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Title: Focus On Life Science


1
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2
Chapter Menu
Lesson 1 Geologic Time and Mass
Extinction Lesson 2 Early Earth History Lesson
3 Middle and Recent Earth History
Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding
lesson.
3
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinction
  • index fossil
  • mass extinction
  • catastrophic event

4
Development of the Geologic Time Scale
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • The changes that have occurred in Earths history
    are recorded on a time line called the geologic
    time scale.
  • The time scales units are uneven because
    extinctions, growth rates, and environmental
    changes happen at different rates.

5
Index Fossils
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • An index fossil is the remains of a species that
    existed over vast regions of Earth for a short
    period of time.
  • Special criteria are used to identify index
    fossils.

6
Index Fossils (cont.)
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
7
Divisions of the Geologic Time Scale
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • No two divisions of time have the same number of
    years.
  • The largest divisions are eons, then eras,
    periods, and epochs.

8
Eras
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • The Phanerozoic eon is divided into three eras.
  • Paleozoic era dominated by invertebrate marine
    organisms
  • Mesozoic era dinosaurs and mammals lived on
    land
  • Cenozoic era humans evolved, continues today

Phanerozoic Eon Part A Part BPart C Part D
9
Periods and Epochs
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • The Cenozoic era is divided into the Paleogene,
    Neogene, and Quaternary periods.
  • The Quaternary period began 1.8 million years ago
    and is divided into epochs.
  • The Pleistocene epoch ended about 8,000 years
    ago, and we now live in the Holocene epoch.

10
What are mass extinctions?
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Mass extinction is the dying off of many species
    at one time.
  • A greater abundance of fossils in one rock layer
    compared to other layers indicates a mass
    extinction.
  • Mass extinctions happen over a great span of time.

11
Possible Causes of Mass Extinctions
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • A catastrophic event causes drastic change in the
    numbers of organisms of species over a short
    period in geologic time.
  • Not all catastrophic events cause mass
    extinction.
  • Types of events that can cause mass extinction
    include changes in climate, volcanic eruptions,
    and asteroid impacts.

12
Climate Change
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • There is evidence that some mass extinctions were
    caused by sudden climate change.
  • Species that cannot survive a change in climate
    become extinct.
  • Climate change can be caused by volcanic
    eruptions or asteroid impacts, and can result in
    global warming or cooling.

13
Global Warming
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Greenhouse gases in the atmosphere may contribute
    to global warminga global increase in
    atmospheric temperature.
  • Global warming causes a decrease in oxygen levels
    in water, and an increase in sea levels.
  • May have been the cause for the Devonian mass
    extinction

14
Global Cooling
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Global cooling could lower sea levels as more
    water is frozen in glacial ice.
  • Less water means fewer warm, shallow-water
    environments.
  • May have initiated the Ordovician mass extinction

15
Volcanoes
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Eruptions can be explosive or non-explosive.
  • The dust, ash, lava, and gas emitted from
    volcanic eruptions can affect climate and
    organisms.
  • A volcanic eruption is one hypothesis proposed to
    explain the mass extinction at the end of the
    Cretaceous period.

16
Basalt Flows
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Non-explosive floods of molten basalt emit the
    largest volume of matter of any eruptions.
  • Geologic evidence shows that large basalt flows
    occurred during the Permian and Cretaceous mass
    extinctions.

17
Volcanic Haze
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • The gases produced by basalt flows cause a
    volcanic haze effect.
  • Sulfur dioxide gas is released and acid clouds
    form, preventing the Suns ultraviolet rays from
    reaching Earth.
  • Global cooling occurs over months and years.
  • Heat becomes trapped in the atmosphere and global
    temperatures increase.

18
Asteroid Impacts
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Scientists believe an asteroid impact in Mexico
    may have contributed to the Cretaceous mass
    extinction.

19
Asteroid Impacts (cont.)
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Scientists propose that this impact sent enough
    dust and materials into the atmosphere to block
    sunlight.
  • Global cooling after the impact turned to global
    warming as carbon dioxide was released from
    burning plants.

