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Chapter 12
Earth Science College Prep

Clues to Earths Past

Clues to Earths Past

Chapter 12

Fossils

Section 12.1 

Fossil Formation

What are Fossils?

Fossil Formation

Fossil Evidence of once living organisms preserved in rocks

Remains

Imprints

traces

Fossil Formation

What are the conditions necessary to form fossils?

Fossil Formation

Necessary Conditions to from Fossils:

Body protected from scavengers and decay buried quickly

Hard parts

Fossil Formation

List some types of fossils.

Fossil Formation

Types of fossils:

Petrified remains petrified forest organism replaced by minerals one molecule at a time

Carbonaceous films gases and liquids forced from body leaving carbon

Original remains real organism left

Trace fossils foot prints

Molds and casts

Fossil Formation

Describe the difference in how a mold and cast are formed.

Fossil Formation

Mold

Organism buried

Organism is dissolved

Mold in the cavity left behind

Fossil Formation

Cast

Mold is filled with rock solution or sediment and hardens

Cast has same shape as original organism

Index Fossil

What is an Index Fossil?

Index Fossil

What is an index fossil?

Index Fossil

Existed on Earth for relatively short period of time

Abundant

Widespread geographically

Index Fossils can be used to date rock layers.

Fossils and Ancient Environments

Fossils can tell what the environment was like.

Water land

Warm cold

Extinction of Dinosaurs

Section 12.2

What Killed the Dinosaurs?

Dinosaurs were the dominant species for 160 million years.

Dinosaurs became extinct 66 million years ago.

What Killed the Dinosaurs?

Two Theories:

Meteorites

Collisions changed atmosphere

Evidence iridium layer

Volcanoes

Changed atmosphere

Iridium layer

Relative Ages of Rocks

Section 12.3

The Principle of Superposition

What is the Principle of Superposition?

The Principle of Superposition

In an undisturbed layer of rock, the oldest rocks are on the bottom and the rocks become progressively younger toward the top.

Principle of Cross-cutting Relations

What is Cross-cutting Relations?

Principle of Cross-cutting Relations

Igneous intrusions which cut across rock layers are younger than the rock layers.

Principle of Inclusive Fossils

What is the Principle of Inclusive fossils?

Principle of Inclusive Fossils

Fossils found in rock layers must be older than the rock layers.

Relative Dating

What is Relative Dating?

Relative Dating

Determine which rock layer is older.

Unconformities

Distinguish between

Angular unconformities

Disconformity

Nonconformity

Unconformities

Angular Unconformities

Rock layers laid down

Layers tilted

Layers eroded

Unconformities

Disconformity

Rock layers laid down

Rock layers eroded

Missing layers

Unconformities

Nonconformity

Igneous or Metamorphic rocks are eroded

Sedimentary rocks are laid down

Missing igneous or metamorphic rocks

Correlating Rock Layers

Similar minerals

Fossils

Order of layers

Absolute Ages of Rocks

Section 12.4

Absolute Dating

What is Absolute Dating?

Absolute Dating

Determine the age, in years, of rock or other objects

Radioactive Decay

Describe Radioactive Decay.

Radioactive Decay

1 neutron = 1 proton + 1 beta(electron)

New element is formed with more protons.

Radioactive Decay

What is half-life?

Radioactive Decay

Half-life time for half of a radioactive isotope to decay.

Example: carbon-14 half-life = 5730 years

Radiometric Dating

Process of measuring the amount of parent and daughter materials in a rock and by knowing the half-life of the parent, determining the age of the rock.

Radiometric Dating

Radiocarbon Dating

Useful to 50,000 years

Carbon-14 decays to Nitrogen-14 at a steady rate after an organism dies

Principle of Uniformitarianism

What is the Principle of Uniformitarianism?

Principle of Uniformitarianism

James Hutton

Earth processes occurring today are similar to those that occurred in the past.

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