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Vocabulary Chapter 14 • Fossil • Paleontologist • Relative dating • Law of superposition Fossil Any preserved evidence of an organism Formed in sedimentary rock Example fossil types: trace, molds, casts, replacement, petrified, amber and mummification Plants, animals and bacteria can form fossils, but only organisms that are buried rapidly in sediment are readily preserved. Most organisms decompose before they have a chance to become fossilized. Constant change of sediment in aquatic environments allows for fossilization to occur more frequently Paleontologist A scientist who studies fossils From fossil evidence, paleontologists attempt to interpret the record of life left in rocks They infer the diet of an organism and the environment in which it lived and can often create images of extinct communities Relative dating A method used to determine the age of rocks by comparing them with those in other layers Relative age scale for rocks all over the world – from studies of rock layers (strata) geologists inferred that all strata of the same age contained similar collections of fossils Relative dating is based on the law of superposition Law of Superposition States that younger layers of rock are deposited on top of older layers Process is similar to stacking newspapers in a pile as you read them each day, unless disrupted, the oldest ones will be on the bottom Read Chapter 14 Do Chapter 14 Assessment Pages 411 – 412 Questions 1-10 and 17-24 Turn In Vocabulary Chapter 14 • Radiometric dating • Half-life • Geologic time scale Radiometric dating A method of dating rocks that uses the decay of radioactive isotopes to measure the age of a rock Scientists calculate the ratio of the parent isotope to the daughter isotope to determine the age of the sample Radioactive isotopes used for radiometric dating are found in igneous or metamorphic rocks, not sedimentary rocks, so they can not be used to date rocks that contain fossils but instead date rocks found close by Half-life The amount of time it takes for half of the original isotope to decay For a radioactive isotope to be used to determine the age of rocks by radiometric dating the half-life of that isotope must be known Geologic Time Scale A record of Earth’s history that identifies major geological and biological events Geologic time spans more than 4 billion years and it is subdivided to identify how many millions of years ago (mya) an event occurred Vocabulary Chapter 14 • Epoch • Period • Era • Eon • Cambrian explosion Epoch Smallest units of geologic time Last several million years Period Divisions of geologic time consisting of two or more epochs Lasts tens of millions of years Era Unit of geologic time consisting of two or more periods Lasts hundreds of millions of years Eon Longest unit of time in the geologic time scale Can include billions of years Cambrian explosion A time period when the ancestors of most major animal groups diversified, creating a drastic change in the history of animal life on Earth In the space of just a few million years, started in Paleozoic era Vocabulary Chapter 14 • K-T boundary • Plate tectonics • Spontaneous generation • Theory of biogenesis • Endosymbiont theory K-T Boundary A layer of material that contains high levels of iridium, between the rock layers of the Cenozoic era and ending the Mesozoic era Iridium is rare on Earth but common in meteorites, which indicates a meteorite impact Scientist relate this impact to the mass extinction wiping out the dinosaurs The impact did not kill all species, but with the extreme global climate change only species that could adjust to the change survived including avian and reptilian descendents, many marine invertebrates, and numerous plant species Plate tectonics Describes the movement of several large plates that make up the surface of Earth Continental drift – continents sit on top of these plates which have moved and reshaped over millions of years Plates move atop a partially molten layer of rock underneath them Spontaneous generation Old idea that life arises from nonlife Disproved by Francesco Redi’s experiment testing the idea that flies arose spontaneously from rotting meat Not completely rejected until replaced by theory of biogenesis Theory of biogenesis States that only living organisms can produce other living organisms Proved by Louis Pasteur’s experiment which showed microorganisms only grew in a flask of broth that was exposed to the enviroment Endosymbiont theory States that the ancestors of eukaryotic cells lived in association with prokaryotic cells The mutually beneficial relationship lead to the prokaryotic symbionts to become organelles in eukaryotic cells Proposed by Lynn Margulis Example: Mitochondria and chloroplasts have following incommon to prokaryotes: contain there own DNA (arranged in circular pattern), similar ribosome shape, and reproduce by fission