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Geologic Time

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Rocks record geological events and changing life forms of the past. However, erosion has removed a lot of Earth's history. ... archaeopteryx ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Geologic Time


1
Geologic Time
  • Historical Geology

2
  • In 1869, John Wesley Powell recognized the
    history of Earths past on display within the
    rocks of the Grand Canyon.

3
  • Rocks record geological events and changing life
    forms of the past. However, erosion has removed
    a lot of Earths history. It is not enough to
    rely on fossils to tell Earths story.
  • Earth is much older than must humans can imagine.
    But, its surface and interior have been changed
    and influenced by the same geological processes
    that continue today.

4
Brief history of Geology
  • In the mid 1600s Archbishop James Usher, using
    the Bible as a source, determined that Earth was
    more than 5000 years old. He determined that
    Earth had been created in 4004 BC.
  • This was accepted as fact by most historians and
    scientists

5
  • In the late 1700s, James Hutton published his
    Theory of the Earth. He had observed rocks in
    Scotland that the Romans had erected to build
    Hadrians Wall. He knew these rocks had been
    laid down around 40 AD. (less than 2000 years
    before) Yet they werent weathered to the extent
    that certain sedimentary rocks along Scotlands
    coast were. Their weathering and uplifting
    implied that the Earth had to be older than 5000
    years.

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7
  • Hutton believed that the forces and processes
    that we observe today have been at work for a
    long time.
  • This is called the principle of
    uniformitarianism.
  • Scientists today understand that the same
    processes may not allways have had the same
    relative importance or operated at precisely the
    same rate.

8
  • Some important processes are not currently
    observable, but evidence that they occur is well
    established. (meteor strikes)
  • We must remember that our lives are very brief
    when compared to the age of the Earth.

9
  • Relative Dating
  • Relative Dating tells us the sequence in which
    events occurred, not how long ago they occurred.

10
  • Law of Superposition- this law states than in an
    undeformed sequence of sedimentary rocks, each
    bed is older than the one above it and younger
    than the one below it. This rule also applies to
    materials such as lava flows and beds of ash from
    volcanic eruptions.

11
  • The Principle of Original Horizontality this
    prieciple means that layers of sediment are
    generally deposited in a horizontal position. If
    you see rock layers that are bent, it means that
    they were disturbed after they were laid down.

12
  • The Principle of Cross Cutting Relationships
    This means that when a fault cuts through or when
    magma intrudes other rocks and crystallizes, we
    can assume that the fault or intrusion is younger
    than the rock affected. If a layer is unbroken
    above a fault, it means that the fault was there
    before that layer of rock.

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14
  • Inclusions these are pieces of one rock unit
    that are contained within another. The rock next
    to the one containing the inclusion must have
    been there first in order to provide the rock
    fragments. So the rock unit containing the rock
    fragments is the younger of the two.

15
  • Unconformities A break in the rock record. It
    represents a long period during which deposition
    stopped, erosion removed previously formed rocks,
    and then deposition resumed. Unconformities
    represent significant geologic events.

16
  • Angular unconformity this indicates that during
    the pause in deposition, a period of deformation
    (folding or tilting) and erosion occurred.

17
  • Disconformity Two sedimentary rock layers that
    re separated by an erosional surface. These are
    more common than angular unconformities

18
  • Nonconformity the erosional surface separates
    older metamorphic or intrusive igneous rocks from
    younger sedimentary rocks.

Nonconformity, comprising bedded sandstones lying
directly on top of coarse-grained granite. The
granite is a plutonic igneous rock which
crystallized at a depth of at least 10
kilometers, indicating the minimum depth of
erosion that must have occurred here. The reddish
colour and the noticeably friable appearance of
the granite are due to weathering that took place
before the sandstone was deposited.
19
Unconformity
20
  • Correlation of Rock Layers Rocks of similar age
    in different regions must be matched up. To do
    this you might be able to match up distinctive or
    uncommon minerals in rock layers that are the
    same in areas that are nearby. In this way, you
    can create a more complete view of the geologic
    history of a region.

21
  • p 341 shows how the rocks correlate at 3 sites on
    the Colorado Plateau in southern Utah. This
    cannot be used to match rocks that are separated
    by great distances. Fossil correlation comes
    into play in these instances.

22
Correlation of Rock Layers
23
Fossil Evidence of Past Life
  • Fossil Formation the type of fossil is
    determined by the conditions under which an
    organism died and how it was buried.

24
  • Unaltered Remains Some remains teeth, bones,
    shells, may not have been altered or changed
    hardly at all over time. Finding a fully
    preserved, frozen mammoth.

Baby mammoth
25
  • Altered Remains petrified fossils. Bone or
    remains are soaked in mineral-rich water,
    penetrating the small cavities and pores of the
    original organism.

26
  • The minerals precipitate from the water and fill
    the spaces. There are no more cells. The
    molecules of the cell are replaced by molecules
    of minerals, sometimes to the extent that
    microscopic structures are preserved.

27
  • Mold a shell or other structure is buried in
    sediment then dissolved by underground water.
    The mold reflects only the shape and surface
    features of the organism. There is nothing
    preserved of its internal structure.

28
  • A cast is created when the hollow space of a mold
    are filled with mineral matter

29
  • Carbonization this is particularly effective in
    preserving leaves and delicate animal forms.
    Carbonization occurs when an organism is buried
    under fine sediment, pressure squeezes out the
    liquid and gas components of an organism and
    leaves a thin residue of carbon.

