Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 1: 02/02/06 Science B—complex systems (historical) o Idiographic—description of unique events o Nomothetic—rules, laws The first text was the Bible Francis Bacon (1561-1626) argued that there are two great books authored by God, the Bible and the Natural World; but if ever there were a conflict between the two, the Natural World would take precedence in our understanding Bishop James Ussher (1701) proposed that the Earth was formed in 4004 BC on October 23 at 9am James Hutton (1788) believed the Earth was much older and is known as the founder of modern geology o Hadrian’s Wall was erected 2,000 years ago by the Romans to keep the Scots out of England (the wall is between England and Scotland) o Noticed that the there was a very thin layer of soil at the bottom of the rock wall that was the same color as the rock; deduced that soil is decayed rock o The accumulation of thick soils meant that the Earth was very old o Principle of uniformitarianism—“the present is the key to the past”— processes that operate today have also operated in much the same way in the past; the rate of soil formation is roughly the same in all places and throughout time; foundation of modern geology Charles Lyell (1830-1833)—made Hutton’s work known and established geology as the premier science o Realized that there must be a rock cycle in which soil and rock are recreated by each other since soil is necessary for growing food and sustaining life; influenced by the deistic belief that God must have designed this Fossilization o Key aspect is burial in sediment o Sediment—rock fragment o Fragments can be clays, muds, silts, sands, cobbles (goes from small to large in terms of grain size) o Burial needed to prevent decay/rotting and bacterial action o Other ways to prevent these things include oxygen or water deprivation (drying out) Burial in sediments o Occurs in river deltas, flood plains, lakes, and sometimes deserts (even though there is no water, sand moves things around) o Unlikely places are on most surfaces of land, including forests, mountains, and Harvard Yard Means two things: the fossil record is incomplete, as most remains rot or are scavenged; the fossil record is biased, as some environments are more conducive to burial than others (mountainous species will likely never be seen) Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 2: 02/07/06 Fossilization—burial (any way of stopping decay, bacteria, or scavenging) o Lacustrine/lake is good for burial, acolian/desert is okay (even though there is no water, sand moves things around), glacial is terrible, and fluvial/river is particularly good (floodplains, deltas) o Marine (sea) is not ideal for finding dinosaur fossils; can find fossils in oceans though due to bloat and float o Terrestrial settings are best for finding fossils The fossil record is: incomplete—most remains rot or are scavenged; biased— some environments are more conducive to burial and fossilization than others 100-year floods cause sediments to become compacted/cemented to layers of sedimentary rock Geologic time is very long; suppose 1 foot of sediment compacts to 1 inch of sediment in 100 years, then you will have 1 foot of rock in 1,000 years, 1,000 feet of rock in 1,000,000 years, and 100,000 feet of rock in 100,000,000 years Sediments are usually deposited horizontally o Exceptions include when air and water disperse them across sand dunes and they become deposited at an angle; form cross-beds Stratum—a layer of sedimentary rock (plural is strata) Stratigraphy—the study of sedimentary layers Law of Superposition—younger layers are always on top of older layers o One exception is faults (usually up and down but sometimes horizontal) and folds; when land drifts and collides it gets scrunched up, and it becomes difficult to see which layer is on top o Another exception relates to geographic distance since it is difficult to compare layers from different regions Correlation—the process of identifying rocks of the same or similar age o Difficult when there is a complex geology or wide geographic distances o Evolutionary processes are slow on human time-scales but fast on geologic time-scales o Evolution charts out a unique history, meaning that there is a unique succession of fossils in the rock record o Can determine which rocks have the same age by identifying which contain the same fossils; helps clarify cases with folds Biostratigraphy—if rocks contain the same fossil specimen, then they are