologists have two ways of measuring geologic time – Relative age dating: Refers only to the order of events; does not assign a specific ages – Absolute age dating: Assigning an “exact” age to something
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Relative Dating Using one or more of the following principles to determine the order in which things (rocks) have changed over time:
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Principle of Original Horizontality Sediment is deposited in nearly horizontal layers
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Folded Rock Example How in the world did this happen?
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We start with horizontal layers… Time passes, rocks are deformed Time 1 Time 2 Erosion removes top of fold Time 3
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Principle of Superposition In an undisturbed sequence of rock, the youngest rocks are always at the top and the oldest on the bottom – Ex. Cake! Oldest layers Youngest layers
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Principle of Crosscutting Relationships A rock must exist before something can happen to it – Picture ex: Order of events? Here’s a geological example…
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Layer A Layer B Layer C Layer D Layer E Layer F Layer G Layer H Layers A-H were deposited; dike c cuts Through layers A-H; dike B cuts dike C; Dike A cuts Dike B. Layer A is the oldest, Dike A is the youngest unit.
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Principle of Inclusions An inclusion is a piece of one rock unit contained in another – Think about the game “Operation”
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Evolution and Fossils Evolution in a nutshell: – Critters change with time—successive generations adapting to their environments Fossil = remains/traces of ancient critters preserved in rock
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How Are Fossils Useful? Different animals and plants have lived at different times in the past – Ex: Dinosaurs, wicked-big insects Different fossils will appear and disappear in the same order that organisms evolved and died out—Law of Faunal Succession Rock correlation
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Conformity and Unconformity Erosion may cause rock record to be incomplete – unconformity There are several types of unconformities:
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Angular Unconformity: Horizontal Sedimentary rock layers over tilted rock layers Disconformity: Erosion surface Separating horizontal sedimentary Rock layers Nonconformity: Sedimentary rocks lie On top of igneous or metamorphic rocks
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