Title: Digging Into the Past
1Digging Into the Past
- Earth and Life Science
- Fossil Evidence
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3Earth ScienceGeology and Fossil Evidence
- S6E5 Students will investigate the scientific
view of how the earths surface is formed. - f. Describe how fossils show evidence of the
changing surface and climate of the Earth.
4Related Content Standards
- S6E5.
- b. Classify rocks by their process of
formation. - c. Describe processes that change rocks and the
surface of the earth. - d. Recognize that lithospheric plates
constantly move and cause major geological events
on the earths surface.
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6Life ScienceHistory of Life and Fossil Evidence
- S7L5. Students will understand evolution of
living organisms through inherited
characteristics that promote survival. - c. Explain how the fossil record found in
sedimentary rock provides evidence for the long
history of changing life forms.
7Related Content Standards
- S7L4.
- b. Explain in a food web that sunlight is the
source of energy and that this energy moves from
organism to organism. - c. Recognize that changes in environmental
conditions can affect the survival of both
individuals and entire species. - S7L5. Students will examine the evolution of
living organisms through inherited
characteristics that promote survival of
organisms and the survival of successive
generations of their offspring. - Explain how physical characteristics of organisms
have changed over successive generations (e.g.
Darwins finches and peppered moths of
Manchester) - Describe ways in which species on earth have
evolved due to natural selection.
8Characteristics of Science Standards
- S6CS1. Students will explore the importance of
curiosity, honesty, openness, and skepticism in
science and will exhibit these traits in their
own efforts to understand how the world works. - S6CS4. Students will use tools and instruments
for observing, measuring, and manipulating
equipment and materials in scientific activities. - S6CS5. Students will use the ideas of system,
model, change, and scale in exploring scientific
and technological matters. - S5CS6. Students will communicate scientific ideas
and activities clearly. - S6CS7. Students will question scientific claims
and arguments effectively. - S6CS8. Students will investigate the
characteristics of scientific knowledge and how
it is achieved. - S6CS10. Student will enhance reading in all
curriculum areas.
9Big Ideas
- Evidence
- Fossils
- Climate
- Changing Surface of the Earth
- History of the Earth
- Evidence
- Fossils
- Changing Life Forms
- History of the Earth
10Understandings
- Scientists use evidence to explain the history of
the Earth. - The Earths surface is constantly changing.
- Rock formations provide evidence.
- From Earths rocks we can learn about changes
that have occurred in the Earths surface, we can
find evidence of changes in the Earths climate,
and we can find evidence of organisms of long
ago. - Fossils are the most important source of
information about life on Earth in the distant
past. - The principle that geological forces seen in
operation at present should be used to explain
the past history of the Earth is known as
uniformitarianism. - The order in which rocks are layered is an
important clue to Earths history. - The Law of Superposition is fundamental to the
interpretation of Earths history. - Layers are usually formed horizontally, with the
oldest rock strata on the bottom and the youngest
on top. - Sedimentary rocks are formed particle by particle
and bed by bed, and the layers are piled one on
top of the other. - Rock layers reveal data about the locations of
earlier oceans, mountains, plains, and plateaus. - Dating rocks allows scientists to study the most
ancient rocks and refer to the history as a
geologic timetable.
11Understandings
- Scientists use evidence to explain the history of
life on the Earth. - Some organisms have survived Earths changing
surface and climate. - Some organisms have not survived Earths changing
surface and climate. - Organisms have changed through time.
- Rock formations provide evidence.
- From Earths rocks we can learn about changes
that have occurred in the Earths surface, we can
find evidence of changes in the Earths climate,
and we can find evidence of organisms of long
ago. - Fossils are the most important source of
information about life on Earth in the distant
past. - The order in which rocks are layered is an
important clue to Earths history. - Layers are usually formed horizontally, with the
oldest rock strata on the bottom and the youngest
on top. - Dating rocks allows scientists to study the most
ancient rocks and refer to the history as a
geologic timetable. - Scientists can learn many things about organisms
of long ago, such as their development, body
structure, habits, and the climate in which they
lived. - Organisms have changed through time and older
species are ancestors of younger ones. - Index fossils had a short, well-known time of
existence and are used to determine the age of
rocks precisely. - Many thousands of layers of sedimentary rock
provide evidence for the long history of the
earth and for the long history of changing life
forms whose remains are found in the rocks. - More recently deposited rock layers are more
likely to contain fossils resembling existing
species. - Fossils are formed in many different ways.
