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How Old is the Earth Anyway?

How Old is the Earth Anyway?. Unlocking the ancient Earth. Relative Time Scale. Is based on the rock and fossil evidence found in the crust of the Earth The relative age of the rock is due to position. Tells you what happened first, second, third, etc.

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How Old is the Earth Anyway?

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  1. How Old is the Earth Anyway? Unlocking the ancient Earth

  2. Relative Time Scale • Is based on the rock and fossil evidence found in the crust of the Earth • The relative age of the rock is due to position. Tells you what happened first, second, third, etc. • Sedimentary rocks are especially useful because: • They are most likely to contain fossils • They are the most common and widespread rock type

  3. Rules for the Relative Dating of Sedimentary Rocks – The present is the key to the past (uniformitarianism)

  4. Principle of Original Horizontality • Sediments (that make up Sedimentary rocks) will settle in horizontal layers, unless they have undergone deformation

  5. Law of Superposition • The oldest layers are found below the younger layers

  6. Principle of Crosscutting Relationships • Any rock that cuts existing rock is younger than the rock that it cuts.

  7. Fossil Succession • Fossils represent the remains of once living organisms • Most fossils are the remains of extinct organisms • The kinds of fossils found in rocks of different ages differ because life on Earth has changed over time

  8. Other Tools: Index Fossils • Attributes of an Index Fossil: • Fossils of life that existed during limited periods of geologic time. • Widespread distribution • Any fossil found in a rock is the same age as the rock it was found in. • They are used as guides to date the age of the rock in which they are preserved.

  9. Other tools: Unconformity • A surface between two rock layers that represents a gap in the rock record.

  10. Types of unconformities Angular Unconformity Disconformities

  11. Angular unconformity:

  12. Disconformities:

  13. Crosscutting Relationships:

  14. Absolute Age-Radiometric Dating • Is used to determine the absolute age of earth materials • Determines how old a rock is in years. • It is based on the natural radioactive decay of radioactive elements found in igneous rocks.

  15. A little background: • An atom is made up of protons, neutrons and electrons • An element is an atom with a specific number protons. • The number of neutrons and electrons in an element can change, but if you change the number of protons in an element, you change the element.

  16. Diagram: • The protons and neutrons are found in the nucleus of the atom • The electrons are in orbit around the nucleus.

  17. Radioactive decay • Most atoms are stable; that is, the number of protons and neutrons never changes. • In some atoms, the number of protons and neutrons makes the atom unstable. • The unstable atom emits its excess energy and may eject one or more subatomic particles or it will split into two atoms of smaller elements in order to become more stable. • This is radioactive decay.

  18. Half-Life • As the element loses particles from the nucleus it changes or splits from the radioactive PARENT element to a stable DAUGHTER element. • This rate of decay is measured in Half-lives • Half-life is the amount of time it takes ½ (50%) of the parent element to decay to the daughter element • Radiometric dating is based on the ratio of the Parent element to the Daughter element

  19. Rate of Decay:

  20. Different elements have different half-lives: (in your ESRT add U235)

  21. To solve half-life problems: • Find the number of years for that element’s half-life • Find the number of half-lives that have occurred (from table) • Multiply the element’s half-life by the number of half-lives that have passed

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