How_fossils_change
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Transcript How_fossils_change
Objective: Understand “Variation” and the Source of Variation
Key vocabulary: variation, traits, mutation.
DO NOW: List 3 things you learned about variation.
1.____________________________
2. ____________________________
3. ____________________________
Size of Almonds in mm
Number of almonds
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
21– 23
24 – 26
27 – 29
30 -31
32- 33
34 -36
Almond lengths (mm)
37 – 39
40 – 41
42 – 44
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
Most organisms live, die and decompose. They leave no traces of having lived. Under certain
conditions, an organism’s remains or tracks may be preserved as a fossil. Fossils give clues
about how an organism looked and where it lived. They are often used by scientists as
evidence of change.
A fossil is any remains of a once-living thing. Fossils may only be the outline of some plant,
animal, or other organism that is preserved in rock. Sometimes, entire skeletons of animals
that lived millions of years ago are found.
DO NOW:
•
What is a fossil? A fossil is any remains of a once-living thing
•
Give 2 examples of fossils.
• the outline of plants or animals that is preserved in rock
• entire skeletons of animals that lived millions of years ago
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
How Do fossils Show Change?
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
Horse
Hyracotherium
Miohippus
Age
55 million
Years ago
30 million
Years ago
Size
38 cm
65 cm
Type of
surroundings
Forest,
wooded,
swampy areas
Taiga
Forest with
trees and
shrubs
Merychippus
13 million
Years ago
100
Prairie
scattered trees,
shoots of shrubs
abundant grass
Equus
Today
140 cm
Plain
grasslands
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
2. Look for and color the following kind of bones for each fossil hors.
a. Color the toe bones red. These are marked for you with an x.
b. Color the foot bones blue. These are marked for you with a y.
c. Color the ankle bones green. These are marked with a w.
d. Color the heel bones yellow. These are marked with a z.
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
Kind of Horse
Hyracotherium
Miohippus
Merychippus
Equus
Number of toes
4
3
3
1
Number of toe bones
12
9
9
3
Number of foot bones
4
3
3
3
Number of ankle
bones
7
6
4
4
Number of heel
bones
1
1
1
1
Total number of foot
bones
24
19
17
11
14
18
21
38
16
17
20
39
Length of foot
(measure inset
diagrams in mm)
Height of teeth (mm)
Objective: Understand Evolution as the Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
1. What changes occurred in the surroundings of horses from Hyracotherium to
Equus? The environment changed from rainforest to grassland.
Less plants, more open space.
2. What change occurred in the size of the horse from Hyracotherium to Equus?
The earliest horses were small. The horse size has increased over time.
3. How is called the change of the horse population over time?
Evolution
4. How do you explain the changes in the size of the horses?
Horses adapted to environmental changes: As there is less vegetation in the
environment, horses increased in size.
Objective: Understand Evolution as the Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
5. As the surroundings changed, what happened to the teeth of the horse?
As the surrounding changed, the teeth of the horse became larger and longer.
The present-day horse has larger teeth than earliest horses.
6. Describe the overall changes in foot length, number of toes, and size of toes in
the horse over time.
Foot length increased, number of toes reduced from 4 to 1 toe, size of toes
became larger in the horse over time
Objective: Understand Evolution as Change of a Population Over Time
Key words: fossils, adaptation, evolution, natural selection
7. How do you call the changes in foot length, number of toes, and size of toes in
the horse over time? Evolution
8. How would natural selection have caused changes in the size, feet, and teeth
of the horse?
Horse Teeth
The earliest horses had teeth that were adapted to browsing on young shoots
of trees and shrubs.
The present-day horse is much larger and has larger teeth that are adapted to
grazing on the tough leaves of grasses.
Size and Number of Toes
Early horses were adapted to living in wooded, swampy areas where more toes
where more toes were an advantage.
The single-hoofed toes of the present-day horse allow it to travel fast in the plains.