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A Trip Through Geologic Time

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Title: A Trip Through Geologic Time


1
A Trip Through Geologic Time
  • Fossils
  • Relative Age
  • Radioactive Dating
  • The Geologic Time Scale
  • Earths History

2
Fossils
  • How do fossils form?
  • What are the different types of fossils?
  • What do fossils tell about how organisms have
    changed over time?

3
The Burgess Shale
  • In 1909, Charles Walcott was exploring at an
    altitude of 7450 feet in the Canadian Rockies and
    discovered a very rich collection of fossils in a
    layer of shale. This rock outcrop became known as
    the Burgess Shale.

4
Burgess Shale - Hallucigenia
  • Hallucigenia was a strange little bottom-dwelling
    creature with leg-like processes and strongly
    developed dorsal spines. This animal was about 2
    cm in length.

5
Burgess Shale - Anomalocaris
  • Anomalocaris was the most fearsome predator of
    the Burgess fauna. Up to 60 cm long, it used
    arm-like processes to capture prey, which were
    eaten with a mouth equipped with a circle of
    tooth-like, sharpened plates.

6
The Burgess Shale
  • These were sea creatures unlike anything found on
    Earth.
  • How did they get there?
  • What is the story behind this record in the
    rocks?

7
Fossil Formation
  • Death in a water environment
  • Sedimentation
  • Mineralization
  • Uplift

8
1-Death in water environment
  • The first step of fossil formation an animal or
    plant must die in water or near enough to fall in
    shortly after death. The water insulates the
    remains from many of the elements that contribute
    to decomposition.

9
2-Sedimentation
  • As time passes sediments bury the exoskeleton.
    The faster this happens the more likely
    fossilization will occur. Land and mud slides
    definitely help. River deltas are also good for
    quick accumulation of sediments.

10
3-Mineralization
  • As the sediments continue to pile on, the lower
    layers become compacted by the weight of the
    layers on top. Over time, this pressure turns the
    sediments into rock.

11
3-Mineralization
  • If mineral-rich water percolates down through the
    sediments, the fossil formation process has an
    even better chance of preserving our ancient
    animal. Some of the minerals stick to the
    particles of sediment, effectively gluing them
    together into a solid mass.

12
3-Mineralization
  • Over the course of millions of years they
    dissolve away the outer shell, sometimes
    replacing the molecules of exoskeleton with
    molecules of calcite or other minerals.

13
4-Uplift
  • As the continental plates move around the earth,
    crashing into each other, mountains are formed.
    Former sea floors are lifted up and become dry
    land.

14
Types of Fossils
  • Molds and Casts
  • Carbon Films
  • Trace Fossils
  • Preserved Remains

15
Mold
  • Hollow impression in a rock in the shape of an
    organism or part of an organism.
  • A mold forms when the hard part of the organism
    is buried in sediment and then dissolves.

16
Cast Fossil
  • A cast is a copy of the shape of an organism.
  • Casts occur when the minerals in an organism are
    replaced by minerals.

17
Carbon Film Fossils
  • Heat and pressure can remove all volatile remains
    of an organism, leaving just a thin film of
    carbon on a rock.

18
Trace Fossils
Footprints
Burrows
Coprolites
19
Relative Age of Rocks
  • How do geologists determine the relative age of
    rocks?
  • How are index fossils useful for geologists?

20
Principles of Geology
  • James Hutton 1726-1797 stated first modern theory
    of geology
  • Hutton identified most of the processes that
    shape rocks in the Earths crust.

21
Huttons Unconformity
  • Hutton was puzzled by a very interesting rock
    formation at Siccar Point near his home in
    England
  • This is now known as Huttons Unconformity

22
Huttons New Story of Geology
  • The earth is shaped by erosion, deposition and
    uplift acting over very long periods of time.
  • Geology Principles allow us to read geological
    formations to infer their relative ages and
    history.
  • Fossils found in rock layers provide additional
    information about age.

23
Principle of Uniformitarianism
  • Geologic processes observed in operation that
    modify the Earth's crust at present have worked
    in much the same way over geologic time.
  • The present is the key to the past.

24
Principle of Original Horizontality
  • The deposition of sediments occurs as essentially
    horizontal beds
  • Any slope in sedimentary layers is the result of
    folding, faulting or uplift.