12Stubby Dino Find Blurs Image of Long-Neck
Lumberers John RoachNational Geographic
News June 1, 2005 Paleontologists today unveiled
a sauropod dinosaur with a stubby neck. The
discovery smudges the common picture of sauropods
as unspecialized, lumbering dinosaurs that used
very long necks to munch away at any greenery in
sight, including treetops.
13Questions to Consider
- Can we stop the earth from changing?
- Why was Nebraska the first state to require
oceanography as a part of its science curriculum? - Why have fossilized sea life been found in rock
at the top of Mt. Everest and the remains of a
lush tropical rainforest been found buried under
miles of ice and snow at the South Pole?
14Questions to Consider
- How can fossils tell us what ancient environments
were like? - Evidence left by early people is called
artifacts. Some examples are arrowheads, ancient
beads, and animal skins used as clothing. Why do
you think we dont call them fossils? - Why was Nebraska the first state to require
oceanography as a part of its science curriculum? - Why have fossilized sea life been found in rock
at the top of Mt. Everest and the remains of a
lush tropical rainforest been found buried under
miles of ice and snow at the South Pole? - Can you find fossils where you live? Where do
you think you would go to look for fossils? - Do all organisms adapt or die?
- How do scientists accurately depict organisms
from only a fragment of the organism found in a
fossil? Or do they?
15Knowledge and Skills
- How to use scientific language correctly
- What a fossil is and how it is formed
- How we obtain evidence
- What is climate
- How fossils show climate change and changes in
the earths surface
- Make simulated fossils
- Simulate/explain changes in earths history
- Research theoriesKT event, Ice Age evidence,
Plate tectonics, superposition, uniformitarianism - Simulate geologic dating
- Sketch evidence of rock layering and fossil
evidence
16Stage 2 Evidence of the Evidence
- Performance Task
- Part One
- You are a construction worker in charge of
digging the foundation of a building in a
downtown area of a large city. You find evidence
of fossils. What do you do? What is the
evidence? How do you know they are fossils?
Write a newspaper article where you were
interviewed about your job and the find.
17Part Two
- You contact the site manager who must talk to the
city council and building owners about the
evidence. Write a telephone skit telling about
the resulting conference call and what will
happen next. - Products The class is divided into characters
and groups for a debate over what will happen to
the project. Suggested characters and groups
include - Construction worker
- Site Manager
- City Council members
- Building owners and their lawyers
- Professor of geology from a local university
- Curator of a natural history museum
- Members of the public
- News reporter from local media
18After the debate,
- Write a position paper or make a display about
this scenario. - Choose a location in Georgia and explain what
kind of fossil evidence would be found there. - What may have caused the fossil evidence?
- What are some reasons for preserving or not
preserving fossil evidence? - Could you find history of fossil evidence in that
location? Site sources. - Use the following terms correctly rock
formation, superposition, uniformitarianism,
fossil formation
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20Knowledge
- How to use the scientific language correctly,
- What is a fossil?
- How do we obtain fossil evidence?
- Biographies of paleontologists and geologists
such as William Smith, Georges Cuvier, and
Alexandre Brongniart, Alfred Wallace, and Charles
Darwin - Geologic Timetable
- The difference between threatened, endangered and
extinct organisms
21Skills
- Make simulated fossilsprints, casts, molds, etc.
- Simulate/explain changes in organisms through
earths history - Research theoriesNatural Selection
- Explain geologic dating
- Explain how index fossils show evidence of ages
of rocks - Sketch evidence of rock layering and fossil
evidence
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23Performance Task
- You are a paleontologist working on a new dig.
You have found evidence of a new organism. Make
a display to show your findings - Classification based on the evidence you have
located - Environment of the organism
- How did the organism get its food? Give examples
of evidence from fossil remains. - Where did the organism live? How do you know?
- Why is the organism no longer alive?
- What is the organism most like? Compare the
fossil remains to a current organism.
