250 to 65 million years ago
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Transcript 250 to 65 million years ago
Bellwork: 02/13/2012
Collect the following data:
Chlorine
Salt Water Tanks Only:
DO
- Phosphate
Turbidity
- Salinity
Nitrate
- Calcium
Nitrite
- Water Hardness
Make sure to clean out any excess
Ammonia
food
pH
from your filter and gravel/sand.
Temperature Scrub off
(Fresh water only)
the inside of the glass & clean the
outside
with Windex once you are finished.
Evolution and Biodiversity
Before we start:
What is a scientific theory?
It makes falsifiable predictions with consistent accuracy
across a broad area of scientific inquiry
It is well-supported by many independent strands of
evidence, rather than a single foundation
It is consistent with pre-existing theories and other
experimental results
It can be adapted and modified to account for new evidence
as it is discovered, thus increasing its predictive capability
over time.
It is among the most parsimonious explanations, sparing in
proposed entities or explanations.
Other Scientific Theories:
The Atomic Theory
Theory of Matter and Energy
Theory of Plate Tectonics
Theory of Quantum Mechanics
Theory of of Molecular Bonds
Theory of the States of Matter
Theory of Homeostasis
Theory of Gravity
Theory of Evolution (we are the only Westernize
country that argues about this)
Keep In Mind:
The theory of evolution and:
Creationism
Neo-creationism
Intelligent design
Creation science (“science”)
Are not equal on an intellectual and rational level
Evolution: All species
descended from earlier
ancestral species.
Changing genetic makeup in a population over
time.
Accepted scientific
explanation of how
animals adapt and
survive
Evolution and Adaptation
Macroevolution – long term, large scale
changes; one species turns into a different
species
Microevolution – small genetic changes;
changes within a species
Gene pool – all genes in a population
Mutation – random change in structure of
DNA. Every so often, a mutation is beneficial
for survival.
Natural selection – individuals that have traits
that benefit survival.
Natural Selection
Microevolution is changes in the gene pool
of a population over time that result in
changes to the varieties of individuals in a
population such as a change in a species'
coloring or size.
Macroevolution If the changes are over a
very long time and are large enough that the
population is no longer able to breed with
other populations of the original species, it is
considered a different species.
Evolution and Adaptation
Microevolution
Macroevolution
Natural Selection
Three things must happen:
1. Genetic variability in a trait within
population
2. Trait is heritable
3. Differential reproduction – must enable
individuals with the trait to leave more
offspring than others without the trait.
Adaptive (heritable) trait helps survival and
reproduction under current conditions
Speciation, Extinction, and
Biodiversity
How Species Evolve
Speciation
Geographic isolation
Reproductive isolation
Fig. 5-7 p. 94
Extinction
When Environmental changes occur, species must evolve to adapt.
If not…
Background extinction – slow rate
Mass extinction – quickly, large groups
99% of species that have existed on earth are now extinct.
Changes in Earth’s biodiversity – has leveled off during the last
1.8 million years. Is this due to human influence?
Extinction
Adaptive radiation – after mass extinctions,
numerous new species evolve to fill vacated
niches. Takes 1-10 million years for adaptive
radiation to rebuild biodiversity.
Human impacts – accelerated extinction
Human Impacts on Evolution
Artificial Selection – artificially selecting superior
genetic traits
• Agriculture
• Hatcheries
• pets
Genetic Engineering
• Gene splicing
• Species creation in laboratories
• Takes less time than artificial selection
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Geologica_time_USGS.png
Evolution: Periods of the
Earth
The age of the Earth is difficult to determine
with absolute certainty
It is thought to be about 4.57 billion years old
This age is based on
dating of both the oldest
terrestrial minerals on
Earth and of meteorite
and lunar samples,
which provide estimates
of the age of the solar
system
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Asaphiscuswheelerii.jpg
How old is the Earth?
• This estimate is based on a
combination of radiometric dating of
the oldest terrestrial minerals on the
planet (small crystals of zircon found
in western Australia), and estimates
by astronomers of the age of the
solar system, based on radiometric
dating of meteorite and lunar
samples.
• The Earth is believed to have formed
early on in the formation of the solar
system.
Technique known as radiometric dating
Rocks are made up of chemical elements
These elements decay at a constant rate over
time into radioactive
isotopes
The ratio of
radioactive to nonradioactive isotopes
provides an
estimate of age
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:DirkvdM_rocks.jpg
How do we Age Rocks?
•All matter, including rocks, is made up of chemical
elements. When a rock is first crystallized, it
contains elements in their “normal” state or
isotope.
• However, over time, changes take place in the
elements that make up the rock, and radio-active
isotopes begin to accumulate in the rock at a
constant rate of disintegration.
• These radioactive products remain in the rock
along with what is left of the original material. The
ratio of radioactive to non-radioactive isotopes give
us a gauge as to the age of the rock.
• Uranium was one of the first elements used in
radiometric dating. Argon and potassium are now
usually used.