20
The Debate
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  • Evidence supports the idea that many species
    became extinct at the end of the Cretaceous
    period because of asteroids.
  • But the impact did not cause all the extinctions.
  • Many species became extinct before the impact,
    and the rate of extinction was increasing before
    the impact.

21
Lesson 1 Review
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which describes the divisions of the geologic
time scale in order of longest to shortest units
of time? A eons, eras, periods, epochs B eons,
epochs, eras, periods C epochs, eons,
periods, eras D epochs, eons, eras, periods
22
Lesson 1 Review
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What is the likely immediate outcome of an
explosive volcanic eruption that sends dust into
the atmosphere? A global warming B global
cooling C basalt flows D volcanic haze
23
Lesson 1 Review
8.1 Geologic Time and Mass Extinctions
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What type of eruption emits the largest volume of
matter? A basalt flows B explosive eruptions
C non-explosive eruptions D volcanic haze
24
End of Lesson 1
25
8.2 Early Earth History
  • cyanobacteria
  • vertebrate
  • amniote

26
Life on Earth Changes
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Paleontologists discovered that the system used
    to classify modern organisms could be used to
    classify fossils.
  • Fossils from rock layers that are touching are
    more similar than fossils from widely separated
    layers.
  • The more recent a fossil was formed, the more it
    resembles a living organism.

27
Life on Earth Changes (cont.)
8.2 Early Earth History
28
Precambrian Time
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Precambrian rocks are difficult to study because
    they have undergone metamorphism or been
    destroyed.
  • Precambrian fossils are not abundant but provide
    a lot of information about Earths early
    atmosphere and environment.

29
The Precambrian Atmosphere
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Archean sediments contain large amounts of pyrite
    and uraninite.
  • Todays atmosphere contains oxygen that quickly
    destroys these minerals through oxidation.
  • Earths early atmosphere had very little oxygen.

30
Ozone
8.2 Early Earth History
  • The absence of oxygen suggests there was no ozone
    layer during Precambrian time.
  • Without ozone, ultraviolet rays cause death or
    mutations in cells.
  • Changes in one gene in an organism could result
    in new life forms many generations later.

31
The First Organisms
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Cyanobacteriaone of the earliest organisms.
  • Stromatolites are mounds of alternating
    thin-layered sediments and photosynthetic
    cyanobacteria that take in carbon dioxide and
    release oxygen.

32
A Changing Environment
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Oxygen levels rose slowly as cyanobacteria and
    other early-life forms released oxygen.
  • Natural selection favored organisms that could
    tolerate or use oxygen.
  • The amount of ozone in the atmosphere increased.

33
Soft-Bodied Organisms
8.2 Early Earth History
  • The first invertebrate organismsanimals without
    backbonesappeared during the Proterozoic eon.
  • Ediacaran fauna

34
The Paleozoic Era
8.2 Early Earth History
  • The first appearance of fossils of organisms made
    from hard parts marks the end of the Proterozoic
    eon.
  • Because hard parts fossilize easier, fossils are
    easier to find in Paleozoic rocks than
    Precambrian rocks.

35
The Cambrian Explosion
8.2 Early Earth History
  • During a relatively short period of time, the
    number of animals with shells greatly increased.
  • Invertebratessponges, jellies, coralsalso
    evolved during the Cambrian explosion.

36
Invertebrates of the Paleozoic Era
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Throughout the Paleozoic era, the oceans
    contained a wide variety of invertebrate
    organisms.
  • Corals, brachiopods, crinoids, bryozoans
  • Ordovician period, Silurian period

37
Vertebrates of the Paleozoic Era
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Vertebratesanimals with backbones evolved
    during the early Paleozoic era.
  • The first of these lived in the oceans.
  • Bony fish with bony rays that supported their
    fins
  • Bony fish with thick fins supported by large
    bones and muscles

38
A New Egg
8.2 Early Earth History
  • A new organism that could lay its eggs on land
    evolved during the early Pennsylvanian period.
  • Amniotes laid water-tight, amniotic eggs and
    could spend all their time on land.
  • Mammals, dinosaurs, and reptiles evolved from
    amniotes.