25
Principle of Superposition
  • States that a sedimentary rock layer in a
    tectonically undisturbed sequence is younger than
    the one beneath it and older than the one above
    it.

26
Principle of Intrusive Relationships
  • When an igneous intrusion cuts across a formation
    of sedimentary rock, it can be determined that
    the igneous intrusion is younger than the
    sedimentary rock.

27
Unconformities - Erosion
  • Unconformities occur when sedimentary layers are
    uplifted and eroded.
  • This produces a gap in the geological record.

28
Unconformity in the Grand Canyon
29
Quiz Which is older?
  • F or G?
  • E or L?
  • A or D?
  • L or K?
  • J or L?
  • J or K?

30
Principle of Faunal Succession
  • Sedimentary rock layers contain fossilized flora
    (plants) and fauna (animals), and that these
    fossils succeed each other vertically in a
    specific, reliable order that can be identified
    over wide horizontal distances.
  • Index fossils can be used to establish relative
    ages of rocks.

31
Some Index Fossils
32
Characteristics of Index Fossils
  • Worldwide found everywhere on Earth
  • Shelled Animal very likely to have been
    fossilized
  • Only lived during a specific period and are not
    found outside that period.

33
Index fossils allow correlation of rock layers in
different areas
34
Fossils allow correlation in spite of
unconformities.
35
The Geologic Column
  • Geologic principles and index fossils allow
    worldwide correlation.
  • The names of different layers have been
    standardized into a worldwide geologic column.
  • The layers represent different times in the
    Earths history based on relative ages.

36
The Geologic Column
37
Radiometric Dating
  • What happens during radioactive decay?
  • What can be learned from radioactive dating?
  • How did scientists determine the age of the earth?

38
Radioactivity
  • In 1896, Henri Becquerel laid some uranium salts
    on photo film.
  • When he developed the film, it showed an exposed
    area from the uranium

39
Types of Radioactive Decay
  • Alpha He nucleus not very penetrating.
  • Beta electron more penetrating
  • Gamma EM radiation very penetrating

40
Radioactive Decay Alpha
  • Here Am-241 (parent nucleus) decays into Np-237
    (daughter nucleus).
  • This produces an alpha particle (Helium nucleus)
    and much energy.

41
Radioactive Decay Beta
  • Here, Hydrogen-3 (parent nucleus) decays into
    Helium-3 (daughter nuclesu) and an electron
  • Beta radiation can emit either an electron (-
    charge) or positron ( charge).

42
Radioactive Decay Gamma
  • Gamma rays are high-energy electromagnetic
    radiation, similar to light.
  • They may be given off from a number of different
    processes involving the nucleus
  • They have no mass, but may be able to penetrate
    deeply into matter. They require shielding of a
    few feet of dirt or a few inches of lead shielding

43
Radioactive Decay
  • Different combinations of protons and neutrons
    are called nuclides.
  • Some nuclides are very unstable and explode to
    form other nuclides in a process called
    radioactive decay.
  • The more unstable the nuclide is, the more
    quickly it will explode.

44
Radioactive Decay Series U238
45
Half-Life
  • The half-life of a nuclide is the time required
    for half of the atoms of the parent nucleus to
    decay.
  • The shorter the half-life, the more unstable is
    the nuclide.

46
Radioactive Decay Rate
  • The rate of radiation decreases with time in a
    predictable way.
  • The half-life of a nuclide is not affected by
    heat, pressure, chemical conditions, gravity or
    magnetism.
  • Rutherford and Soddy realized that radioactive
    decay could be used as a clock to date rocks.

47
Setting of the Radioactive Clock
  • Radiometric dating can only be performed on
    igneous rocks.
  • When the melted rock solidifies as it cools, it
    locks its atoms into place in its crystal
    structure.
  • As atoms in it decay, they remain in place in the
    crystal allowing labs to determine their ratio.

48
Isotope Ratios and Age of Rocks
49
Commonly used dating isotopes
50
The Age of the Earth - Estimates
51
The Age of the Earth - Estimates
52
Geologic Time
  • Why is the geologic time scale used to show
    Earths history?
  • What are the different units of the geologic time
    scale?

53
Deep Time
Consider the earth's history as the old measure
of the English yard, the distance from the King's
nose to the tip of his outstretched hand. One
stroke of a nail file on his middle finger erases
human history. John McPhee
  • Geologic Time or Deep Time is almost
    unimaginably long.