24Other Evidence
- Observation
- Sketches of rock layers and fossil evidence
- Demonstrate how a fossil can be formed using
sand, water, and an object such as seashell - Simulations of fossil production
- Simulations depicting rocks as they change
layering, folding, faulting, etc. - Simulations of fossil digs
- Label and sequence pictures depicting fossil
formations
- Tell or write what a fossil is and what
information it can provide. - Research geological events, principles of
geology, and biographies - Cartoons, comic strips, or Powerpoint
presentations of major geologic events impacting
climate changes - Group reports (jigsaw) of biographies
25Other Evidence
- Constructed response about extinct, threatened,
and endangered organisms - Examples of adaptation
- Selected response test about evidence (Examples
included in samples) - Matching evidence found in fossils to changes in
food getting beaks and feet - Group reports (jigsaw reporting) of biographies
- Sketches of rock layers and fossil evidence
- Simulations of fossil production
- Simulations of fossil digs
- Research on geological events, fossil finds in
Georgia, and biographies - Cartoon or PowerPoint presentation of major
geological events impacting climate changes - Label and sequence pictures depicting fossil
formation - Geologic Timetable
26Language Marlees students will use in this unit
are not necessarily the same terms that would be
found on a standardized assessment.
- Evidence
- Archeology
- Paleontology
- Sedimentary rock
- Extinction
- Fossil
- Mold
- Print
- Amber
- Tar
- Remains
- Cast
- Index fossil
- Layers
- Superposition
- Uniformitarianism
- Relative dating
- Plate tectonics
- Ice Age evidence
- KT event
- Adaptation
- Diversity
27Self-Assessment Questions
- What did you accomplish today?
- What strengths do you think you showed in your
work? - How did you feel about the topic we investigated
today? - How well do you think you understood the activity
we did today? - What questions do you have about what we did
today? - Are there some things you dont understand?
- What do you think is the most important thing you
learned in science this week?
28Multiple Choice Tests
- The next set of slides are questions from
released state tests. - http//edinformatics.com/testing/testing.htm
- Instruction can be written to guide the students
in understanding the concept at a different
level.
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33- Fossils of the fern Glossopteris have been found
in Africa, Australia, Antarctica, and South
America. How do scientists explain this
observation? - The wind blew the seeds across the oceans from
continent to continent. - The fern developed independently on each
continent. - The continents were at one time joined together
and then moved apart. - The fern had adaptations to survive the different
environments of the continents.
34- Scientists compare layers of rock to each other
in order to determine the - Relative age of rocks.
- Composition of rocks.
- Amount of fossils in rocks.
- Chemical composition of rocks.
35- The best evidence that two land areas were once
connected is the discovery that both land masses - Have the same climate.
- Are in the same stage of succession.
- Exist along the same line of longitude.
- Have similar types of rocks and fossils.
36- Fossil fuels were formed from?
- Uranium
- Sea water
- Sand and gravel
- Dead plants and animals
37- Which of the following would cause a long-term
(lasting thousands of years) change to Earth? - Spring flooding along the Saint John River
- A hurricane coming north from the banks of the
Carolinas - A volcano erupting such as Mount Pinatubo in the
Philippines - Tornadoes spawned from cold and warm air clashing
38- As a scientist was hiking up a mountain, she
found fossils of seashells in some of the rocks.
Which is a reasonable conclusion she can make? - The rocks were formed when molten lava was
cooled. - Shelled sea organisms once inhabited forested
mountains. - The rocks were formed in an ocean and later
uplifted when the mountain was formed. - The fossil seashells were carried up from an
ocean and embedded in the rocks by strong winds.
39- Which BEST describes the movement of the plates
that make up Earth's surface over millions of
years? - They moved for millions of years but now have
stopped. - They stayed the same for millions of years but
are now moving. - They have been continually moving.
- They have never moved.
40- Fossils similar to marine life found in the
oceans today have been found in rocks on top of
mountains. How can this be explained? - The marine life can live on land or sea.
- Marine organisms were once able to breathe air.
- The rocks in which the fossils were found were
formed under an ocean. - Marine organisms have evolved from land organisms.
41- Fossils are evidence of living things that were
alive many, many years ago and often consist of
the skeletons of creatures imbedded in rock. Why
dont fossils contain the animals soft tissues,
as well? - Because the soft tissues decayed before the
fossil could be formed - Because the rock breaks down soft tissues.
- Because the soft tissues were always eaten by
scavengers. - Because the rock always smashed the soft tissues
flat.
42- Which BEST describes the surface of the Earth
over billions of years? - A flat surface is gradually pushed up into higher
and higher mountains until the Earth is covered
with mountains. - High mountains gradually wear down until most of
the Earth is at sea level. - High mountains gradually wear down as new
mountains are continuously being formed over and
over again. - High mountains and flat plains stay side by side
for billions of years with little change.
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