39
Plants of the Paleozoic Era
8.2 Early Earth History
  • During the Ordovician period, plants began
    spreading onto land.
  • Early land plants were small and lived in moist
    areas because they could not move water to all
    their parts.

40
Plants of the Paleozoic Era (cont.)
8.2 Early Earth History
  • Plants with vascular systems that could move
    nutrients between roots and leaves then evolved.
  • New plants developed quickly.

41
Paleozoic Extinctions
8.2 Early Earth History
  • The Paleozoic era ended with the late Permian
    extinction90 of marine and 70 of land species.

42
Paleozoic Extinctions (cont.)
8.2 Early Earth History
  • The uplifting formation of Pangaea, or ash and
    sulfur released from the Siberian Traps may
    explain the Permian extinction.

43
Lesson 2 Review
8.2 Early Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which is not a characteristic of Earths early
atmosphere during the Precambrian time? A very
little oxygen B no ozone layer C iron in minerals
quickly oxidized D organisms were exposed to
ultraviolet rays
44
Lesson 2 Review
8.2 Early Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What were some of the first vertebrates? A brachio
pods B trilobites C edicacaran fauna D bony fish
45
Lesson 2 Review
8.2 Early Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What ended the Paleozoic era? A Ordovician
extinction B Devonian extinction C Permian
extinction D Cambrian extinction
46
End of Lesson 2
47
8.3 Middle and Recent History
  • pterosaur
  • ectotherm
  • endotherm
  • gymnosperm
  • primate

48
A Changing Landscape
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • 180 million years ago, Pangaea began to split
    into Laurasia and Gondwanaland.
  • This created a warm, wet climate.

What geologic evidence supports the existence of
Pangaea?
49
A Changing Landscape (cont.)
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
50
A Changing Landscape (cont.)
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • The Mesozoic era is known as the Age of Reptiles.
  • Dinosaurs dominated midway through the era.
  • Toward the eras end, land began to dry out and
    the largest dinosaurs became extinct.
  • Mammals that had never been larger than a possum,
    took over as the dinosaurs went extinct.

51
Invertebrates of the Mesozoic Era
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Stromatolites increased in number after their
    predators became extinct at the end of the
    Paleozoic era.
  • Algae and rudistids evolved in the Cretaceous
    period.
  • Reef-building corals replaced rudistids in the
    Triassic period.
  • Insects declined in number and diversity during
    the Mesozoic era.

52
Vertebrates of the Mesozoic Era
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • The oceans contained predatory reptiles, and
    amphibians, reptiles, and mammals that lived on
    land continued to evolve.
  • Frog, turtles, crocodiles, dinosaurs
  • Pterosaursflying reptileswere different from
    dinosaurs, not related to birdsor bats

53
Dinosaurs
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • The first dinosaurs were small, but new species
    evolved into some of the largest animals to walk
    the Earth.
  • Ectothermsanimals that rely on their
    surroundings and behavior to help them regulate
    their body temperature
  • Endothermsanimals that generate internal body
    heat to maintain a constant body temperature

54
Dinosaurs (cont.)
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Scientists think dinosaurs lived more like
    todays mammals and birds than like reptiles.
  • A dinosaurlike skeleton with fossilized feathers
    found in Jurassic-aged rocks supports the idea
    that birds evolved from dinosaurs.

55
Mammals
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Early mammals were small and not numerous for
    most of the Mesozoic era.
  • In the Cretaceous period, they began to increase
    in number and diversity.

56
Plants of the Mesozoic Era
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Gymnospermsplants that produce seeds but no
    flowerswere the dominant plants of the Mesozoic
    era.
  • Angiospermsflowering plants that bear seeds with
    hard coveringsevolved near the end of the
    Mesozoic era.

57
Mesozoic Era Extinction Events
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Mass extinctions occurred at the end of the
    Triassic and Jurassic periods.
  • At the end of the Cretaceous period, an
    extinction event caused 85 of all ocean species
    and the remaining dinosaurs to become extinct.
  • Many mammal species survived.

