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In the Beginning!

In the Beginning!. Early Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago (4.6 x 10 9 ) age determined by radiometric means Moon rocks 4.3 b.y.o Oldest meteorites 4.7 b.y.o . Period of Accretion = Meteoric Bombardment.

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In the Beginning!

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  1. In the Beginning! • Early Earth • formed about 4.6 billion years ago (4.6 x 109) • age determined by radiometric means • Moon rocks 4.3 b.y.o • Oldest meteorites 4.7 b.y.o.

  2. Period of Accretion = Meteoric Bombardment • Nebular cloud began to condense (~ 4.7 b.y.o.); Whirlpools and eddies in cloud plane condensed into Sun, then the planets by gravitational attraction. • 98% of mass became the Sun. As Sun ignited, lighter gases of the inner planets were blown away by blast wave and solar wind. Outer planets retained these gases (called Gas giants).

  3. Early Earth was very hot (molten). Lighter elements were pushed toward surface (H, O, C, N); Heavier elements sank (Fe, Ni, Cu).

  4. As Earth cooled, the Atmosphere and Hydrosphere formed from the de-gassing of the crust (Volcanoes). Early atmosphere consisted of H2, H2O, CO, N2, H2S, CO2, CH4 • At first, H2O was gaseous (too hot!). Eventually, Earth cooled enough for liquid water to accumulate. This caused erosion (oldest known rocks - 3.8 x 109). Oceans formed; probably fresh water at first.

  5. Now: ~ 326 million miles3 of H2O on surface : "Water Planet" Covers 72% of surface: Ocean (salt) 97% Fresh 3% 2.2 % Polar ice caps .8 % Groundwater, Lakes & Rivers

  6. Composition of Matter • Matter - anything that has mass & takes up space. • Element - a substance that cannot be broken down to simpler substances; has specific properties. Each has a chemical symbol: O, N, C, Fe, Cu • Atom - the smallest particle of an element that retains the characteristics of that element.

  7. + Nucleus: Neutrons (no charge) Protons (+ charge) Electron: move in regions outside nucleus (- charge) • The number of electrons and protons should be equal in each element. • Compound - made up of molecules • Molecule - the smallest unit of a compound that retains the characteristics of that compound. -

  8. Water • The most common compound on Earth's surface • Extremely important to Biological systems; Life could not exist without it. Makes up 55 - 96% of living things; Adult human: 65 - 72% Baby: 75% Steer: 55% Jellyfish: 96% Carrot: 88% Watermelon: 93%

  9. Molecule: H2O - chemical formula -two hydrogen atoms covalently bonded to one oxygen atom in a 2:1 ratio. Covalent bond - the sharing of electrons between two atoms. A very strong chemical bond! O H H H O H oxygen + 2 hydrogen = water atom atoms Covalent bond x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x x

  10. H H + Unique Properties of Water _ • Water is a Polar molecule with opposite charges on each end. • Dissolving power - called the "Universal Solvent“ • Cohesion - attraction of "like" molecules. Caused by Hydrogen bonding - unlike charges of the water molecule attract

  11. Hydrogen bonding - the positive region of one molecule attracts the negative region of another. Not a true chemical bond! It is a weak attraction water molecules have for each other; allows water to be a liquid at room temperature; produces cohesion and high surface tension. • Adhesion - Positive and negative ends can attract other surfaces; called the "wetting capacity;" due to polarity. • High Heat of Vaporization - water has a large capacity for absorbing heat. Many hydrogen bonds must be broken for water to vaporize or evaporate.

  12. Resistance to Temperature Change - Hydrogen bonds absorb heat when they break and release heat when they form. Ex: water droplets on cold glass (formation) evaporative air conditioners; sweating (break) • Lower Density of Ice - water molecules form an hexagonal matrix when it freezes due to hydrogen bonding. Takes up more space, therefore is less dense, so it floats. Prevents lakes and streams from freezing solid; protects life forms during winter.

  13. Put these notes at bottom of page 4 Question: Why can water dissolve so many things? Answer - Its Polarity ! Ex: NaCl (common table salt, sodium chloride) Sodium and chlorine attract one another because they they have opposite charges Na+Cl- When this saltdissolves in water, the sodium and chlorine atoms separate to form ions. The positive Na+ is surrounded by the negative ends of the water molecules. H H V O Na+ O O V H V H H H

  14. The negative Cl - is surrounded by the positiveends of the water molecules. O V H H Cl - H V H O

  15. Taxonomy and Binomial Nomenclature

  16. When you go shopping in the grocery store, similar items are often placed on the same aisle. Why? They are most often related to each other. • In science, classification is the arrangement of organisms into orderly groups based on their similarities. • In this unit, you will learn how scientists classify living things. • You will also learn about the six kingdoms into which all living things are classified.

