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Overview: Lost Worlds

Overview: Lost Worlds. Past organisms were very different from those now alive The fossil record shows macroevolutionary changes over large time scales including The emergence of terrestrial vertebrates The origin of photosynthesis Long-term impacts of mass extinctions. Fig. 25-1.

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Overview: Lost Worlds

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  1. Overview: Lost Worlds • Past organisms were very different from those now alive • The fossil record shows macroevolutionary changes over large time scales including • The emergence of terrestrial vertebrates • The origin of photosynthesis • Long-term impacts of mass extinctions

  2. Fig. 25-1

  3. Fig 25-UN1 Cryolophosaurus

  4. Conditions on early Earth made the origin of life possible • Chemical and physical processes on early Earth may have produced very simple cells through a sequence of stages: 1. Abiotic synthesis of small organic molecules 2. Joining of these small molecules into macromolecules 3. Packaging of molecules into “protobionts” 4. Origin of self-replicating molecules

  5. Synthesis of Organic Compounds on Early Earth • Earth formed about 4.6 billion years ago, along with the rest of the solar system • Earth’s early atmosphere likely contained water vapor and chemicals released by volcanic eruptions (nitrogen, nitrogen oxides, carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide)

  6. Fig. 25-2

  7. Amino acids have also been found in meteorites

  8. Abiotic Synthesis of Macromolecules • Small organic molecules polymerize when they are concentrated on hot sand, clay, or rock

  9. Self-Replicating RNA and the Dawn of Natural Selection • The first genetic material was probably RNA, not DNA

  10. The fossil record documents the history of life • The fossil record reveals changes in the history of life on earth

  11. The Fossil Record • Sedimentary rocks are deposited into layers called strata and are the richest source of fossils

  12. Fig. 25-4 Rhomaleosaurus victor, a plesiosaur Present Dimetrodon 100 million years ago Casts of ammonites 175 200 270 300 Hallucigenia 4.5 cm 375 Coccosteus cuspidatus 400 1 cm Dickinsonia costata 500 525 2.5 cm 565 Stromatolites Tappania, a unicellular eukaryote 600 3,500 1,500 Fossilized stromatolite

  13. Fig. 25-4-1 Hallucigenia 1 cm Dickinsonia costata 500 525 2.5 cm 4.5 cm 565 Stromatolites Tappania, a unicellular eukaryote 600 3,500 1,500 Fossilized stromatolite

  14. Fig. 25-4a-2 Rhomaleosaurus victor, a plesiosaur Present 100 million years ago Dimetrodon Casts of ammonites 175 200 270 300 4.5 cm 375 Coccosteus cuspidatus 400

  15. Fig. 25-4b Rhomaleosaurus victor, a plesiosaur

  16. Fig. 25-4c Dimetrodon

  17. Fig. 25-4d Casts of ammonites

  18. Fig. 25-4e 4.5 cm Coccosteuscuspidatus

  19. Fig. 25-4f 1 cm Hallucigenia

  20. Fig. 25-4g 2.5 cm Dickinsonia costata

  21. Fig. 25-4h Tappania, a unicellular eukaryote

  22. Fig. 25-4i Stromatolites

  23. Fig. 25-4j Fossilized stromatolite

  24. Few individuals have fossilized, and even fewer have been discovered • The fossil record is biased in favor of species that • Existed for a long time • Were abundant and widespread • Had hard parts

  25. How Rocks and Fossils Are Dated • Sedimentary strata reveal the relative ages of fossils • The absolute ages of fossils can be determined by radiometric dating • A “parent” isotope decays to a “daughter” isotope at a constant rate • Each isotope has a known half-life, the time required for half the parent isotope to decay

  26. Fig. 25-5 Accumulating “daughter” isotope Fraction of parent isotope remaining 1/2 Remaining “parent” isotope 1/4 1/8 1/16 4 3 2 1 Time (half-lives)

  27. Radiocarbon dating can be used to date fossils up to 75,000 years old • For older fossils, some isotopes can be used to date sedimentary rock layers above and below the fossil

  28. The magnetism of rocks can provide dating information • Reversals of the magnetic poles leave their record on rocks throughout the world

  29. Table 25-1

  30. Table 25-1a

  31. Table 25-1b

  32. Fig. 25-7 Ceno- zoic Meso- zoic Humans Paleozoic Colonization of land Animals Origin of solar system and Earth 4 1 Proterozoic Archaean Prokaryotes years ago Billions of 3 2 Multicellular eukaryotes Single-celled eukaryotes Atmospheric oxygen