approximately the same age o Can correlate with a single species or whole communities since evolution is fast with respect to geologic time Can determine absolute ages by radiometric dating, e.g., Carbon 14 (14C) dating o Lacking since only fossils about 50,000 or 70,000 years and more can be dated; for the most part, there is no way to date fossils directly Can date only igneous rocks—rocks that crystallize from a melt like lava or magma (molten rock); can determine the ages of the igneous rocks and deduce that certain fossils must be older or younger than them Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 3: 02/09/06 With a combination of stratigraphy and biostratigraphy (fossils to correlate rocks, relative ages) and radiometric dating (absolute ages), we have been able to develop a global geologic time scale Igneous rocks are dated by radioactive decay (disintegration of atoms) o Radioactive elements are trapped in crystals as the crystal forms (as magma cools); of most use are volcanic ash falls o Half life (T½)—the time for half a set of radiometric atoms to decay o 14C: T½ = 5,730 years; after about 12 half lives (about 70,000 years), you have only 1/4,000 original atoms left, a limit of measurement o Uranium 235 (235U): T½ = 704 million years; the 235U is trapped in zircon (crystal) 235U 207Pb (lead, Latin for plumbing); can estimate how many half lives have passed by comparing the ratio of uranium and lead Double check for loss of 235U and 207Pb: use a second uranium series, 238U 206Pb, which decays with T½ = 4,470 million years (4.47 Ga), much longer History of the Earth (think in terms of a football field) o Origin of the Earth = 0 yard line o Now = 100 yard line o First fossils (bacteria) = 24 yard line o Good fossil record = 87 yard line o First dinosaurs = 95 yard line o Last dinosaurs = 98.5 yard line o First humans (Homo) = 4 inches from the end zone o Civilization = 1/10,000 of a yard from the end zone Alfred Wegener (1915)—concluded that continents drift but did not know by what mechanism; matched fossils and rock types to determine that the continents were once attached at their coastlines o After matching fossil and rock types, argued that there was a super continent called Pangaea 225 million years ago at the beginning of the Triassic period o Theory became accepted in the late 1960s Plate tectonics—explains continental drift and a general theory for Earth’s geology o Accepted after the discovery of symmetrical magnetic stripes about the mid-ocean ridges on the sea floor o North to south to north flipping of the Earth’s magnetic field, as trapped in the sea floor o Earth’s core rotation causes the flipping of the magnetic field o Hawaii is a string of islands formed as plates shift over a hot spot; the volcano forms islands that drift away and erode o Evidence for plate boundaries comes from Earthquake epicenters and volcanoes Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 4: 02/14/06 All mountain ranges (volcanoes) occur at the edges of plates or what used to be the edges of plates Major controls on dinosaur global distributions: o Climate o Position of continents o Epi-continental seaways Plates move at about the rate of fingernail growth (1-20 cm/year, 10 cm/year on average; 100 km/million years) Deathdecayburialre-mineralization Fossils: o Body fossils (e.g., bones) o Trace fossils (e.g., footprints—tracks and trails) o Both body and trace fossils are given formal scientific names; names are always in two parts (genus and species) and written in italics or underlined (e.g., Homo sapiens and T. rex) o We tend to use the Genus (plural genera) name and not the species name (e.g. Triceratops, not horridus, and Stegasaurus) 1770—discovery of Mosasaurus (not a dinosaur, closest relative is the lizard) in Holland 1795—Cuvier (in Paris) proposes that the species had become extinct First dinosaurs were discovered in England 1815—Dean William Buckland finds Megalosaurus jaw fragment 1822—Mary Ann Mantell finds Iguanodon teeth and other elements 1824—Buckland describes Megalosaurus 1925—Mantell describes Iguanodon 1833—Buckland describes Hylacosaurus 1842—Owen coins the term “Dino saur,” which means “terrible lizard” 1677—Reverend Plot describes Scrotum humanum, probably a thigh bone of Megalosaurus 1851—Dino-mania begins in the Crystal Palace (Victorian England) Dinosaurs begin to be discovered in the USA 1858—A few teeth found in the West 1858—First almost complete dinosaur, the Hadrosaurus (duck bill), found in New Jersey; suggested