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Earth Science 12.2 : Fossils :Evidence of Past Life

Earth Science 12.2 : Fossils :Evidence of Past Life. Fossils : Evidence of Past Life. Fossils: Evidence of the Past. Wooly mammoths once roamed the plains of North America millennia ago. Thousands of years ago they became extinct after the last ice age.

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Earth Science 12.2 : Fossils :Evidence of Past Life

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  1. Earth Science 12.2 : Fossils :Evidence of Past Life Fossils : Evidence of Past Life

  2. Fossils: Evidence of the Past • Wooly mammoths once roamed the plains of North America millennia ago. Thousands of years ago they became extinct after the last ice age. • An extinct organism is an organism that no longer exists on Earth. • In the Arctic, scientists still find fossils from mammoths, such as bones and huge tusks. • A fossil is the remains or traces of an organism preserved from the geologic past.

  3. Fossils: Types of . . . • Preserved remains, such as frozen mammoth fossils, are just one type of fossil. • The different types of fossils include • Petrified fossils • Molds and casts • Carbon films • preserved remains • Trace fossils

  4. Fossils: petrified fossils Petrified Fossils: • Fossils often form when an organism’s remains become petrified; or “turned to stone”. • In this process, mineral-rich water soaks into the small cavities and pores of the original specimen. • The minerals precipitate from the water and fill the spaces. Petrified wood forms this way. • Sometimes, minerals replace the cell walls or other solid material of an organism. Petrified wood

  5. Fossils: Molds and Casts Molds and Casts • Molds and casts are another common type of fossil. • A fossil mold is created when a shell or other structure is buried in sediment and than dissolved by underground water. • The mold reflects only the shape and surface markings of the organism. It doesn’t reveal any information about it’s internal structure. • Cast fossils are created if the hollow spaces of a mold are later filled with mineral matter.

  6. Fossils: Molds and Casts Carbon Films: • Fossils called carbon films can preserve delicate details of leaves and animal parts. • The formation of a carbon film begins when an organism is buried under fine sediment. • Over time, pressure squeezes out the liquids and gases and leaves behind a thin film of carbon. • Black shale often contains carbon film fossils.

  7. Fossils: preserved remains Preserved Remains: • Sometimes, fossilization preserves all or part of an organism with relatively little change. • A mammoth preserved in permafrost is one example. Another example is an insect that has been preserved in amber. • Amber is hardened resin or sap from ancient trees. Insects that get trapped in amber can be preserved perfectly for millions of years. Baby mammoth preserved in permafrost

  8. Fossils: trace fossils Trace Fossils: • Trace fossils are indirect evidence of prehistoric life in the form of footprints or tracks left by organisms. • Tracks or footprints are left behind in soft sediment. This sediment hardens later into sedimentary rock. • Burrows are holes made by an animal or organism that later filled with mineral matter and hardened. • Some of the oldest known fossils are thought to be worm burrows. Dinosaur tracks are trace fossils

  9. Conditions for fossilization: Conditions for fossilization: • All the fossils that geologists have found, arranged by their relative ages, make up the fossil record. • But the fossil record includes only a small fraction of the organisms that once inhabited the Earth. Why is this? • Some organisms were more likely to be fossilized than others. • The two conditions that favor preservation of an organisms as a fossil are rapid burial and the possession of hard parts.

  10. Conditions for fossilization: Conditions for fossilization: • For a fossil to form, the remains of the organism must be buried quickly by sediment. • Sediment protects the soft parts of an animal from being eaten by scavengers or decomposed by bacteria. • Organisms also have a better chance of being preserved if they have hard parts such as shells, bones, and teeth. Fossils of hard parts are more likely to be found than fossils of soft bodied animals.

  11. Fossils and the History of Life: • During the 1700s and 1800s, some scientists thought that fossils might provide clues to the history of life on Earth. • Two major scientific developments helped scientists explain fossil records: the principal of fossil succession and the theory of evolution. • According to the first, the principal of fossil succession, the fossil record showed that certain sets of organisms were characteristic of different periods in Earth’s past. • According to the second, the theory of evolution, living things have evolved over time.

  12. Fossils and the History of Life: Fossil Succession: • The principal of fossil succession states that fossil organisms succeed one another in a definite and determinable order. • Therefore, any time period can be recognized by it’s fossil content. • This principal was developed by William Smith who realized that fossils were not randomly distributed through rock layers. • Each layer contained a distinct assortment of fossils that did not occur in the layers above or below.

  13. Fossils and the History of Life: Theory of Evolution: Geologists had noticed that fossils from older rock layers were very different than fossils in younger layers. Charles Darwin’s Theory of evolution helped explain this fact. Darwin’s Theory of Evolution states that life forms have changed over time, or evolved, from simpler to more complex forms.

  14. Fossils and the History of Life: Theory of Evolution: • To explain why evolution occurs, Darwin proposed a mechanism of natural selection. • In natural selection, individuals that are better adapted to their environment are more likely to survive and reproduce than others of the same type. • Organisms that are less well adapted to their surroundings are more likely to become extinct.

  15. Fossils and the History of Life: Theory of Evolution: • Adaption drives the process of evolution. Organisms posses certain traits, called adaptations, that affect their ability to survive and reproduce. • Organisms that are well adapted to their environment, like a polar bear in the Arctic, survive, mate and pass on their traits to later generations. • Over time, one type of organism can evolve into another quite different type. For example, the ancestors of the modern whale were land walking mammals millions of years ago before they evolved.

  16. Interpreting Fossil records Interpreting the Fossil Record: • The principal of fossil succession and the theory of evolution helped geologists to interpret the fossil record. • Geologists use fossils to improve the correlation of rock layers and reconstruct past environments. Fossil succession of cat family

  17. Index Fossils Fossils and Correlation: • Geologists today use index fossils and groups of fossils to correlate rock layers. • An index fossil is the fossil of organism that was geographically widespread and abundant in the fossil record., but that existed for only a limited span of time. • The presence of an index fossil in rock layers at different locations means that the layers are of roughly the same age.

  18. Fossils and Past Environments • Fossils can also be used to reconstruct past environments. • Because organisms evolve with adaptations suited to particular environments, fossils provide clues to the characteristics of those environments. • For example, fossil teeth with flat surfaces for grinding might be from an animal that ate grasses. • If fossil pollen were abundant in the same rock layer, geologists might infer that the animal probably lived in a grassland.

  19. Fossils and Past Environments • Fossils can help geologists build an even more detailed picture of a past environment. • Suppose geologists find fossil clam shells in limestone. They can infer from this that the area was once covered by a shallow sea. • Geologists might even be able to infer where the shoreline was by the location of certain fossils. Animals with thicker shells capable of handling pounding waves may have lived closer to the shoreline. Prehistoric clam shells

  20. Fossils and Past Environments • Fossils can also indicate the former temperature of the water. • Certain present-day corals require warm and shallow water, like those around Florida. • When similar corals are found in ancient limestones, they indicate that a Florida-like marine environment must have existed when the corals were alive. Prehistoric clam shells

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