  33. Photosynthesis and the Oxygen Revolution • Most atmospheric oxygen (O2) is of biological origin • O2 produced by oxygenic photosynthesis reacted with dissolved iron and precipitated out to form banded iron formations • The source of O2 was likely bacteria similar to modern cyanobacteria

  34. By about 2.7 billion years ago, O2 began accumulating in the atmosphere and rusting iron-rich terrestrial rocks • This “oxygen revolution” from 2.7 to 2.2 billion years ago (this is when we see rust) • Posed a challenge for life • Provided opportunity to gain energy from light • Allowed organisms to exploit new ecosystems

  35. Fig. 25-8

  36. The First Eukaryotes • The oldest fossils of eukaryotic cells date back 2.1 billion years • The hypothesis of endosymbiosis proposes that mitochondria and plastids (chloroplasts and related organelles) were formerly small prokaryotes living within larger host cells • An endosymbiont is a cell that lives within a host cell

  37. The prokaryotic ancestors of mitochondria and plastids probably gained entry to the host cell as undigested prey or internal parasites • In the process of becoming more interdependent, the host and endosymbionts would have become a single organism • Serial endosymbiosis supposes that mitochondria evolved before plastids through a sequence of endosymbiotic events

  38. Key evidence supporting an endosymbiotic origin of mitochondria and plastids: • Similarities in inner membrane structures and functions • Division is similar in these organelles and some prokaryotes • These organelles transcribe and translate their own DNA • Their ribosomes are more similar to prokaryotic than eukaryotic ribosomes

  39. The Origin of Multicellularity • The evolution of eukaryotic cells allowed for a greater range of unicellular forms • A second wave of diversification occurred when multicellularity evolved and gave rise to algae, plants, fungi, and animals

  40. The Cambrian Explosion • The Cambrian explosion refers to the sudden appearance of fossils resembling modern phyla in the Cambrian period (535 to 525 million years ago) • The Cambrian explosion provides the first evidence of predator-prey interactions

  41. Continental Drift • At three points in time, the land masses of Earth have formed a supercontinent: 1.1 billion, 600 million, and 250 million years ago • Earth’s continents move slowly over the underlying hot mantle through the process of continental drift • Oceanic and continental plates can collide, separate, or slide past each other • Interactions between plates cause the formation of mountains and islands, and earthquakes

  42. Fig. 25-12 North American Plate Eurasian Plate Crust Caribbean Plate Philippine Plate Juan de Fuca Plate Arabian Plate Indian Plate Cocos Plate Mantle South American Plate Pacific Plate Nazca Plate African Plate Outer core Australian Plate Inner core Antarctic Plate Scotia Plate (b) Major continental plates (a) Cutaway view of Earth

  43. Fig. 25-12a Crust Mantle Outer core Inner core (a) Cutaway view of Earth

  44. Fig. 25-12b North American Plate Eurasian Plate Caribbean Plate Philippine Plate Juan de Fuca Plate Arabian Plate Indian Plate Cocos Plate South American Plate Pacific Plate Nazca Plate African Plate Australian Plate Antarctic Plate Scotia Plate (b) Major continental plates

  45. Consequences of Continental Drift • Formation of the supercontinent Pangaea about 250 million years ago had many effects • A reduction in shallow water habitat • A colder and drier climate inland • Changes in climate as continents moved toward and away from the poles • Changes in ocean circulation patterns leading to global cooling

  46. Fig. 25-13 Present Cenozoic Eurasia North America Africa 65.5 India South America Madagascar Australia Antarctica Laurasia 135 Mesozoic Gondwana Millions of years ago Pangaea 251 Paleozoic

  47. Fig. 25-13a Present Cenozoic North America Eurasia Millions of years ago Africa 65.5 India South America Madagascar Australia Antarctica

  48. Fig. 25-13b Laurasia 135 Gondwana Mesozoic Millions of years ago 251 Pangaea Paleozoic

  49. Mass Extinctions • The fossil record shows that most species that have ever lived are now extinct • At times, the rate of extinction has increased dramatically and caused a mass extinction

  50. Fig. 25-14 800 20 700 600 15 500 Number of families: 400 Total extinction rate (families per million years): 10 300 200 5 100 0 0 Mesozoic Paleozoic Cenozoic Era Period E C Tr C O S D P J P N 200 145 65.5 0 542 488 444 416 359 299 251 Time (millions of years ago)

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