1 / 32

Chapter 17

Chapter 17. The History of Life. 17-1 The Fossil Record. Paleontologists- scientists who study fossils Fossil Record- all the information about past life forms. Provides evidence of the history of life on Earth. Shows how different groups of organisms have changed over time.

ciel
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 17

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 17 The History of Life

  2. 17-1 The Fossil Record • Paleontologists- scientists who study fossils • Fossil Record- all the information about past life forms. • Provides evidence of the history of life on Earth. • Shows how different groups of organisms have changed over time.

  3. What the record shows • Certain fossils appear only in certain rock layers • Some older, some more recent 99% of all species on Earth are extinct

  4. How fossils form • Primarily found in sedimentary rock • Hard parts- bones, wood, shells mineralize • Soft parts- leave impressions • The fossil record is selective and incomplete

  5. Fossil Dating- Relative Dating • Relative dating- the age of a fossil is determined by comparing its placement with that of fossils in other rock layers • Index fossils- used in relative dating. Must be short lived and wide spread

  6. Fossil Dating- Radioactive Dating • Half-life- length of time for half of the radioactive atoms to decay • Radioactive dating- calculating the age based on the amount of radioactive isotopes remaining. • Carbon 14, half-life of 5730 years (useful up to 60,000 years) • Carbon 14 decays into Nitrogen-14 • The ratio of Carbon 12 to Carbon 14 is used Potassium-40 decays into Argon-40, half-life of 1.26 billion years

  7. Geologic Time Scale

  8. 17-2 Earth’s Early History • Earth- 4.6 billion years old • Early Earth atmosphere- hydrogen cyanide, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, nitrogen, sulfide, and water

  9. 4 billion years ago- solid rocks form • 3.8 billion years- water in liquid form, oceans form

  10. First Organic Molecules • 1950s Stanley Miller and Harold Urey • Simulated conditions of the early earth

  11. Stanley Miller and Harold Urey • Hydrogen, methane, ammonia and water combined with an electric spark • Produced amino acids

  12. The Puzzle of Life’s Origin • After the Earth cooled 3.8 billions years ago, 200 to 300 million years later, bacteria form • Proteinoid microspheres- tiny bubbles formed by organic molecules. Selectively permeable membranes

  13. Evolution of RNA and DNA • RNA probably preceded DNA

  14. Free Oxygen • Early Earth’s atmosphere had very little oxygen • 3.5 Billion years ago- bacteria appear • 2.2 Billion years ago- photosynthetic bacteria common • Oxygen combined with iron in oceans • Iron oxide formed and deposited in the oceans

  15. Origin of Eukaryotic Cells • 2 billion years ago- developed of organelles in prokaryotes • Endosymbiotic theory- eukaryotic organisms arose from a mutalistic relationship between prokaryotes

  16. Endosymbiotic theory-evidence • Mitochondria and chloroplasts • 1. contain DNA similar to bacterial DNA • 2. have ribosomes similar to bacteria • 3. reproduce by binary fission

  17. 17-3 Evolution of Multicellular Life • Precambrian • Anaerobic and aerobic bacteria appear • -Eukaryotes appear • Mulitcellular organisms appear

  18. Cambrian • Cambrian Explosion • Shells appear • Invertebrates • Jellyfish • Worms • Sponges Arthropods

  19. Ordovician and Sulurian • Octopi and squid • Jawless vertebrates • Plants on land • Aquatic arthropods

  20. Devonian • Ferns • Insects • Bony skeleton fishes • Vertebrates on land

  21. Carboniferous and Permian • Reptiles • Winged insects • 95% of organisms became extinct

  22. Triassic • Age of Reptiles Fish Insects Reptiles Cone-bearing plants Small mammals

  23. Jurassic • Dinosaurs • Archaeopteryx- first bird

  24. Cretaceous • Dinosaurs • Plants with seeds • 50% of organisms became extinct

  25. Tertiary • Earth warmed • Mammal diversity • Land • Water • Air

  26. Quaternary • Series of ice ages and then warming • Continued diversity of plants and animals • 200,000 modern humans

  27. 17-4 Patterns of Evolution • Extinction • Mass extinction causes • Changing environment: sea levels change, temperature change, land masses move • Accident- asteroid impact

  28. Adaptive Radiation • A single species evolves into many other diverse forms that live in different ways • Example: Darwin’s finches

  29. Convergent Evolution • Process by which unrelated organisms resemble each other • Organisms adapt to a similar environment in similar ways

  30. Coevolution • Process by which two species evolve in response to changes in each other over time • Example- plants and pollinators

  31. Punctuated Equilibrium • Gradualism- slow change over time • Equilibrium- no change • Punctuated Equilibrium- long periods of no change combined with short periods of rapid change • Rapid changes caused by: • Small population • Founders of a new colony • New niches open after mass extinction

  32. Development of Genes and Body Plans • Hox genes- master control genes • Changes in Hox genes have big effects on organisms

More Related