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Aim : How can rocks & geologic events in one place be matched with those in other locations?

Aim : How can rocks & geologic events in one place be matched with those in other locations? Homework : Do–Now : Define the following vocabulary; Correlation, Index fossils, key beds, stratigraphy . Correlation : involves determining that rock layers in different areas are the same age.

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Aim : How can rocks & geologic events in one place be matched with those in other locations?

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  1. Aim: How can rocks & geologic events in one place be matched with those in other locations? Homework: Do–Now: Define the following vocabulary; Correlation, Index fossils, key beds, stratigraphy

  2. Correlation: involves determining that rock layers in different areas are the same age • Rocks in one area can fill in gaps in the record in another location • Allows the relative ages of rocks in widely separated outcrops to be determined

  3. Correlation Techniques • Matching of rock layers from one area to another • Walking the Outcrop • Matching Rock Characteristics • Using Index Fossils • Matching Key Beds • Stratigraphic Matching

  4. Walking the Outcrop • Following an outcrop, or cliff • Difficult in regions with heavy vegetation or thick soil • Very accurate way of correlating

  5. What is a fossil? • The trace or remains of an organism that lived long ago, most commonly preserved in sedimentary rock

  6. What is an Index Fossil? • Used to correlate one region to another • Index Fossils must • be easy to identify • have been very abundant • have lived in a wide geographic area • have existed for a short geologic time ex. Trilobites, Graptolites, Ammonoids

  7. Key Beds – well definable layers or formations that have distinctive characteristics or fossil content that allows them to be used in correlation. Easily recognizable, widespread • Ex. volcanic ash layers that are rapidly deposited over a wide area • Ex. iridium rich layer of rock – formed 66 mya

  8. A. Volcanic Ash Layer = BentoniteB. Meteorite impact debris A B USGS

  9. Stratigraphic Matching • Using patterns in sedimentary layers to match one region to another.

  10. Activity # 1 • On you desk, you have 8 large colored index cards with nonsense letters placed on them. • Your task is to determine what the correct sequence of the letters are. • You have two clues: • The card with the letters “C” and “T” is on the bottom, or the oldest layer • Look for a card that has either a “T” or “C” written on it for the second layer

  11. M D X O N B U A G C T This is one possible way to arrange the cards. Questions: What letter is the oldest? What letter is the youngest? What letter showed up the most? Which letters only showed up once? Which letters could be index fossils? How did you know which was older: “M” or “X”? MD DXO ON NB NBU UA AGC C T

  12. Activity # 2 • Flip your eight index cards over • Arrange the index cards that represent layers of rock and fossils • Clues: • The oldest layer has the letter “M” in it • Find a rock layer that has at least one of the fossils you found in the oldest rock layer • Extinction is forever - once an organism disappears from the sequence it cannot reappear later

  13. A N S W E R

  14. To think about… • What problems did you run into when trying to arrange the fossils into the correct sequence? • Would this have been more difficult if you did not know which layer was the oldest to start the activity? • Which organism is the most complex of all the fossils and why?

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