that dinosaurs had a bipedal (two-leg) stance 1877—Cope and Massh make first great dinosaur discoveries in the West 1878—39 complete skeletons of Iguanodon are found in a fissure (uncommon) in Belgium (Bernissart) Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 5: 02/16/06 David Norman’s work with Iguanodons o Teeth form grinding surfaces and are packed in large numbers (up to 2,000 in some); teeth wear down and grow continuously o The tooth row is inset from the cheek in order to make room for chewed food o The predentary bone has a rough surface in order to support a keratin sheath (or beak) that has no teeth Keratin is the stuff in hair, fingernails, and claws o Foramina (small holes) are along tooth rows and behind the predentary bone; they supply blood (nutrients) to the “beak,” gums, and cheeks o The jaw articulation lies below the occlusal plane (where the teeth meet), enabling the teeth to meet altogether as the jaw closes and facilitating grinding o Novel method of grinding food; the upper jaw flexes out as the lower jaw closes; “past is the key to itself” Results for dinosaurs o Great diversity of biologies o Some functions are unique o Modern analogs for inferring function can be hard to find o Analysis led to a revolution in dinosaur biology Species definition—there are many Population—an interbreeding group of individuals Biological species concept—a species is a group of interbreeding (or potentially interbreeding) populations that cannot interbreed successfully with other such groups o Complications include how we know individuals can interbreed if they are not currently interbreeding and ring species (see readings book) o Not so useful for fossils, so instead we use a morphological species concept Morphological species concept—different species will look different from one another since like begets like o Can distinguish species based on head width when you have a lot of fossils but not when you have just two (don’t know how similar they are since there is no other comparison) o As you gather more fossils and information, you can determine if the head widths form one or two clusters; however, even if there are two clusters, one might be male and the other female o Sexual dimorphism complicates the application of species concepts It is hard to distinguish species in the fossil record given few specimens, incomplete preservation, or species extinction; as a result, we typically work at the genus level Classification—in 1735 Carlis Linnaeus (real name Karl Linné) established genus and species binome Evolution o Formal study began in 1859 with Darwin and Wallace; Darwin wrote “The Origin of Spcies” o Malthus proposed the idea of the struggle for survival in 1789 o Phenotype—the morphological, biochemical, and/or behavioral characteristics of an organism o Genotype—the genetic material, or DNA, that gives rise to the phenotype o Driving force of evolution is the fecundity of nature (i.e., its propensity to over-produce) o Evolution is historically contingent, as windows of opportunity open and close over and over again Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 6: 02/21/06 Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes (DNA) o There are two pairs of each gene, one coming from the father and one coming from the mother Regular hemoglobin gene H, sickle cell hemoglobin gene S o HH—normal blood o SS—sickle cell blood o HS—normal blood o If each parent is HS, ¼ of their children will be HH, ¼ will be SS, and ½ will be HS Sickle cell and resistance to malaria o HH has no special resistance to malaria o HS has some resistance to malaria o SS has resistance to malaria but also has the sickle cell disease o If malaria is present, there is a tradeoff for HS parents between some resistance and losing offspring; ¼ of their children won’t have resistance to malaria, ¼ will develop sickle cell disease, and ½ will have just some resistance Principle of Frustration—all organisms have multiple needs, and there are often conflicting solutions to those needs; the overall optimal solution for an organism is unlikely to be optimal for any single task or need o Explains why there are so many species; organisms are complexes of compromises; we maximize, not optimize (keep the tree evolution computer simulation in mind) The nature of variation (particularly important during growth) constrains the path of evolution; in other words, the variation available limits the scope of possible evolutionary changes (e.g., there are many breeds of