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Unit #5 Geologic Time 21.1 Organizing Time O Fossils are preserved remains or traces of ancient organisms. O Fossils are located within the layers of rock on Earth O Studying these rock layers and the fossils in them enable scientists to reconstruct Earth’s history and past climates 21.1 Organizing Time O Using the information from fossils and rock layers geologists have created the geologic time scale O Geologic time scalerecord of Earth’s history from its origin 4.6 billion years ago to the present 21.1 Geologic Time Scale O The geologic time scale O O O O begins with Earth’s formation 4.6 bya. Geologists organize Earth’s history according to groupings called eons. Each eon contains eras Each era contains periods. Each period contains epochs. These divisions are defined by different life forms found within the rock O Eons 21.1 Geologic Time Scale O The earliest eon is the Precambrian O Makes up 90% of Earth’s history O Began when the Earth first formed until it became hospitable to simple life O After the Precambrian there the Phanerozoic eon 21.1 Geologic Time Scale O Eras O Usually 10-100’s of millions of years in length O The three era found in the Phanerozoic eon O Paleozoic-Ancient Life O Mesozoic- Middle Life O Cenozoic- Recent Life O Periods O Generally 10’s of million of years in length 21.1 Geologic Time Scale O Epochs O Generally 100’s of thousands to millions of years O The most current epoch is the Holocene which started 12,000 years ago to current time 21.1 Succession of Life Forms O During the Phanerozoic Eon multicellular life diversified becoming more complex O During the Paleozoic era small segmented animals like trilobites became abundant O The end of the Paleozoic is marked by largest mass extinction in Earth’s history O About 97% of marine organism became extinct O The large loss of species in a relatively short period of time is a mass extinction. 21.1 Succession of Life Forms O The era after the Paleozoic is called the Mesozoic O Know for the emergence of dinosaurs O The end of the Mesozoic is marked by another mass extinction even which includes the extinction of the dinosaurs O The era after the Mesozoic is the Cenozoic O Mammals began to dominate in numbers and diversity O Humans arise 21.2 Interpreting Geology O In the past it was thought that the Earth was only a few thousand year old (time spans that the human could relate) O James Hutton (1700’s) was the first scientist to think that the Earth was very old O Hutton attempted to explain the process that occur on Earth (erosion, weathering ect.) if the Earth was only a few thousand years old and he couldn’t O He realized that it would take a much longer amount of time for those processes occur 21.2 Uniformitarianism O Hutton’s work led to the development of uniformitarianism O Uniformitarianism states that geologic processes occurring today have been occurring since Earth formed 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Relative-age dating is the process that is used to put geologic events in order O There are several method used to determine relative ages O Original Horizontality O Superposition O Cross Cutting Relationships O Inclusions 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Original Horizontally O Sedimentary rocks are deposited in horizontal or nearly horizontal 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Superposition O The oldest rocks are found at the bottom of a sequence of rocks O Each layer above get progressively younger 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Cross-Cutting Relationships O States that an intrusion is younger that the rock it cuts across O It also applies to faults that cut across rock layers 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Inclusions O Rocks can contain pieces of other rocks called inclusions O The principle of inclusions states that inclusions (fragments from other rocks) must be older than the rock that contains them 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Unconformities O Because Earth’s surface is constantly changing it can be difficult to relatively date some sequences of rocks O Many time rocks have been weathered away, removed, or changed in other ways O Unconformity occurs where a layer(s) of rock have been removed then sediments are deposited on top of the missing layers 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O There are three types of unconformity O Disconformity- When sedimentary rock is eroded away and new sedimentary rock is deposited Sedimentary Rock Area where erosion occurred Sedimentary Rock 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Nonconformity O A layer of sedimentary rock that is deposited over a layer of metamorphic rock Erosional Surface 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Angular Unconformity O When horizontally deposited