Geological Time Scale
Eon is the largest sub-division of geological time
First three eons (Hadean, Archean, Proterzoic)
are collectively known as the Precambrian eon
Eons are sub-divided into eras
Eras are sub-divided into periods
Periods are sub-divided into epochs
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eon_%28geology%29
Paleozoic (543 to 250 million
years ago), divided into six
periods
CENO
-ZOIC
Phanerozoic eon is divided into
three eras:
Cretaceous
65
MYA
Jurassic
Permian
Mesozoic (250 to 65 million
years ago), divided into three
periods
Cenozoic (65 million years
ago to present), divided into
two periods and seven
epochs
Present
Tertiary
Triassic
PALEOZOIC
Quaternary
MESOZOIC
Phanerozoic Eon – Ancient Life
250
MYA
Carboniferous
Devonian
Silurian
Ordovidan
Cambrian
543
MYA
542 to 488 Million years ago
Sudden appearance in the fossil record of many new
phyla (Cambrian explosion)
Fauna included:
Earliest animals with a notochord (Pikaia spp.)
Abundant marine invertebrates
Primitive marine algae
Brachiopods
Arthropods
Echinoderms
Pikaia gracilens
http://park.org/Canada/Museum/burgessshale/NK20.GIF
Cambrian Period
488 to 444 Million years ago
Diversity of marine invertebrates, including molluscs,
coelenterates, graptolites, trilobites, euryptids
Earliest vertebrates appeared (ostracoderms)
The first plants
invaded land
A major extinction
event in which 60%
of marine species
were wiped out
ended the
Ordovician period
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ordovician_Sea.jpg
Ordovician Period
http://universe-review.ca/I10-29-placoderm.jpg
Silurian Period
443 to 416 Million
years ago
Coral reefs became
abundant
First jawed fish
appeared
(Placoderms)
First freshwater
fish appeared
First vascular plants appeared on land
Myriapods (a type of arthropod) became the first animals
to colonise land
Placoderm
416 to 360 Million years ago
First fish evolved into tetrapods and invaded land
Cartilaginous fish (sharks) became dominant
Trees and forests colonized the land
Terrestrial invertebrates
invaded the land
Another major extinction
of marine fauna ended
the Devonian period
http://universe-review.ca/I10-72-Eusthenopteron.jpg
Devonian Period – “age of the
fish”
360 to 299 Million
years ago
Climate became drier
The first conifers
appeared
Extensive forests
appeared with prolific
insect life, including
the first winged insects
The first reptiles evolved from amphibians
The first ammonites evolved
http://universe-review.ca/I10-68-Carboniferous.jpg
Carboniferous Period
299 to 250 Million years ago
Major transition in vegetation
from ferns to more advanced
conifers and ginkgo trees
Deserts were established
Amphibians became larger in size
Insects continued to radiate, with the appearance of
Coleoptera (beetles) and Diptera (flies)
Reptiles thrived and began their radiation
Ended with the largest extinction event on record – 96%
of animal species disappeared
This also marked the end of the Paleozoic era
http://www.copyrightexpired.com/earlyimage/prehistoriclifebeforekt/dimetrodon.jpg
Permian Period
250 to 200 Million years ago
Conifers continued to expand
Ammonites recovered from
their near extinction to
co-dominate the seas with
bony fish
Reptiles returned to the seas
The ancestors of snakes and
lizards evolved
Beginning of the radiation of dinosaurs
End of the Triassic marked with another extinction event
http://universe-review.ca/I10-33-Triassic1.jpg
Triassic Period
200 to 145 Million years ago
Warm climate and high sea
levels
Cone-bearing plants covered
the land
First small mammals
appeared
First evidence of feathered
birds (Archaeopteryx)
In addition to land and water,
reptiles also radiated into the
air (pterosaurs)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:SArchaeopteryxBerlin2.jpg
Jurassic Period
Archaeopteryx
145 to 65 Million years ago
Continents began to move into
their present-day positions
First flowering plants appeared
Mammals evolved into three
forms (monotreme, marsupial,
placental)
A meteorite impact caused a
major extinction, which ended
the Cretaceous period – all
dinosaurs and all ammonites,
along with many other species,
became extinct
http://universe-review.ca/I10-68-flowering.jpg
Cretaceous Period
65 to 1.8 Million years ago
Paleocene epoch: flowering
plants became abundant
Eocene epoch: many orders
of mammals appeared
Oligocene epoch: primitive
apes; first elephants
Miocene epoch: kelp forests
and grasslands appeared,
many grazing animals
Pliocene epoch: First ancient
hominids arose
http://universe-review.ca/I10-36-oldesthominid.jpg
Tertiary Period
1.8 Million years ago to present
Pleistocene epoch: modern humans evolved; ended with
the Ice Age that saw the extinction of mammoths and
other animals
Holocene epoch: human civilization spread throughout
the globe and humans became the dominant form of life
http://universe-review.ca/I10-37-Quaternary.jpg
http://www.primates.com/homo/homo-sapiens.jpg
Quaternary Period
In a group of 2 or 3:
Imagine a species that came into being during the
Cambrian Explosion and some form of this
species survived through all eras to our modern
time.
Draw and describe your species and adaptations
through each period (11 total)
Each Period should have:
a drawing
a description of how it survives
a description of a new adaptation for the
changed environment (land, water, temperature,
predators, etc)
Bellwork
Look over your vocabulary before the quiz