54
What events divide geologic time?
  • Mass extinctions abrupt changes in the fossil
    record
  • Catastrophes Asteroid / Comet impacts,
    supervolcanos
  • Climate change rapid switching between warmer
    and colder climates
  • Tectonic changes Continental movement across
    the globe

55
Geologic Time Divisions
  • Eons Longest units of time. Hadean, Archean,
    Proterozoic...
  • Eras Divide eons. Paleozoic, Mesozoic,
    Cenozoic...
  • Periods Divide ErasTriassic, Jurassic,
    Cretaceous, Quaternary...
  • Epochs or Series Divide Periods Holocene,
    Pleistocene, Pliocene, Eocene, Paleocene...

56
Geologic Time Divisions
57
  • Age of the earth 2,827 miles about the
    distance from Boston to Los Angeles
  • Lucy lived 2 million years 1.2 miles
  • Agriculture invented 10 meters, or about the
    length of the classroom
  • United States Exists 23.5 cm or 10 inches
  • Your life span so far 1.5 cm or about the width
    of your thumb

58
Fossil Record of Biological Evolution
More Complex Life
  • As millions of years of earth history pass, life
    gradually develops and becomes more complex as
    time passes.

Very Simple Life
59
Fossil Record of Biological Evolution
  • Over time, life has steadily grown more and more
    complex.
  • Precambrian fossils show only the simplist life
    forms bacteria in the form of Stromatolites.

60
Fossil Record of Biological Evolution
  • 500 million years ago early life blooms.
  • Early Paleozoic Era fossils include no fish,
    reptiles, birds or mammals only simple marine
    life.

61
Fossil Record of Biological Evolution
  • 360 million years ago age of fish.
  • Devonian age showed early forms of fish. No
    fossils of reptiles, birds or mammals are present.

62
Fossil Record of Biological Evolution
  • 245 million years ago near the end of the
    Paleozoic Era.
  • Permian Period, complex life was found on land
    including early reptiles. No fossils of birds or
    mammals yet.

63
Plate Tectonics
  • Continental land masses have not remained fixed
    in one place over geological time, but have
    continuously moved in relation to each other.

64
Evidence for Plate TectonicsTopographic Fit
  • The edges of continents such as South America and
    Africa appear to match. This apparent jigsaw-like
    fit is no coincidence.

65
Evidence for Plate Tectonics Tectonic Fit
  • The positions and ages of tectonic features which
    occur on the various continental landmasses seem
    to join up. This is best seen in the cratons of
    Africa and South America, and in the mountain
    belts of northern Africa and southern Europe.

66
Evidence for Plate Tectonics Stratigraphic Fit
  • Continents which were once part of the same
    landmass will show similar rock sequences along
    their margins up until the time when they split
    apart.

67
Evidence for Plate Tectonics Fossil Correlation
  • Fossils contained within stratigraphic sequences
    which are now located on different continents can
    indicate that the two landmasses were once
    joined.

68
Earths History
  • What were the major events in Earths geologic
    history?
  • What were the major events in the development of
    life on Earth?

69
Earth Formation
  • The solar system is thought to have condensed
    from a nebula similar to the M16 Pillars of
    Creation shown here.
  • Heavy elements had to be formed inside supernova
    stars that exploded before the cloud condensed.

70
Nebular Theory
  • Over millions of years, the very thin nebula
    cloud condenses into the sun and planets.
  • Gravity provides the force that pulls the matter
    together, while the system keeps revolving
    because of conservation of angular momentum.

71
Collision Theory of the Moon
  • The most accepted theory of the moon is that it
    was the result of a collision between the earth
    and a Mars-sized object during the Hadeon eon
    very early in the Earths history.
  • This collision theory also explains the Earths
    tilt.

72
Precambrian - Hadean Eon
  • The Hadean eon (4.6M to 3.8M) saw a hot earth
    with much water vapor and carbon dioxide in the
    atmosphere.
  • The surface temperature was around 230F
  • Very little surface from the Hadean period exists
    on earth today mainly some zircon crystals and
    a very few rocks.

73
Precambrian - Achean Eon
  • The Achean eon (3.8M to 2.5M) saw much volcanism
    at first, slowing later.
  • Continents were small at first, gradually growing
    as the earth cooled at the end of the eon.
  • Blue-green algae in the form of stromatolites
    began to produce free oxygen.