dog and pig and fewer breeds of cat and horse) o In dogs, nose length is particularly allometric o In cats, nose length is basically isometric Evolution is influenced by selection, variation availability, and chance! o Complications in understanding how selection operates include the Principle of Frustration (which need accounts for the evolution?) and the “hitchhiking” correlation of characters Evolutionary “hitchhiking” makes it hard to identify the targets of selection (e.g., balls of different colors and sizes and T. rex) Speciation—the origin of a new species o Change within a species over time; in other words, species 1 evolves into species 2; called anagenesis or phyletic evolution o Origin of a new lineage; in other words, species 1 branches into species 1 and species 2; called cladogenesis or branching Speciation itself refers to the origin of a new lineage, includes many mechanisms, and involves allopatric speciation New species form (allopatrically) when populations diverge over time so that they can no longer interbreed; a barrier to reproduction occurs and lasts long enough so that sufficient differences accumulate (by chance, by selection) Species are related to one another, and the closer they are, the more similar they should be (in general) Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 7: 02/23/06 Amnion—surrounds the embryo and prevents it from drying out o Enabled tetrapods to reproduce on land, freeing them from living in or near water o Amniotes were the first fully terrestrial vertebrates Fenestra (means “window)—large openings in the region of skull behind the eye, called the temporal region o Most amniotes have fenestra in their temporal region Molecular Revolution—cladograms start to be built with synapomorphies found in DNA o Can apply this method to all organisms and thereby develop a tree of life o Use the genetic code (A, T, G, C) o Each of your cells contains about 6,000,000,000 bases of DNA (6 feet worth) Mitochondria—bacteria derivatives that provide cells with energy o Mitochondria in humans have just 16,000 base pairs; they are super stripped-down bacteria since with the a new host, they didn’t need prior functions and genes; purple bacteria (see back of handout 4) Chloroplasts—bacterial derivatives that harvest light Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 8: 02/28/06 Phytosaurs o Aquatic o Carnivores o Triassic Aetosaurs o Terrestrial o Herbivores o Triassic Crocodiles o Aquatic (mostly) o Carnivores o Triassic Recent Biped—walk on two legs (e.g., T. rex, Homo sapiens) Quadruped—walk on four legs (e.g., dogs, cats) Obligate (can be only bipedal or only quadrupedal) vs. facultative (can be either) o A chimp can be considered a facultative biped As of 1990, there were 285 genera described o 246 genera were from 1 species o 2,100 skeletons were found o 45% of genera were from 1 individual (partial skeleton) o 75% of genera were from fewer than 5 individuals o 20% of genera had at least one skull found (about 55 genera) On average, a genus lasts 5-10 million years (7-8 million years for mammals) o Saurischia—contained about 6 types of individuals/genera o Ornithischia—contained about 9 types of individuals/genera Scientists have discovered (approximately) 1/4 - 1/8 of all large dinosaurs and 1/20 - 1/40 of all large dinosaurs by finding at least one skull Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 11: 03/09/06 Darwin (1859) said almost nothing about the origin of birds but did complain about the fossil record 1861—skeleton of Archaeopteryx discovered (ancient wing) Huxley noticed numerous resemblances between dinosaurs and birds Heilmann (1926) noticed features shared by theropods and birds; but dinosaurs lacked clavicles (fused collar bones); means that dinosaurs must have lost their collar bone and then regained it Dollo’s Law—complex structures, once lost, are not regained; birds must have been derived from primitive Archaesaurs, not dinosaurs We now believe that birds evolved from theropods o Dollo’s Law no longer inviolate, can be outweighed by other evidence o Clavicles (sometimes even fused) are known in some dinosaurs but are rare Clavicles easily lost during preservation Clavicles remained cartilaginous, didn’t ossify Archaeopteryx and Bird differences: Archaeopteryx lacks: o Loss of teeth o Large sternum o Reduced tail o Expanded brain o Fused fingers o Fused pelvis Archaeopteryx is a theropod and a bird, but a very primitive bird Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 