  17. Early Ideas On Earth’s Organisms • Linnaeus – 1st to group similar organisms and assign them Latin names • Two word name (Genus species) • Known as Binomial nomenclature

  18. Taxonomy Scientists classify the diverse number of organisms on the planet in order to learn and study from them. Taxonomy is the field of biology thatidentifies(gives organisms a name) andclassifiesorganisms based on shared characteristics.

  19. Taxonomy is the science of grouping • and naming organisms. • Classification the grouping of • information or objects based on • similarities.

  20. We only know about a fraction of the • organisms that exist or have existed on Earth. • Taxonomists give a unique scientific name to • each species they know about whether it’s alive • today or extinct. • The scientific name comes from one of two • “dead” languages – Latin or ancient Greek.

  21. Rules for Binomial Nomenclature • Always written in Latin and in italics. • Genus name is written first and is capitalized. • Species name is written second and is NOT capitalized. • Correctly written scientific names • Homo sapiens (modern man) • Felisdomesticus (common housecat)

  22. When we identify an organism, we list only the genus and species name. • The genus name is capitalized, the species name is not. • Genus-species names are always underlined or in italics. • Canisfamiliaris • Canisfamiliaris • Genus species names can often be shortened. Ex C. familiaris, E. coli

  23. Devil Cat

  24. Ghost Cat

  25. Mountain Lion

  26. Screaming Cat

  27. Puma

  28. Florida Panther

  29. Cougar

  30. There are at least 50 common names for • the animal shown on the previous 7 slides. • Common names vary according to region. • Soooo……why use a scientific name?

  31. Classification

  32. Purpose • Scientists give animals Latin names during classifications which consists of two parts; the genus and species names put together. • They use Latin because it is universal (worldwide) and it is not widely spoken and, therefore, the meanings of the word are not likely to change.

  33. Purpose for Classification cont. http://www.imagequest3d.com/stock/taxon/taxonomy_r2_c1.gif • Classification organizes large amounts of information into manageable levels. • Classification also reveals (or shows) evolutionary relationships between organisms. Created & Designed by S. Harrington Background Image: http://www.funny-potato.com/images/animals/jellyfish/jellyfish.jpg

  34. Carl von Linne (Carolus Linnaeus) • Von Linne was the Swedish biologist who in the mid-1700’s developed the biological system of classification with 7 taxonomic levels (kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, & species). http://www.ub.uit.no/northernlights/images/linne06d.jpg Created & Designed by S. Harrington Background Image: http://www.funny-potato.com/images/animals/jellyfish/jellyfish.jpg

  35. Modern Levels of Classification • Domain is the most recently added 8th taxonomic level, which is even more inclusive than a kingdom. https://eapbiofield.wikispaces.com/file/view/classi6.jpg Created & Designed by S. Harrington Background Image: http://www.funny-potato.com/images/animals/jellyfish/jellyfish.jpg

  36. Levels of Classification • In modern taxonomy there are eight major levels of classification: • Domain • Kingdom • Phylum • Class • Order • Family • Genus • Species

  37. Mnemonic Device • D = … • K = … • P = … • C = … • O = … • F = … • G = … • S = … Directions: • Create an Mnemonic Device to remember the levels of classification. • Use the first letter for each level to create a rhythm, poem or saying to remember the order. Created & Designed by S. Harrington Background Image: http://www.funny-potato.com/images/animals/jellyfish/jellyfish.jpg

  38. As you move from the top to the bottom of this hierarchy, each classification level becomes more specific and includes fewer members than the level above it. Domain – Eukarya Insect fish snake bird pig dog panda black bear grizzly bear tree

  39. Dashing • King • Phillip • Came • Over • For • Grape • Soda

  40. Domain • In the mid-1990’s, domain was added as a new level in the classification hierarchy. • Domain is the largest group in the classification system.

  41. 3-Domains • The three domains are: • Bacteria • Archaea • Eukarya

  42. Domain Bacteria • Bacteria includes common strains such as Streptococcus and E. coli. • Includes Kingdom Eubacteria. http://news.bbc.co.uk/olmedia/300000/images/_300835_e_coli300.jpg Created & Designed by S. Harrington Background Image: http://www.funny-potato.com/images/animals/jellyfish/jellyfish.jpg

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