* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Document
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
REVIEW TEST 3 This review is a suggested list of terms and practice questions. This is NOT all-inclusive. Check notes, power points, and textbook for topics covered in class that may not be included here. Terms from each chapter for review: Ch. 4 absolute dating principles radioactive decay -- radiometric dating catastrophism – principle of uniformitarianism daughter – parent elements half-life and per cent parent Ch. 5 sedimentary facies marine transgression – regression – Walther’s law Ch. 7 chromosomes – genes – alleles – DNA (know what these terms mean – you do not have to analyze these) mutation Lamarck: inheritance of acquired characteristics artificial selection, natural selection Darwin—theory of evolution Mendel -- genetics convergent evolution, divergent evolution, parallel evolution phyletic gradualism, punctuated equilibrium species homologous structures, analagous structures, vestigal structures living fossil Ch 10 (a few references from 11) Fig. 10.3: be able to interpret Figs. 10.5, 10.10, 10.14, 11.17 Questions 107, 9, 12, 14 on page 208 (answers in your text) Mountain ranges formed at convergent boundaries are now called “mobile belts” Appalacian mobile belt (east) Taconic orogeny (see Queenston Delta below) Cordilleran mobile belt (west) cratonic sequence Transcontinental Arch – high land or islands rising above epeiric sea epeiric sea Gondwana Laurentia Laurasia clastic wedge: example: Queenston Delta Page 205 Acadian orogeny * Chapter 11 Page 225, 226 formed Catskill Delta: Old Red Sandstone (Eastern US and British Isles – were once together before breakup of Pangea) Sauk Sequence Tippecanoe Sequence – deposition of St. Peters Sandstone barrier reef – Michigan basin salt deposits Grand Canyon marine transgressive series page 198 The following is a practice review quiz. Your instructor is NOT responsible for errors in this review quiz. It is up to YOU to find the correct response for each question. (Numbers not sequential) 9. Radioactive Na24 decays with a half-life of 15 hours. Starting with 1000 atoms of this nuclide, how many atoms would exist after 45 hours? A. 500 B. 250 C. 125 D. 996 E. no Na24 would remain 10. If a radioactive element has a half-life of 4,000,000 years, the amount of parent material remaining after 12,000,000 years of decay will be this fraction of the original amount: A. 1/32 B. l/16 C. 1/8 D. 1/4 11. The atomic number of an element is the same as the number of A. electrons in the nucleus B. neutrons in the nucleus C. protons in the nucleus D. electrons in the outer shell E. protons and neutrons in the nucleus 14. The half-life of a radioactive isotope is A. half the amount of time required for the isotope to decay B. half the duration of a radioactive isotope’s existence C. half of the isotope’s decay rate D. the time necessary for half of the radioactive parent atoms to decay to daughter atoms 15. If an isotope has a half-life of 50 million years, and 1/8 of the remaining sample consists of the parent isotope, the age of the rock from which the sample was taken is A. 400 million years B. 300 million years C. 150 million years D. 100 million years 17. In the field, you encounter layers of sedimentary rock through which a dike of igneous granite intrudes. The granite is dated radiometrically to be 28.7 million years. How old is the sedimentary rock? A. younger than 28.7 million years B. 28.7 million years C. older than 28.7 million years D. 40.2 million years Chapter 5 18. If a sandstone contains fragments of an underlying granite, we can infer that A. both the sandstone and the granite are the same age B. the sandstone is older than the granite C. the relative age of the sandstone and granite cannot be determined D. the granite intruded into the sandstone E. the sandstone is younger than the granite 19. An erosional surface that separates strata that are parallel with one another is called a(n) A. angular unconformity B. disconformity C. nonconformity D. bedding plane 20. An erosional surface that separates tilted strata below from flat lying strata above is called a(n) A. angular unconformity B. disconformity C. nonconformity D. bedding plane 21. An erosional surface that separates older metamorphic or igneous rocks from younger overlying sedimentary rocks is called a(n) A. angular unconformity B. disconformity C. nonconformity D. bedding plane 22. What is the correct order of typical sedimentary facies, from shoreline toward deep open water? A. shale, mud, and sand B. limestone, sandstone and conglomerate C. limestone, shale, sandstone D. sandstone, shale, and limestone 23. The term facies in sedimentary rocks refers to the A. lateral changes resulting from deposition in different depositional environments that had existed simultaneously B. vertical variation resulting from deposition in the same environment separated by significant time intervals C. lateral variation resulting from deposition in the same environment separated by significant time intervals. D. laterally homogeneous strata deposited over a long time interval in the same environment 24. Sedimentary facies are a result of A. similar depositional processes operating in adjacent environments B. similar depositional processes operating in geographically separate environments C. different depositional processes operating in geographically separate environments D. different depositional processes operating in adjacent environments 25. Which of the following is a likely cause of marine transgressions? A. continental uplift B. lowering of sea level with respect to a continent C. rapid sea floor spreading D. formation of large glaciers. 