12: 03/14/06 Pterosaurs—means “winged lizard” o First appeared in the Triassic o Became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous o 50 genera known (smaller group than dinosaurs) o Most are small o Synapomorphies include an elongated fourth digit to support the wing o Active fliers—large shoulder muscles; brain has a large plocculus for balance; large sternum for flight musculature Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 13: 03/21/06 Either the fossil record of theropods and birds is incomplete (more likely) OR birds branched off earlier than the cladogram suggests Feathers predate birds Origin of feathers—modified scales; evolved for: o Flight—rejected because some dinosaurs had feathers o Display—not good at explaining the origin of feathers but may explain why feathers became large o Insulation (temperature control)—fits with the small size of feathered theropods o Predation (of insects)—seems farfetched Origin of powered flight in birds o “Ground-up” hypothesis—theropods lived on the ground and gradually made the transition to flight; but how? hard to see how there could have been selection for incremental improvement in flight ability o “Trees-down” hypothesis—first came gliding and then powered flight; allowed for incremental improvement Ostram (at Yale) argued that the claws of Archaeopteryx looked like the claws of ground dwelling birds; supports the “ground-up” hypothesis A more refined, quantitative analysis suggests that Archaeopteryx could have/did live in trees (see graph in packet); supports “trees-down” hypothesis Mammals and living birds both are warm-blooded; this is perhaps the reason why they have weaker muscles; if Archaeopteryx was cold-blooded (reptilian), then maybe it had more powerful muscles o Can test physiology by looking for growth rings in bones Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 16: 04/06/06 In Montana, there are bone beds with thousands of bones of Maiasuara; these beds extend over a couple of square miles 10,000 individuals preserved; implies herding and catastrophic death o Possible that a volcanic eruption poisoned them (with CO2) and then buried them in ash Evolution (Darwinian) o Variation o Selection Natural selection Sexual selection o Have to reproduce to pass genes onto the next generation Sexual selection is very important if species are non-monogamous (harems); can lead to exaggeration of some characters even if they do not look advantageous from a natural selection point of view (e.g., peacock tail feathers, which are actually Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 17: 04/11/06 It is assumed for birds and reptiles that females are the ones who choose and males are the ones whom are chosen It is the sex with the highest parental investment that usually chooses 1. The female makes and lays the eggs and then has the responsibility of parental care 2. An exception is sea horses: males look after the young in a pouch for some time after hatching; males choose and females display We want to test the hypothesis that sexual selection is responsible for crests in hadrosaurs 1. “Use it or lose it” test: some elements of the crest are not part of the air passageway; the extra bone is for display 2. One would expect that eyes and ears are well developed; there are plenty of other reasons for having good eyes and ears 3. Crest shape should be species specific; this seems to be true based on non-crest demonstrations 4. One would expect to see more elaborate crests when more specifies are present; this seems to be true 3. On balance, the hypothesis is plausible and reasonable one would expect sexual dimorphism, and that seems to be true Head (flank) butting in Stegocerus 1. Thick skull 2. Wide hips 3. Extra bone in the back vertebrae that stiffens the back 4. 45-degree angle at which the backbone meets the skull 5. Shelf at the back of the skull for extra muscle support during collision 6. Closure of the upper temporal fenestra as the skull is strengthened Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 18: 04/13/06 Dinosaur fossils from the late Cretaceous have been found near the poles (e.g., in northern Alaska); they suggest that the Earth was ice-free (sea-ice) and much warmer then; the poles had forests, etc. Today, the temperature gradient between the poles and the equation is about 80 degrees F; in the late Cretaceous, the gradient was about 40 degrees F The Earth’s tilt is about 23 degrees; this suggests that the poles are dark 6 months of the year; therefore, dinosaurs must have migrated large distances We have covered about 80 percent of the well-preserved dinosaurs We can expect new types of dinosaurs to be found in coming years; there has been an exponential increase in the discovery of new species 1. 