Title: Paleogeology
1Paleogeology
2Paleontology
3Geology
- The study of the origin, history and structure of
the Earth.
4Paleogeology
- Combines the studies of paleontology and geology
- Go to Becoming Human.org and view Explore A Dig
5How Fossils Form
- Organism is quickly covered with sediment.
6Fossil Formation
- 2. Minerals from the sediments seep into the
body.
7Fossil Formation
- 3. Additional layers of sediment compress,
forming rock. - 4. Minerals eventually replace all the bodys
bone material.
Animation
8How are fossils discovered?
- Earth movements or erosion may expose the fossil
millions of years after formation.
9Dating Fossils
- 2 Methods
- Indirect Dating
- Does not determine the exact age
- Direct Dating
- Determines a number
10Indirect Dating
- Gives a relative age of a fossil
- Younger than, older than
- Strata Layers of Earth
11Stratigraphy
- Determining the relative age of a fossil based on
which layer its found in. - Top Younger
- Bottom Older
12Horse Evolution
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17Our understanding of the evolution of horse feet,
so often depicted in textbooks, is derived from a
scattered sampling of horse fossils within the
multi-branched horse evolutionary tree. These
fossil organisms represent branches on the tree
and not a direct line of descent leading to
modern horses. But, the standard diagram does
clearly show transitional stages whereby the
four-toed foot of Hyracotherium, otherwise known
as Eohippus, became the single-toed foot of
Equus. Fossils show that the transitional forms
predicted by evolution did indeed exist.
To learn more about fossil horses on this
continent view the video interview with Dr.
Michael Voorhies.
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19Direct Dating
- Can determine an age of the fossil
- Gets you a specific number of years old.
20Radiometric Dating
- Uses radioactive isotopes
- Atoms with unstable nuclei that break down
(decay) over time. - Forms a new isotope after it decays.
- Age is determined by comparing the amount of the
original isotope to the new isotope. - If you know the half-life of the original
isotope, you can determine the age.
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22Example
- A rock forms that contains a radioactive isotope
that has a half-life of 1 million years. - Today, the rock contains equal amounts of the
original and new isotopes. - The age of the fossil is..?
- 1 MILLION YEARS!
23Other Resources