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Section 22'1 Early Earth

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Plate tectonics caused microcontinents to collide and fuse throughout the Proterozoic. ... Earth's first supercontinent formed at the end of the Proterozoic. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Section 22'1 Early Earth


1
Section 22.1 Early Earth
22
Key Concepts
Study Guide
Several lines of evidence indicate that Earth
is about 4.56 billion years old.
  • Scientists use Earth rocks, zircon crystals, moon
    rocks, and meteorites to determine Earths age.

2
Section 22.1 Early Earth
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
  • Likely heat sources of early Earth were
    gravitational contraction, radioactivity, and
    asteroid and meteorite bombardment.
  • Cooling of Earth led to the formation of liquid
    water.

3
Section 22.2 Formation of the Crust and Continents
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
The molten rock of Earths early surface formed
into crust and then continents.
  • Earth differentiated into specific density zones
    early in its formation.
  • Plate tectonics caused microcontinents to collide
    and fuse throughout the Proterozoic.

4
Section 22.2 Formation of the Crust and Continents
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
  • The ancient continent of Laurentia formed as a
    result of many mountain-building episodes.
  • Earths first supercontinent formed at the end of
    the Proterozoic.

5
Section 22.3 Formation of the Atmosphere and
Oceans
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
The formation of Earths oceans and atmosphere
provided a hospitable environment for life to
begin.
  • Earths atmosphere and oceans began forming early
    in Earths history.
  • Oxygen gas began to accumulate in the Proterozoic
    by photosynthesizing cyanobacteria.

6
Section 22.3 Formation of the Atmosphere and
Oceans
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
  • Evidence for atmospheric oxygen can be found in
    rocks.
  • The water that filled Earths oceans most likely
    came from two major sources.

7
Section 22.4 Early Life on Earth
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
Life began on Earth fewer than a billion years
after Earth formed.
  • Scientists think that life on Earth began between
    3.9 and 3.5 bya.
  • Stanley Miller and Harold Urey were the first to
    show experimentally that organic molecules could
    have formed on early Earth.

8
Section 22.4 Early Life on Earth
22
Study Guide
Key Concepts
  • Scientists have developed several hypotheses to
    explain how and where life formed.
  • Eukaryotes appeared after prokaryotes.
  • Earths first multicellular organisms evolved at
    the end of the Precambrian.

9
22.1 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
The Precambrian lasted for nearly 4 billion years.
a. true b. false
10
22.1 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Which is used as evidence of Earths age?
a. Moon rock samples b. metamorphic rocks
c. comet fragments d. iron-oxide molecules
11
22.1 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Earth was extremely hot after it first formed.
What was one of the sources of that extreme heat?
a. solar radiation b. radioactive decay
c. volcanic events d. metamorphism
12
22.2 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What is the process by which a planet develops
layers as denser materials sink toward the center
and less dense materials rise toward the surface?
a. continent formation b. continental drift
c. consolidation d. differentiation
13
22.2 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
The microcontinents that formed early in Earths
history still exist as the cores of Earths
continents. What are those cores called?
a. cratons b. plutons c. granite d. basalt
14
22.2 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Rodinia was Earths first supercontinent.
a. true b. false
15
22.3 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Earths atmosphere contained large amounts of
free oxygen 4.5 billion years ago.
a. true b. false
16
22.3 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What discovery is strong evidence for the
existence of cyanobacteria 3.5 billion years ago?
a. fossil stromatolites b. sedimentary red beds
c. banded-iron formations d. Archean iron
oxides
17
22.3 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What is the probable source of water in Earths
atmosphere and oceans?
Answer The water probably came from asteroids,
comets, and other space objects, as well as from
volcanic outgassing.
18
22.4 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Experiments suggest that RNA molecules may have
been the first replicating molecules on Earth.
a. true b. false
19
22.4 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What most likely played a major role in the mass
extinction of eukaryotes about 750 million years
ago?
a. an asteroid impact b. widespread glaciation
c. widespread volcanism d. predation by
prokaryotes
20
22.4 Section Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Why did life not flourish on Earth before about 4
billion years ago?
Answer Until about 4 billion years ago, Earth
was still subject to steady asteroid impacts.
Large impacts could have destroyed many early
life forms.
21
Chapter Assessment Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Using radiometric dating, which material is
likely to be the oldest?
a. iron oxide b. zircon c. granite d. basalt
22
Chapter Assessment Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What was Laurentia?
Possible answer Laurentia was the ancient
continent of North America and one of Earths
largest Proterozoic landmasses. It collided with
Amazonia in the Grenville Orogeny at the end of
the Proterozoic and became part of Rodinia,
Earths first supercontinent.
23
Chapter Assessment Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
What was essential for the formation of Earths
first continental crust?
a. formation of a supercontinent b. presence of
water in the mantle c. asteroid and meteorite
impacts d. oxygen in the early atmosphere
24
Chapter Assessment Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
How did scientists conclude that atmospheric
oxygen did not exist in large amounts until the
Proterozoic Eon?
Possible answer Iron oxides are not found in
rocks that were formed before the Proterozoic
Eon. If Earths atmosphere had contained oxygen,
it would have reacted with the iron in the rocks
to form iron oxides.
25
Chapter Assessment Questions
22
The Precambrian Earth
Where is most of Earths iron located?
Answer Most of Earths iron is in or near its
core.
26
Standardized Test Practice
22
The Precambrian Earth
Besides being necessary for animal life, why else
is the presence of oxygen in the atmosphere
important?
Possible answer Oxygen forms ozone in the
atmosphere, which provides protection from
ultraviolet radiation from the Sun.
27
Standardized Test Practice
22
The Precambrian Earth
What was the main source of Earths atmospheric
oxygen?
a. volcanic outgassing b. photosynthesis
c. ocean formation d. Archean atmosphere
28
Standardized Test Practice
22
The Precambrian Earth
Which of Earths layers is the least dense?
a. A b. B c. C d. D
29
Standardized Test Practice
22
The Precambrian Earth
In which layer are you most likely to find
granite?
a. A b. B c. C d. D
30
Standardized Test Practice
22
The Precambrian Earth
How long did it take for Earth to cool enough for
the first oceans to form?
a. about 200 years b. about 200,000 years
c. about 2 million years d. about 200 million
years
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