74
Precambrian Proterozoic Eon
  • The Proterozoic Eon (2.5M to 550K) saw the
    evolution of the first multicellular life.
  • The red-bands of iron deposits were the result of
    a steady increase in free oxygen in the
    atmosphere.

75
Precambrian Glaciations
  • Late in the Proterozoic, all the continents
    combined to form the supercontinent Rodinia.
  • This disrupted the ocean currents and resulted in
    a worldwide glaciation called Snowball Earth
  • Snowball earth nearly extinguished all life on
    Earth.

76
Paleozoic Era Cambrian
  • 544-505 my bce
  • O2-12.5
  • CO2-4500 ppm
  • Temp 21C
  • 30-gt90 m
  • Ancient continents Laurentia and Baltica near the
    equator, and Gondwanaland near the south pole.
  • Shallow seas cover much of the land

77
Paleozoic Era Cambrian Period
  • Flora No land plants. A scum of fungi and algae
    covered the land.
  • Animals Most invertebrate phyla evolve rapidly
    during the Cambrian explosion a period of 10-30
    million years.
  • Trilobites, sponges, pikaia (chordate) clams
    lived during this period.

78
Paleozoic Era Ordovician
  • 505-438 my bce
  • O2-13.5
  • CO2-4200 ppm
  • Temp 16C
  • 180m
  • Warm shallow seas cover much of the Earth.
  • Ice cap covers present day North America
  • Cambrian explosion In a short time, all but one
    of the modern phyla appeared on earth.

79
Paleozoic Era Ordovician Period
  • Plants Land plants included only liverworts and
    mosses.
  • Marine animals increased four-fold. Invertebrates
    dominate the ocean.
  • Cephalopods (octopi, squids) brachiopods,
    crinoids, and jawless fish evolved during this
    time.

80
Paleozoic Era Silurian Period
  • 438-408 my bce
  • O2-14
  • CO2-4500 ppm
  • Temp 17C
  • 180m
  • Early continents Laurasia and Baltica collide
    building mountains.
  • Silurian marks the beginning of a long warm
    greenhouse climate phase, producing violent
    storms.

81
Paleozoic Era Silurian Period
  • Plants Moss forests grow along streams and
    lakes.
  • First fossils of vascular plants on land.
  • Coral reefs and jawed fish evolve.
  • Eurypterids (sea scorpions) terrorize the seas.
  • Insects and spiders first appear in the fossil
    record.

82
Paleozoic Era Devonian
  • 408-360 my bce
  • O2-15
  • CO2-2200 ppm
  • Temp 20C
  • 180-gt120 m
  • Seas rise and fall over present day North
    America.
  • Devonian was a warm period with very high sea
    levels and shallow seas covering much of the land.

83
Paleozoic Era Devonian Period
  • O2-15
  • CO2-2200 ppm
  • Temp 20C
  • 180-gt120 m
  • Seas rise and fall over present day North
    America.
  • Devonian was a warm period with very high sea
    levels and shallow seas covering much of the land.

84
Paleozoic Era Carboniferous Period
  • O2-32.5
  • CO2-800 ppm
  • Temp 14C
  • 120-gt0 m
  • Appalachian mountains begin to form
  • North America and Northern Europe are in warm,
    tropical regions
  • South America and Africa are in polar regions and
    are glaciated.

85
Paleozoic Era Carboniferous Period
  • Forests grow in swampy areas.
  • Great swamp forests cover tropics will become
    todays coal.
  • First true reptiles evolve
  • Insects are abundant and first winged insects
    appear.

86
Paleozoic Era Permian Period
  • 286-245 my bce
  • O2-23
  • CO2-900 ppm
  • Temp 16C
  • 60m-gt-20m
  • Pangaea forms, large tropical deserts and
    southern glaciation
  • Permian ended in the great dying, the most
    complete mass extinction known

87
Paleozoic Era Permian Period
  • Primitive cockroaches and dragonflies thrived
  • Swamp-type vegetation was replaced by seed ferns
    and conifers
  • First ginkgos and cycads appear in this period
  • Mammal-like Pelycosaurs (sail backs) were a
    common tetrapod
  • Diapsids are unimportant in the Permian, but
    would later evolve into dinosaurs

88
Great Dying Event
  • Occurred at the end of the Permian Period (End P
    at right)
  • As many as 70 of all species and perhaps 99.5
    of all individuals died
  • Possible causes Siberian traps flood basalt or
    venting of hydrogen sulfide gas, or climate
    change triggered by frozen methane reservoirs.
  • Other candidates for cause include a nearby
    supernova and an impact crater in Antarctica.

