Ch14 - OCPS TeacherPress
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Transcript Ch14 - OCPS TeacherPress
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Land Environments
Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago.
Gravity pulled the densest elements to the
center of the planet.
The planet began to cool after about 500
million years.
A solid crust formed on the surface.
Water vapor condensed and formed the
oceans.
Most scientists believe life began in the
oceans
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Atmosphere
The gases that likely made up the atmosphere
are those that were expelled by volcanoes.
Water vapor, Carbon dioxide, Sulfur dioxide,
Carbon monoxide, Hydrogen sulfide,
Hydrogen cyanide, Nitrogen, and Hydrogen
NO Oxygen (O2)
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Radiometric Dating
Uses the decay of
radioactive isotopes
to measure the age of
a rock
Radioactive dating is
the method used to
determine the age of
the earth and of
fossils.
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Clues in Rocks
A fossil is any preserved evidence of an
organism.
Examples of fossils include bones, shells,
and impressions of dead organisms left in
rocks.
Most organisms decompose before they have
a chance to become fossilized.
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Fossil Formation
Nearly all fossils are formed in sedimentary
rock.
The sediments build up until they cover the
organism’s remains.
Minerals replace the organic matter or fill the
empty pore spaces of the organism.
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Dating fossils
Relative dating is a
method used to
determine the age of
rocks by comparing
them with those in
other layers.
Section 1
The History of Life
Section 1
The History of Life
Fossil Evidence of Change
Plate tectonics describes the movement of several
large plates that make up the surface of Earth.
These plates, some of which contain continents,
move atop a partially molten layer of rock
underneath them.
Section 1
The History of Life
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Origins: Early Ideas
Spontaneous generation is the idea that life arises
from nonlife.
Francesco Redi, an Italian scientist, disproved the idea
that flies arose spontaneously from rotting meat.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
The theory of biogenesis states that only living
organisms can produce other living organisms.
Louis Pasteur designed an experiment to show that
biogenesis was true even for microorganisms.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Simple Organic Molecule Formation
Life may have began at the surface of the
ocean where UV light from the Sun and
lightning were the primary energy sources.
Many scientists believe life began at the depths
of the ocean where geothermal vents provided
the energy for organic molecule formation.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
The Primordial Soup Model
In the 1920’s Oparin and Haldane both
suggested that the early Earth’s oceans
contained large amounts of organic
molecules.
This hypothesis became known as the
primordial soup model.
In 1953, the primordial soup model was tested
by Miller and Urey.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Stanley Miller and
Harold Urey were the
first to show that simple
organic molecules
could be made from
inorganic compounds.
Later, scientists found
that hydrogen cyanide
could be formed from
even simpler molecules
in simulated early Earth
environments.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
The Bubble Model
In 1986, the geophysicist Louis Lerman
suggested that the key processes that formed
the chemicals needed for life took place within
bubbles on the ocean’s surface.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
The Bubble Model
Section 2
The History of Life
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Genetic Code
Some RNA sequences appear to have
changed very little through time.
Many biologists consider RNA to have been
life’s first coding system.
Other researchers have proposed that clay
crystals could have provided an initial
template for RNA replication.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Cellular Evolution
Scientists hypothesize that the first cells were
prokaryotes.
Many scientists think that modern prokaryotes
called Archaea are the closest relatives of
Earth’s first cells.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Photosynthesizing Prokaryotes
Fossil evidence of cyanobacteria has been
found in rocks as old as 3.5 billion years.
Cyanobacteria eventually produced enough
oxygen to support the formation of the ozone
layer.
Ozone blocks the sun’s UV rays
With oxygen and the ozone layer in the
atmosphere, life could migrate onto land.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
The Endosymbiotic Theory
The ancestors of eukaryotic cells lived in
association with prokaryotic cells.
It has been suggested that a large prokaryote
engulfed a smaller one, which continued to live
and provide energy to the larger prokaryote
The relationship between the cells became
mutually beneficial, and the prokaryotic symbionts
became organelles in eukaryotic cells.
This theory explains the origin of chloroplasts and
mitochondria.
Section 2
The History of Life
The Origin of Life
Section 2
The History of Life