1 / 36

Studying the Past

Studying the Past. Fossils, Relative Time and Absolute Time. Paleontology. The study of the forms of life existing in prehistoric or geologic times, as represented by the fossils of plants, animals, and other organisms. What do you know about fossils?. Fossils.

Download Presentation

Studying the Past

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Studying the Past Fossils, Relative Time and Absolute Time

  2. Paleontology • The study of the forms of life existing in prehistoric or geologic times, as represented by the fossils of plants, animals, and other organisms.

  3. What do you know about fossils?

  4. Fossils • Fossilis is Latin for “dug up” • Fossils are the remains, molds or traces of organisms that died a long time ago • Fossils are usually found in sedimentary rock like sandstone, limestone or shale

  5. Fossils • Fossils provide evidence that different organisms lived long ago • Fossil organisms many times do not exist on Earth anymore • They have gone extinct or they have evolved

  6. Fossils • As we go through the different types of fossils look for what each type of fossil needs to form.

  7. 5 Main Types of Fossils • Original Remains • Replaced Remains • Molds and Casts • Trace Fossils • Carbonaceous Films

  8. Original Remains • Very rare • Most animals decay or decompose • Examples • Frozen woolly mammoths • Insects incased in resin (amber)

  9. Replaced Remains • Actual remains are replaced with minerals • Many hard parts fossilize this way • Teeth • Bones • Shells

  10. Molds and Casts • A replaced remain fossil may dissolve leaving behind a mold • Later minerals may fill in the mold creating a cast of the original organism Click picture to see cast and mold formation

  11. Trace Fossils • No actual part of the organism is left • Give information about the location of different organisms • Traces like • Impressions • Bite Marks • Burrows • Feces Coprolites Tracks

  12. Carbonaceous Films • An imprint or thin film is left behind • Not the actual organism • Tissue undergo chemical changes

  13. What do fossils need to form? • Sediment • Compaction • Water • Minerals • Organism • TIME!!! Lots of TIME!!!

  14. Fossil Concept Map1. Write in the 5 fossil types2. Write in a few details about each fossil type

  15. Relative Dating Example: On the way home I stopped for gas First, I ate dinner I drove home Then I went to the store Absolute Dating Example I drove home at 5:35 I stopped for gas at 5:25 I ate dinner at 5:00 I went to the store at 5:15 Dating Past Geologic Events

  16. Dating Past Geologic Events • What is the difference between these two dating methods? • Relative Time has no actual times but can be put in order • Absolute Time gives actual times

  17. Relative Time • Puts events in a sequence without telling when they actually happened • Does not reveal actual age but age in comparison to other events

  18. Relative Dating • The evidence is in the rocks • Each layer represents a different place in time • Every layer of rock is another part of the timeline

  19. Uniformitarianism “the present is the key to the past” • We can watch how things happen now to understand how they happened before.

  20. Uniformitarianism • James Hutton realized these processes did not happen quickly therefore the Earth must be very old.

  21. Uniformitarianism • Siccar point in Scotland is where he made the observations • Came up with the idea of DEEP TIME

  22. Principles of Relative Dating The Principle of Superposition The Principle of Cross-Cutting Relationships Embedded Fragments

  23. The Principle of Superposition • Draw This… Water 3 2 1

  24. The Principle of Superposition • The OLDEST rock is on the bottom and the YOUNGEST is on the top • Rocks are deposited horizontally

  25. The Principle of Cross-Cutting Relationships • Draw This… Water 4 2 1 3

  26. The Principle of Cross-Cutting Relationships • An igneous intrusion is YOUNGER than the rock it intrudes • A fault is YOUNGER than the rock it breaks

  27. The Principle of Embedded Fragments Water 4 3 2 1

  28. The Principle of Embedded Fragments • Rocks that are embedded in other rocks are OLDER than the rock they are found.

  29. Unconformity • Gaps in time • Surfaces have been eroded away • New rock has been laid on top

  30. Unconformity

  31. Putting in all together • Rock layer correlation • Matching rock in one area to rocks in another • Match characteristics • Match index fossils • Using fossils to tell what type of environment existed

  32. Index Fossils • Fossils that can be used to identify a certain rock layer • Fossils that lived within a certain time can give the rock a relative age. See page 653

  33. Fossils • Fossils can also give clues to the type of environment existed. • Is there a lot of coral? • Are there a lot of amphibians? • Are there a lot of deep sea animals?

  34. Relative Time • Use the present to determine past processes • No actual time is given • Fossils can be used to indicate a general time • 3 Principles

More Related