30
archaeopteryx
fish
31
  • Preservation in amber some very delicate
    organisms, such as insects, are preserved in the
    hardened resin of ancient trees.

32
  • Indirect evidence Trace fossils
  • Footprints
  • Burrows
  • Coprolites fossilized dung
  • Gastroliths stomach stones used in the
    grinding of food in the gizzards of some ancient
    reptiles

33
Insect in amber
34
Burrows
35
Gastroliths
36
coprolite
37
coprolite
38
  • Conditions favoring preservation two conditions
    are important for preservation rapid burial and
    the possession of hard parts.

39
  • Fossils and Correlation William Smith
    demonstrated in the late 18th century that rock
    layers contain a distinct assortment of fossils
    that did not occur in the layers above or below
    it. Hw also discovered that sedimentary rock
    layers in distant areas could be identified and
    correlated by the distinct fossils they contained

40
  • The principle of fossil succession states that
    the fossil organisms succeed one another in a
    definite and determinable order. Any time period
    can be recognized by its fossil content.

41
  • So we can pinpoint an Age of Trilobites, Age of
    Fishes, Age of Coal Swamps, Age of reptiles, Age
    of mammals. These Ages correspond to particular
    time periods. They are in the same order of
    dominant organisms on every continent

42
  • Geologists pay particular attention to index
    fossils. These are fossils that are widespread
    geographically and are limited to a short span of
    geologic time and occur in large numbers.

43
  • Interpreting environments geologists can
    conclude that a region was once covered by a
    shallow sea when the remains of certain clam
    shells are found in the limestone of that region.
    Heavy shells imply an environment of pounding
    waves. Corals require warm shallow seas,
    implying a tropical climate like Florida.

44
  • Dating with Radioactivity
  • Remember that an atom contains protons and
    neutrons in their nucleus and electrons in orbit
    around the nucleus.
  • The atomic number corresponds with the number of
    protons in the nucleus.
  • Different elements have different numbers of
    protons in their nuclei.

45
  • An atoms mass number is the number of protons
    plus the number of neutrons in the nucleus.
  • The number of neutrons can vary and these
    variants, or isotopes, have different mass
    numbers.
  • In some isotopes, the forces that hold the
    protons and neutrons together are not
    sufficiently strong to maintain the nucleus. In
    this case, nuclei are unstable and spontaneously
    break apart.

46
  • This is a process called radioactivity or
    radioactive decay.
  • This process continues until a stable or
    non-radioactive isotope is formed.

47
  • One well documented decay series is uranium -238.
  • U-238 decays over time to form lead-206.
  • Half life is the amount of time necessary for one
    half of the nuclei in a sample to decay to its
    stable isotope.
  • If the half life of a radioactive isotope is
    known and the parent/daughter ratio can be
    measured, the age of the sample can be calculated.

48
  • Radiometric dating
  • The procedure is used to calculate the age of
    rocks, or other materials, using radioactive
    isotopes. The rate of radioactive decay is not
    influenced or varied by anything physical in the
    environment. It has been occurring in the rock
    since it was formed.

49
  • If U-238 becomes incorporated in crystallizing
    magma, there is no lead. The clock starts at
    this point. As the uranium decays, atoms of the
    daughter product are formed and measurable amount
    of lead eventually accumulate.
  • This method is accurate only if the mineral
    remained in a closed system during the entire
    period since its formation.

50
  • If more radioactive elements or daughter elements
    are added at a later date, it is not possible to
    calculate a correct date.
  • U-238 has 13 intermediate daughter products
    before Pb-206 is produced

51
Carbon 14 dating-
  • C-14 is a radioactive isotope of carbon. It is
    produced continuously in the upper atmosphere.
    It becomes incorporated in the CO2 in the
    atmosphere, and, into the carbon cycle of Earth
    processes.

52
  • All living organisms contain some C-14. The C-14
    to C-12 ratio is constant as long as they are
    alive. They will continue to incorporate C-14 as
    long as they are living. As soon as they die,
    C-14 is no longer incorporated, and the C-14 to
    C-12 ratio changes as the C-14 decays.

53
  • C-14 dating is a valuable tool for scientists who
    study recent Earth history.
  • Radiometric dating have become very important
    tools for geologists.
  • Rocks on Earth have been dated to be as much as 4
    billion years old. Meteorites have been dated at
    4.6 billion years.
  • Radiometric dating has supported the ideas of
    James Hutton, Charles Darwin and others.

54
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55
  • Difficulties with the Geologic Time Scale
  • Not all rocks can be dated by radiometric
    methods. For a radiometric date to be useful,
    all minerals in the rock must have formed at
    about the same time.

56
  • Radioactive isotopes can be used to determine
    when minerals in an igneous rock crystallized and
    when pressure and heat made new minerals in a
    metamorphic rock.
  • Sedimentary rocks may contain particles that
    contain radioactive isotopes but these particles
    are not the same age as the rock in which they
    occur.

57
  • A metamorphic rock may contain minerals that tell
    when the rock was metamorphosed, not when the
    rock first formed.

58
  • To date sedimentary rock, geologists relate their
    age to datable igneous masses. Using the
    principle of superposition you can tell a
    sedimentary bed below an ash layer is older than
    the ash. A volcanic dike cutting through a
    sedimentary layer is younger than the sedimentary
    rock. If the ash is dated, and the dike is dated
    you can get an idea of the age of the sedimentary
    rock.
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