layers of rock are deformed (tilted) then are weathered O Then sedimentary rock layers are deposited on top of the tilted layers 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Correlation O The matching of rock layers of fossils in one region to similar rocks in another location 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Fossil Correlation O The use of fossils in sedimentary rock layers to compare rocks from different regions 21.2 Principles for Determining Relative Age O Key Beds O Distinctive rock layers that are deposited over a large geographic area O They are used as a marker to help date the rock layers around it 21.3 Radioactive Isotopes O Absolute-age dating- helps scientists determine the numerical ages of rocks O Researchers use radioactive isotope to find the age of rocks O Radioactive Decay is the emission of radioactive particles and the resulting change into other isotopes O Radioactive isotopes emit nuclear particles at a constant rate no matter the conditions 21.3 Radioactive Isotopes O The original radioactive isotope is called the parent O The isotope that results from radioactive decay is called the daughter 21.3 Radiometric Dating O As the number of parent atoms decreases the number of daughter atoms increases O The ratio of parent to daughter product in a mineral shows the amount of time that has passed since it formed O The time it takes for ½ of the original parent isotope to decay into daughter product is called half-life O After 1 half life 50% of the parent has turned into daughter O After 2 half lives 75% of the parent material has turned into daughter product 21.3 Radiometric Dating 21.3 Dating Rocks O Radiometric dating is useful for dating igneous and metamorphic rocks O Sedimentary rocks cannot be dated using radioactive isotopes because they are formed form other rocks O To get the age of sedimentary rocks geologists can use surrounding igneous and metamorphic rocks to get a more accurate age 21.3 Radiocarbon Dating O Uses carbon-14 (radioactive isotope of carbon) O Has a much shorter half-life than other radioactive isotopes O Used to determine the age of organic materials O Bone, charcoal, amber O Used for dating geologic events that occurred with in the last 60,000 years 21.3 Other ways to Determine Absolute Age O Tree rings O growth rings in a tree that can show how old a tree is O Can also show certain events in the past O Wet or dry periods O Forest fires O Can date up to 10,000 years in the past O Dating using tree rings is called dendrochronology 21.3 Other ways to Determine Absolute Age O Ice Cores O Used a lot like tree rings O Contain a record of past environmental conditions like temperature and atmospheric composition 21.3 Other ways to Determine Absolute Age O Varves O Alternating light and dark O O O O sediments of sand, clay and silt Show seasonal deposition of sediments, usually in lakes Summer sediments are generally sand sized particles with traces or organic matter (lighter in color) Winter darker fine grained sediments Can date up to 120,000 years 21.4 Fossil Record O Fossils provide evidence of the past existence if life forms O Also provide evidence for how species have evolved over time O When geologists find a fossil in a rock they know that the rock is about the same age as the fossil 21.4 Fossil Record O Original Preservation O Remains of plants and animals that have been changed very little since the organisms death O Requires freezing, arid or oxygen free environments 21.4 Fossil Record O Altered Hard-Parts O Usually the soft parts of an organism decay rapidly O The hard parts can become fossils with altered parts O Shells, bones. Cell walls, exoskeletons O Altered part fossils are the most common type of fossil O They form from two processes O Mineral Replacement O Recrystallization 21.4 Fossil Record O Mineral Replacement O the pore spaces of on organisms hard parts are filled in with minerals from ground water O This gradually replaced the organisms original hard parts all together with minerals 21.4 Fossil Record O Recrystallization O Occurs when buried hard parts are subjected to changes in temperature and pressure O The original mineral in the organism is transformed into a new mineral 21.4 Fossil Record O Molds and Casts O Fossils that do not contain any of the original or altered material of an organism O Mold- Sediments cover the original hard part of and organism and the hard part in later removed by erosion or weathering leaving a hollowed out impression O A cast forms when the mold become filled in with materials 21.4 Fossil Record O Trace Fossils O indirect evidence that an organism existed O Foot prints, tunneling burrows 21.4 Index Fossils O Fossils that are easily recognized, abundant, widely distributed geographically and existed for a short period of geologic time O These types of fossils can help scientists date sedimentary rock layers