2. 3. Euryapsids Modified diapsids All marine (ocean) All derived from terrestrial ancestors o Breathed air o Started with 4 limbs, etc. Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 19: 04/18/06 In advanced ichthyosaurs o Ribs are attached to the backbone by two heads o Tail bends downwards (most Jurassic and all Cretaceous forms); we know this because: 1. The tail is always bent downwards 2. The body outlines always show the backbone in the lower fluke 3. A wedge-shaped vertebra(e) creates the bend Most reptiles lay eggs Some, though, produce eggs, which are incubated and hatched inside the mother (oviviporous); in these cases you get live births (e.g., snakes, lizards, sharks) o There is usually no nutrient exchange between the mother and embryos; however, there is in few reptiles (e.g., lizards) Ichthyosaurs gave live births (oviviporous) Dolphins echo-locate; could ichthyosaurs? o Dolphins have ear (otic) capsules that are isolated from the skull by soft tissue; they need this for echo-location o Ichthyosaurs have otic capsules that are fused to the skull; they did not echo-locate Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 20: 04/20/06 Snakes and Lizards o 6,000 living species o Small o Most are tropical Mammals o About 4,000 living species The first snakes and lizards appear in the fossil record in the Jurassic; we suspect that their origins are in the Triassic, so the record must be poor Two origins of neck retraction in turtles Evolution of sea-going turtles Warm-bloods = endotherms Cold-blooded = ectotherms Humans o Warm-bloods o Endotherms o Homeotherms Lizards o Cold-bloods o Ectotherms o Poikilotherms Hummingbirds o Warm-bloods o Endotherms o Poikilotherms (their body temperature drops at night) There is a gradient between being and endothermic and being ectothermic o Sea turtles (endotherms, poikilotherms) keep their body temperatures at about 10 degrees F above the ambient Parts of the body can be endothermic o Sail fish (marlins) are cold-blooded and ectotherms but have a heater organ (muscle) that warms the forebrain and the retina to see depths in the sea Note: an ectotherm in a constant environment (e.g., a cave) is a homeotherm Dinosaurs—were they endothermic or ectothermic, and to what degree? o They are traditionally considered ectotherms because they are reptiles o 1970-1980s—Deinonychus hunting in packs Sustained activity Enthodermy…(?) o Birds are endotherms, so maybe their theropod ancestors were endotherms too o Polar migrations of dinosaurs Sustained activity Endotherms require about 10 times more food (energy) than ectotherms Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 21: 04/25/06 Taphonomy concerns itself with the study of biases in the fossil record Hadrosaurs, ceratopsids, and sauropods traveled in herds; the whole group would get buried in one preservation event; can get huge numbers of individuals preserved Theropods (T.rex) tend to be found as single individuals or very small groups; likely to get only 1-2 individuals per preservation event Predator/prey ratios will be biased towards over counting herbivores “Hand-bag” farms (Alligator farms) o Constant, warm temperature o Fast, continuous growth o Bones look mammalian (even though Alligators are ectotherms) Bone histology can tell you if something is warm-blooded and whether it is a homeotherm or poikilotherm In the Late Cretaceous o The world was warm o Most dinosaurs were large Large body size means they could retain heat well o Very large animals were likely to be approximately homeothermic even if they were ectothermic Elephants o Naked o Losing heat is a problem Large ears to drop heat o Must eat almost all the time to keep endothermic fires burning It is hard to see how sauropods could have eaten enough to be endotherms At the other end of the size range, we have small theropods, some with feathers o Feathersinsulationendothermy; small size if ectothermicpoikilothermy o Supports that small theropods were endotherms Nasal turbinates o Don’t fossilize o Inside nasal cavities o Increase the surface area inside the nose o Only found in endotherms like birds and mammals o Large nasal cavities o Function Warm and humidify the air as we breathe in Extract heat and moisture from the air as we