89
Mesozoic Era Triassic Period
  • 245-208 my bce
  • O2-16
  • CO2-1750 ppm
  • Temp 17C
  • Almost all the Earths land mass was concentrated
    in the supercontinent Pangaea.
  • Climate was hot and dry and even the poles were
    temperate.

90
Mesozoic Era Triassic Period
  • Gingkos and cycads were common
  • Seed plants began their domination
  • First mammals
  • Crurotarsi groups thrive, including crocodiles.
  • Onithodira (bird-necked) groups include
    pterosaurs (flying dinosaurs)
  • Carnivores cynognathus (dog-head) and cynodonts
    (dog-tooth) spread world-wide

91
Mesozoic Era Jurassic Period
  • 208-144 my bce
  • O2-26
  • CO2-1950 ppm
  • Temp 16.5C
  • Pangaea breaks apart into Gondwana and Laurasia.
  • Age of reptiles continues

92
Mesozoic Era Jurassic Period
  • Warm, lush forests conifers thrive
  • Ginkgos and ferns were common
  • First birds evolved
  • Ichthyosaurs and pleosaurs dominate the seas and
    pterosaurs flew in skies.
  • Giant Saurpods thrived, preyed upon by large
    theropods

93
Mesozoic Era Cretaceous Period
  • 144-65 my bce
  • O2-30
  • CO2-1700 ppm
  • Temp 18C
  • Gondwanaland and Laurasia split as modern
    continents form
  • Widespread volcanism results in warming from
    increased carbon dioxide

94
Mesozoic Era Cretaceous Period
  • First flowering plants
  • Dinosaurs dominate
  • First snakes appear
  • Sea life included modern sharks, ichthyosaurs,
    and plesiosaurs
  • Many species of dinosaurs flourished including
    T-Rex

95
K-T Extinction Event
  • Caused by a mountain-sized asteroid hitting the
    Yucatan Peninsula
  • Led to the extinction of most dinosaurs
  • Led to radiative evolution of mammals
  • Simultaneous with impact was the Deccan traps, a
    flood basalt event in India
  • Impact may have produced massive dust clouds and
    a worldwide nuclear-winter event.

96
Cenozoic Era Tertiary Period
  • 65-1.6 my bce
  • O2-25-gt21
  • CO2-1700 ppm
  • Temp 22-gt12C
  • The Americas move west away from Africa and
    Europe, and join with a land-bridge
  • New circulation patterns in the later Cenozoic
    result in regular ice ages
  • Worldwide temperatures fall along with carbon
    dioxide percentages

97
Cenozoic Era Tertiary Period
  • Flowering plants thrive
  • First grasses evolve
  • Modern mammals classes evolve
  • Horses, elephants, bears, rodents and primates
    appear
  • Mammals return to the seas and evolve into whales
    and dolphins.
  • Reptiles diversify into modern crocodilians,
    snakes and turtles.
  • Birds radiate into modern bird groups.

98
Cenozoic EraExtinct Mammals
Killer Pigs! Entelodon from the Late Eocene and
Early Oligocene of Asia
Andrewsarchus from the Paleogene
99
Cenozoic Era Tertiary Period
  • 65-1.6 my bce
  • O2-25-gt21
  • CO2-1700 ppm
  • Temp 22-gt12C
  • The Americas move west away from Africa and
    Europe, and join with a land-bridge
  • New circulation patterns in the later Cenozoic
    result in regular ice ages
  • Worldwide temperatures fall along with carbon
    dioxide percentages

100
Cenozoic Era Quaternary Period
  • Mammals, flowering plants and insects dominate
  • A dozen or more ice ages occurred at intervals of
    around 100,000 years.
  • Algae, coral, mollusks, fish and mammals thrive
    in the ocean. Insects, birds, and many types of
    mammals were common on land.
  • A series of hominids lived during this time,
    eventually evolving to homo sapiens about 100,000
    to 200,000 years ago.
  • Agriculture was invented 10,000 years ago leading
    to our current modern civilization.

101
Carbon Dioxide and Temperature
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