30. Radiometric dating of detrital or clastic minerals (particals) in sedimentary rocks gives A. the exact age of the sedimentary rock B. an age older than the sedimentary rock C. an age younger than the sedimentary rock D. the age of lithification of the sedimentary rock 31. You date an igneous rock that cuts across a sedimentary layer. What can you determine about the age of the sedimentary rock? A. a minimum age B. a maximum age C. no age inference can be made at all D. an exact age 32. In the field, a geologist notices igneous rock below parallel sedimentary layers. The igneous rock has pieces of limestone from the first sedimentary layer contained within it. What can be said about the age of the limestone? A. The limestone was deposited simultaneously with emplacement of the igneous rock. B. The limestone is older than the igneous rock C. The limestone is younger than the igneous rock D. The limestone can only be dated through its included fossils Chapter 6 Chapter 7 37.. What led Darwin to develop his theory of natural selection? A. His renewed interest in the biblical account of creation B. His observation of language variation in human populations in the British Isles C. His observations of no documentable difference in plant and animal population over wide geographic areas. D. His observations that distinct, but closely related, groups of plants and animals inhabited isolated islands 38. Which of the following is not a component of the Darwin-Wallace theory of natural selection? A. all populations contain heritable variations B. some variations are more favorable than others C. not all young survive to maturity D. all organisms can knowingly select their genetic direction 39. The central theme for the theory of evolution is A. all life forms that existed in the past exist today B. all life forms that have existed on Earth rose from spontaneous generation C. all life forms that exist on Earth today are completely unrelated to life forms that existed in the past D. all life forms that exist today are descendants of life forms that existed in the past 40. Lamarck's theory of inheritance of acquired characteristics was based on A. discovery of DNA B. discovery of genes C. experiments D. observation and interpretation 41. In evolutionary terms, the best thing to be is A. the biggest, meanest organism around B. so well adapted to your environment that you don’t change if your environment changes C. well adapted to your environment but able to change if your environment changes D. the smartest organism around E. the best camouflaged organisms around 42. One important conclusion of Mendel's genetic studies with pea plants is A. mutation is the only important factor in change B. genes controlling traits do not blend during inheritance, but are transmitted as discrete entities C. the traits that an organism inherits are the average of the two alleles D. once a trait becomes recessive, it is lost to the population forever 43. An important aspect of mutation is that A. the only mutations that can be passed on to the next generation are those that occur in sex cells (sperm and eggs) B. all mutations are bad C. all mutations are good D. all mutations can be passed to the next generation Plant and animal breeders choose traits they deem desirable, and specifically breed for those traits. They practice A. allopatric speciation B. artificial selection C. evolution D. natural selection 44. A population that has similar individuals that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring is called a A. mating pair B. family C. breeding stock D. species (The next questions were assigned as extra credit and weren’t covered in class) 45. Structures that are superficially dissimilar but have a common origin with subsequent modifications are called A. heterologous structures B. homologous structures C. vestigial structures D. analogous structures 46. Features that serve the same function on very dissimilar organisms are called A. heterologous structures B. homologous structures C. analogous structures D. vestigial structures 47. The wings of sparrows and eagles are _______, but the wings of bats, birds and insects are _______. A. vestigial, homologous B. homologous, erogenous C. homologous, analogous D. analogous, homologous 48. Structures in an organism that are nonfunctional remnants of organs that were once functional in ancestors are called A. relict organs B. ancestral organs C. analogous organs D. homologous organs E. vestigial organs