1 / 18

Interpreting Earth’s History

Interpreting Earth’s History. How can rocks be correlated? And Geologic Time Scale. Index Fossils. Index fossils are: commonly found widely distributed limited in time span . H elp in dating other fossils found in the same layer. Ash layers are also good time markers

jduhon
Download Presentation

Interpreting Earth’s History

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. Interpreting Earth’s History How can rocks be correlated? And Geologic Time Scale

  2. Index Fossils • Index fossils are: • commonly found • widely distributed • limited in time span. • Help in dating other fossils found in the same layer. • Ash layers are also good time markers • Humans will one day make excellent index fossils

  3. Correlation • Correlation- or CO-RELATION (two or more things related) is a critical tool in the reconstruction of Earth’s history. • Geologists match similar rock strata in different locations to see if they formed at the same time or under similar conditions

  4. Who’s got the TIME?- • RELATIVE: order/sequence known, but not the actual date of occurrence. • ABSOLUTE: actual date known. If 2 dates are known, then the RATE OF CHANGE can be known- such as Mountain Building.

  5. First Things First…or…“How’d that get there?” • In the 17th C., Nicolas Steno made an important observation: • "Sediments are usually deposited in horizontal layers." This was called: “ORIGINAL HORIZONTALITY”

  6. REVIEW: • SUPERPOSITION: sedimentary sequence will be OLDEST on BOTTOM (if undisturbed). • CROSS-CUTTING:igneous rock is younger than rocks it has intruded (cut across). • INCLUDED FRAGMENTS: pieces of rock found IN another rock must be OLDER (formed first).

  7. Geologic Time • Using our best data, the Earth is about 4.6 billion years old • That’s 4,600,000,000 years!

  8. How do we know the Earth’s age, and which rocks are older? • Many experiments using radiation found in rocks tell us. • The “Law of Superposition” can also help tell which rocks are older than other rocks.

  9. DIVIDING UP THE EARTH’S AGE • ESRT page 8-9 • Just as we have hours and minutes, Earth’s time has also been broken up into units called ERAS. • The ERAS do not have a set amount of time like the hour. Some ERAS are longer than others. • ERAS are broken down farther into PERIODS.

  10. THE CENOZOIC ERA • The Age of the Mammal • We are currently living in the Cenozoic Era. • The Cenozoic Era has lasted for about 63 million years. • There are only two periods in the Cenozoic Era: • The Tertiary Period • The Quaternary Period - the current period

  11. THE MESOZOIC ERA • Known as the “Age of the Dinosaur” or “Age of the Reptile” • Started about 265 million years ago. • Ended with a mass extinction due to climate change 65.5 million years ago • Contained three periods: • The Triassic • The Jurassic • The Cretaceous

  12. THE PALEOZOIC ERA • Known as the “Age of Fish” • Started about 570 million years ago. • Lasted about 340 million years • Toward the end of this era coal began to form.

  13. The PRECAMBRIAN • Known as “Age of Bacteria” • During much of this time there was no life on earth. • The earth was still hot • The atmosphere was not like it is now- needed bacteria and photosynthetic life to change theCO2 atmosphere into “free oxygen” • The Precambrian Era lasted for the first 4 billion years of Earth’s history.

  14. EARTH’S GEOLOGIC ERAS • PRECAMBRIAN -rocks form, atmosphere • PALEOZOIC -fish, amphibian,coal forms, Appalachian Mt. peak • MESOZOIC -dinosaur, birds, flowers • CENOZOIC -horses, humans, last ice age

More Related