* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Geologic Time
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Geologic Time Philosophies on Earth Dynamics • Catastrophism (up to late 1700’s) • Landscape developed by catastrophes • Features such as mountains and canyons formed quickly by catastrophic events • James Ussher, a mid-1600s Anglican Archbishop, concluded Earth was only a few thousand years old (4004 BC) • Used the Bible to construct a chronology of Earth and human history • Widely accepted by scientists and religious leaders Philosophies on Earth Dynamics • Uniformitarianism • James Hutton (father of modern geology) • Theory of the Earth • Published in the late 1700s • Marked the beginning of modern geology • Fundamental principle of geology • The present is the key to the past • The physical, biological, and chemical laws that operate today have operated the same way throughout geologic time Uniformitarianism • Hutton’s theory was based on scientific observations on mountain building, and weathering and erosional features • BUT, Hutton’s book was BORING and difficult to read, so people gave up on reading it – His ideas weren’t widely accepted. – Contradicted the Church – Playfair wrote a book that presented Hutton’s ideas more clearly. That helped. • Charles Lyell published Principles of Geology in 1830 – Much better publication – Greatly advanced people’s knowledge of geologic processes Relative dating Placing rocks and events in sequence Principles and rules of • Law of superposition – oldest rocks are on the bottom • Principle of original horizontality – sediment is deposited in horizontal beds • Principle of cross-cutting relationships – younger features cut through older features Superposition illustrated by the strata (layers) in the Grand Canyon Cross-cutting relationships Relative dating Principles and rules of • Inclusions – fragments of one rock unit that are contained within another (rock containing the inclusions is younger than the inclusions) • Unconformities • An unconformity is a break in the rock record – This means that a portion of geologic time is “missing” from the rock record in that area. – Indicates a period of weathering and erosion – Old erosional surface Relative dating Types of Unconformities • Angular Unconformity - tilted rocks are overlain by flat layers of rocks • Disconformity – Layers above or below are parallel • Sometimes difficult to identify • Rocks above and below could have significantly different ages, OR • The sequence of the rock TYPES isn’t “in order” • Nonconformity - Older metamorphic or igneous rocks are overlain by younger sedimentary rock layers Relative dating Types of Unconformities Relative dating Formation of an angular unconformity Relative dating Unconformities of the Grand Canyon Relative dating Correlation of rock layers • Matching rocks of similar age in different regions • Often relies upon fossils Fossils: evidence of past life • Remains of prehistoric life, OR • Anything other evidence that the organisms left behind (trace fossils) • Types of fossils • Petrified – cavities and pores are filled with mineral matter that was dissolved in underground water • Formed by replacement – cell material is removed and replaced with mineral matter • Mold – shell or other structure is buried and then dissolved by underground water, leaving a hollow space • Cast – hollow space of a mold is filled with mineral matter Fossils: evidence of past life • Types of fossils • Carbonization – organic matter becomes a thin residue of carbon • Impression – replica of the fossil's surface preserved in fine-grained sediment • Preservation in amber – hardened resin of ancient trees surrounds an organism Cast fossils of shelled invertebrates Fossils: evidence of past life • Trace fossils • Indirect evidence includes • Tracks • Burrows • Coprolites – fossil dung and stomach contents • Gastroliths – stomach stones used to grind food by some extinct reptiles Dinosaur footprints near El Paso, at Mt. Cristo Rey Fossils: evidence of past life • Conditions favoring preservation • Rapid burial • Possession of hard parts • Fossils and correlation • Principle of fossil succession • Fossils succeed one another in a definite and determinable order • Proposed by William Smith – late 1700s and early 1800s Determining the ages of rocks using fossils Fossils: evidence of past life Fossils and correlation • Index fossils • Widespread geographically • Existed for a short range of geologic time Absolute Dating Absolute dating means finding the actual age in years Atomic Structure Review • Protons – positively charged particles in the nucleus • Neutrons – particles in the nucleus with no charge. Formed by protons and electrons colliding during supernovae • Electrons – negatively charged particles that orbit the nucleus Radioactivity and Radiometric Dating Atomic structure reviewed • Atomic number • An element's identifying number • Number of protons in the atom's nucleus • Mass number • Number of protons plus the number of neutrons in an atom's nucleus • Isotope • Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons, and different mass numbers • Many isotopes are radioactive Radioactivity and Radiometric Dating • Radioactivity • Spontaneous breaking apart (decay) of atomic nuclei • Radioactive decay • Parent – an unstable isotope • Daughter products – stable isotopes formed from the decay of a radioactive parent Radioactivity and Radiometric Dating • Radioactivity • Radioactive decay • Types of radioactive decay • Alpha emission • Beta emission • Electron capture Half Lives of some Common Isotopes Radioactive Decay and Half Life Half life is the amount of time it takes for a radioactive isotope to decay down to 50% of its original mass Carbon-14 dating • Half-life of only 5730 years • Used to date very recent events (not rock ages, usually) • Used to find the ages of organic matter (must contain carbon to begin with) • Useful tool for anthropologists, archeologists, historians, and geologists who study very recent Earth history Geologic Time Scale • Divides geologic history into units • Originally created using relative dates • Subdivisions • Eon • Greatest expanse of time • Four eons • Phanerozoic ("visible life") – the most recent eon, plenty of fossils • Proterozoic • Archean • Hadean – the oldest eon (The Proterozoic, Archean, and Hadean are often referred to as just the Precambrian) Geologic Time Scale • Subdivisions • Era (Subdivision of an Eon) • Eras of the Phanerozoic eon • Cenozoic ("recent life") • Mesozoic ("middle life") • Paleozoic (“early or ancient life") • Eras are subdivided into periods • Periods are subdivided into epochs The Geologic Time Scale Geologic Time • Difficulties in dating the time scale • Not all rocks are datable • Sedimentary rock ages are often not reliable because the sediment that comes together to form a rock is older than the rock itself. • Dateable materials are used to estimate the ages of events and the rocks involved in the events. • A combination of radiometric dating and field observations are necessary to obtain accurate ages