The Fossil Record Paleontology is the study of the fossil record to document life’s early history...

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Transcript of The Fossil Record Paleontology is the study of the fossil record to document life’s early history...

The Fossil Record• Paleontology is the study of the

fossil record to document life’s early history– Documents patterns within species

living at a specific time and area– Documents extinctions and new

arrivals– Documents evolution of life as the

environment of Earth changed• Index (Key) Fossils are those

found in similar strata over a wide area… used for relative dating

Formation of Fossils• Whole remains…

– Requires a soft substrate (sand, snow, riverbed, tar pit,…)

– Organism must be buried and protected for the elements

• Fossils can be evidence of life– Footprints, tunnels and burrows

Absolute Dating of Fossils

• Uses the presence of a radioactive isotope and the principle of half-life to determine the age of the organism– Sometimes called radioactive or radio dating– Half-live… the amount of time it takes for ½ of a substance to

undergo radioactive decay• C-14 has a half life of 5730yrs, so… if you had 100g of C-14 there

would be 50g left in 5730yrs, 25g left in 11460yrs, 12.5g in 17190yrs – (mass)(1/2n) ; n= ½ lifes

Geologic Time Scale • eon - longest division – Archeon - 1st eon of Earth ~3.9 to 2.5 billion

years ago – Proterozoic - lasted for the next 2 billion

years – Phanerozoic - most resent with evidence of

life • era - there are three eras per eon

– Paleozoic - ~543 million years ago "Age of Invertebrates" • fossils of both land and plants

– Mesozoic - ~248 million years ago "Age of Reptiles" • dinosaurs

– Cenozoic - ~most recent "Age of Mammals" • appearance of humans

Geologic time scale• periods

– Precambrian - all periods before the paleozoic era • rocks lack index fossils • fossil evidence is contained in stromatolites - layers of bacteria and algae • Oldest are anaerobes ~3.5mil yrs. ago

– Cambrian • invertebrates • trilobites is the most common index fossil ~500 million years ago

Early Earth• Early (protoplanet) Earth is struck

by a large object (Mars size) (~4.6Billion yrs ago)– Provides the energy for the geologic

process necessary for the rearrangement of Earth’s materials

– The atmosphere lacks oxygen (anaerobic) and contains toxic gases, CO2 and H2O

First Organic Molecules

• ~ 3.8 Billion years ago the Earth cools enough for water to remain a liquid– C compounds from space and inorganic

compounds from the atmosphere form the beginnings of RNA… “primordial ooze”• Replicated in a lab by Miller and Urey in

the 1950s to produce Urea

– Eventually form proteinoids or microspheres

– RNA develops the ability to self replicate

Oxygen Revolution– Oxygen toxic to anaerobes creates mass extinctions

• Seen in layers of stromatolites

– photosynthesis and the oxygen revolution (cyanobacteria) ~2.2billion years ago• prokaryotes start using oxygen as a source of reducing energy to form new

molecules • photoautotrophs … enters in the age of Eukaryotes

Age of Eukaryotes• Eukaryotes (~2.1 billion years ago) – arose from the symbiotic relationship and transfer of

genetic material between prokaryotes • organisms resemble simple single celled algae

– Endosymbionts - mitochondria & plastids • endosymbionts take over the role of energy making paving the

path for multicellular organisms – genetic annealing (combining of genomes) and colony formation leads

to specialization and the multicellular organism

• multicellular organisms (~1.5 billion years ago) – most confined to areas of water and heat (snowball Earth hypothesis)

resembling small algae – Cambrian explosion (explosion of life ~ 700mil years ago)