1 / 15

Chapter 1:

Chapter 1:. The Science of Biology. A. Science is:. 1. Investigating and understanding the natural world 2. Explaining events in the natural world 3. Using explanations to make predictions

Download Presentation

Chapter 1:

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. Chapter 1: The Science of Biology

  2. A. Science is: 1. Investigating and understanding the natural world 2. Explaining events in the natural world 3. Using explanations to make predictions 4. Making observations, collecting data, inferring, hypothesizing processing, questioning, testing, evaluating, recommending . . .

  3. B. How Scientists Work Experiments on Generation of Life: • Redi tested his hypothesis testing one variable against a control group and discovered that maggots were not produced from rotting meat but from flies • Spallanzani proved Redi’s results and disproved Needham’s support of spontaneous generation

  4. Experiments (cont) 3. Pasteur improved on results further by using a curved-neck flask thus finally proving that living things come from living things

  5. C. Studying Life • Characteristics of Living Things • Made up of cells • Reproduce • Universal genetic code • Grow and develop • Use materials and energy • Respond to the environment • Maintain a stable internal environment • As a group, change over time

  6. 2. Branches of Biology a. molecular biology b. cellular biology c. histology, physiology, anatomy d. zoology, bacteriology, botany e. ecology, environmental science And more . . .

  7. D. Tools and Procedures • Common Measurement: Most scientists use a revised metric system known as: SI or International System of Units • Computers to collect and store data • Microscopes: Light and electron microscopes

  8. 4. Cell Cultures: reproduction of cells 5. Cell fractionation: separation of cell parts 6. Safety – see appendix B and wash hands after labs!

  9. Chapter 2: Chemistry of Life A. Matter • Atoms, electrons, protons, and neutrons • Elements/isotopes • Chemical compounds held together by ionic or covalent bonds

  10. B. Water • Polar compound • Because of polarity, hydrogen bonding occurs leading to adhesion and cohesion • Can be used to make mixtures such as solutions and suspensions • Neutral (7) on the pH scale • Acids (below 7) have higher concentration of H+ ions • Bases (7>14) have lower H+ concentration than water.

  11. C. Carbon Compounds • What’s special about carbon? • Has 4 valence electrons and can bond with various elements • Can bond with other carbons forming long chains and rings, more complex and larger molecules

  12. 2. Macromolecules: 4 groups of large polymers found in living things (organic molecules) • Carbohydrates • contain C, H, and O in a ratio of 1:2:1 • are major sources of energy • Examples are sugar,starch, monosaccharides and polysaccharides • Lipids • Made of mostly C and H • Store energy • Not soluble in water • Examples are fats, oils and waxes

  13. c) Nucleic Acids: RNA and DNA • Units called nucleotides contain H, O, C, N and P • Store and transmit genetic information d) Proteins • Polymers made of amino acids containing H, O, C, and N • Control rates of reaction, regulate cell processes, form bones and muscles, transport substances in and out of cells, fight disease

  14. IV. Chemical Reactions and Enzymes • Chemical Reactions • New substances are formed through the breaking of bonds in reactants to form new bonds in products • Exothermic: give off energy and often occur spontaneously • Endothermic: require a source of energy • Examples: CO2 + H2O ↔C6H12O6 + O2 H2+ O2 →H2O

  15. B. Reaction Rates • Catalysts are chemicals that speed up a chemical reaction by lowering activation energy • Enzymes: proteins speed up chemical reactions occurring in cells • Enzymes provide a site for reactants (substrates) to come together

More Related