breathe out Dinosaurs have small nasal cavities o Did not have nasal turbinates o Ectotherms…? But if the environment was moist, maybe they didn’t need turbinates…? Summary o Not decided o Expect different physiologies in different groups o Small theropods were likely endotherms o Large sauropods were likely ectotherms o Everybody else was likely somewhere in between Hard to read extinction patterns in the fossil record o At the coarse (global) scale, extinctions tend to look sudden o At the local scale (individual outcrops of rock), extinctions tend to look more gradual; extinctions also tend to look more intense since it is easy to mistake a local extinction for a global extinction Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 22: 04/27/06 There is evidence of a large impact (by a comet/asteroid = bolide) at the K/T boundary (exactly!) Evidence: 1. Global Iridium layer Gubbio, Italy Signature of bolides 2. Chicxulub crater Yucatan Mexico about 110 miles across 3. Glass-bead layers around gulf of Mexico (tektites) 4. Tsunami—deposits all around the Gulf of Mexico 5. Global soot layer 6. Shocked quartz Meteor—in space Meteorite—meteor large enough to reach Earth’s surface Size—about the size of Mt. Everest; about 6 miles across Mt. St. Helens produced about 0.5 cubic km of debris Krakatau produced about 12 cubic km of debris Chicxulub produced about 22,000 cubic km of debris o Global, short-term climate change First heat, then cold as the sun was blocked Dinosaurs and other amniotes: o The extinction rate if greater than 25 kg is almost 100% o The extinction rate if less than 25 kg is variable Larger body size = more extinction prone 1. Have smaller population sizes 2. Require more food and are more often specialized At the end of the K, the vast majority of dinosaurs were large; dinosaur extinction is due to chance o Mammals not superior to dinosaurs Signor-Lipps effect—mass (sudden) extinction, given the incompleteness of the fossil record, will appear gradual! In the marine fossil record of Antarctica, and in Western Europe, the gradual extinction of ammonites, appears to be due to the Signor-Lipps effect (most went extinct of K/T boundary) The Signor-Lipps effect makes it hard to gauge the impact of the impact The difficult sedimentary processes associated with terrestrial settings makes quantification of the incompleteness of the fossil record of dinosaurs hard Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 23: 05/02/06 Living mammals synapomorphies o Mammary glands o Warm-blooded (endothermic) o Fur/hair o Don’t fossilize well o The first mammal is defined by the first time the dentary bone articulated with the skull to form the “new jaw joint” Endothermy (mammals) o Characters 1-8 give agility and capacity for sustained activity; the price of endothermy is having to eat frequently o Characters 11 result in needing to extract energy quickly; efficient predigestion in our mouths (drawing) DNA data (molecular clocks) o Rates of DNA change, in some genes, is roughly clock-like; DNA differences between species can be used to estimate when they diverged o Molecular clocks suggest that most living mammalian groups diverged in the Cretaceous; DNA suggests that primates existed about 85 million years ago; the oldest primate fossil suggests that primates are 55 million years old In terms of the fossil record, we need to take into account the geologic ranges of species not preserved (or found by us) when we are estimating when lineages first evolved o This is hard o But we get similar dates to molecular estimates, at least for primates Dinosaurs and Their Relatives Lecture 24: 05/09/06 The ecological diversity of mammals exceeds that of dinosaurs The big cladogram indicates that synapsids (mammals) and diapsids should be compared instead; these groups have similar ecological diversities Eutherians (placentals) have full development in the womb Genetic change and morphological innovation o There may be very few genes involved o Est 2 gene in mice, mimics Down’s Syndrome o Different morphologies do not seem to arise from new genes but from changes in the way existing genes are “wired” Final Exam on May 18 NOT cumulative o First lecture—pterosaurs o Second lecture—origin of avian flight Length is about two times the mid-term length; as a result, questions will be more detailed Equal balance across the lectures (6-8 questions) No blue books Closed book Q&A Review Sessions o Monday May 15, 7-8pm o Tuesday, May 16, 7-8 pm o Geological Museum Lecture Hall