58
The Cenozoic Era
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • The Cenozoic era is divided into seven epochs.
  • During the Cenozoic era, marine life began to
    recover from the Cretaceous mass extinction.
  • The offspring of organisms that survived the
    Cretaceous extinction make up todays marine
    ecosystems.

59
Animals on Land
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Some mammals returned to the ocean during the
    Eocene epoch, giving rise to marine mammals such
    as whales.
  • Primatesanimals with opposable thumbs and eyes
    that look forwardevolved during the Eocene epoch
    and rapidly diversified.
  • Hominidsanimals which walk upright on two
    legsevolved from the early primates during the
    Pliocene epoch.

60
Plants of the Cenozoic Era
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  • Flowering plants have continued to evolve since
    the Mesozoic era.
  • Grasses supported a large diversity of mammals,
    allowing mammals to multiply and diversify.

61
Lesson 3 Review
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which era is known as the Age of
Reptiles? A Cretaceous B Mesozoic C Cenozoic
D Jurassic
62
Lesson 3 Review
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What best describes how dinosaurs are viewed
today? A ectotherms B endotherms C reptiles D bird
s
63
Lesson 3 Review
8.3 Middle and Recent Earth History
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

During which epoch did hominids
evolve? A Pliocene B Eocene C Cenozoic
D Cretaceous
64
End of Lesson 3
65
Chapter Resources Menu
Chapter Assessment California Standards
Practice Concepts in Motion Image Bank Science
Online Interactive Table Virtual Lab
Click on a hyperlink to view the corresponding
feature.
66
Chapter Assessment 1
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which is not an effect of an asteroid
impact? A sunlight blocked by dust B basalt flows
causing a complex sequence of events C carbon
dioxide causing global warming D the death of
primary producers causing mass extinctions
67
Chapter Assessment 2
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Why have some paleontologists proposed that
asteroid impacts did not cause all the mass
extinctions at the end of the Cretaceous
period? A There is no evidence of an asteroid
impact at the end of the Cretaceous
period. B Volcanic haze is a more likely
cause. C Many species were already extinct by
the time of the impact. D The fossil record does
not support a mass extinction at the end of
the Cretaceous period.
68
Chapter Assessment 3
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What caused oxygen levels to rise in Earths
atmosphere? A the presence of photosynthetic
organisms B the evolution of bacteria-eating
organisms C an increase in the ozone layer
D the evolution of organisms that could
tolerate or use oxygen
69
Chapter Assessment 4
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

The evolution of amniotic eggs allowed ___. A the
spreading of organisms into dry land B the
movement of organisms to shallow-water
environments C the evolution of amphibians
D organisms to live on land and lay eggs in
the water
70
Chapter Assessment 5
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which group declined in number and diversity
during the Mesozoic era? A stromatolites B reef-bu
ilding corals C insects D mammals
71
CA Standards Practice 1
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which is not one of the methods scientists use to
divide the geologic time scale into units of
time? A mass extinctions B major changes in
life-forms C index fossils D major changes in
climate
72
CA Standards Practice 2
SCI 4.g
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

What is not a possible effect of global
warming? A increase in sea levels B decrease in
oxygen levels C decrease in shallow-water
environments D rising atmospheric
temperatures
73
CA Standards Practice 3
SCI 4.d
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which is not a reason Precambrian rocks are
difficult to study? A many have been
destroyed B many have undergone
metamorphosis C they are difficult to date
with radiometric dating D they do not provide
much information
74
CA Standards Practice 4
SCI 4.g
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

Which does not characterize the Cambrian
explosion? A an increase in small-shelled
organisms B the evolution of amniotes C an
increase in invertebrates D an increase in
large-shelled organisms
75
CA Standards Practice 5
SCI 4.b
  1. A
  2. B
  3. C
  4. D

All remaining dinosaurs became extinct at the end
of which period? A Triassic B Jurassic
C Cretaceous D Mesozoic
76
Concepts in Motion 1
77
Image Bank
78
Interactive Table
Phanerozoic Eon Part A Part BPart C Part D
79
End of Resources
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