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Destruction and creation

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Destruction and creation Goals Learn about the K-T boundary Asteroid impacts and mass extinctions Hominid evolution Ethics of artificial life * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Destruction and creation


1
Destruction and creation
  • Goals
  • Learn about the K-T boundary
  • Asteroid impacts and mass extinctions
  • Hominid evolution
  • Ethics of artificial life

1
2
The K-T boundary
  • Where we left off on our discussion of evolution
    of life on Earth
  • Eukaryotes evolved with symbiont
    prokaryote-organelles (2.1 b.y.a.)
  • Oxygen levels and other stresses had encouraged
    the Cambrian Explosion of multicellular life (545
    m.y.a.)Biodiversity was extraordinary the
    Burgess Creek Shale (post Cambrian Explosion)
    shows arthropods from about 25 subphyla, only 4
    of which persist today
  • Life invaded land (475 m.y.a.)
  • Organisms developed the resistance to
    desiccation, and invaded the land (400 m.y.a.)
  • Dinosaurs and mammals (245 m.y.a.).

2
3
The K-T boundary
  • 245 MYA, terrestrial biodiversity was high.
  • 65 MYA, a major extinction event occurred on a
    global basis, at the end of the Cretaceous
    Period, and beginning of the Tertiary Period.
  • Examples of effects

Heavy losses Microbes significant losses Marine
inverts 60 losses (genera) Terrestrial inverts
major losses Terrestrial plants huge
losses Dinosaurs extinct Ancestral birds heavy
losses Mammals moderate losses
Moderate losses Fish only 10-20 losses Fungi
benefits! Amphibians minor losses Reptiles
minor losses
Summary Plants and animals 75 species
loss Plant and animal kill 99 by individual!
What had happened?
3
4
K-T boundary characteristics
  • Global in occurrence
  • High in iridium and other rare metals (osmium,
    gold, etc)
  • Quartz in layer shows shock characteristics (high
    P, T)
  • It contains rock droplets that were once molten
  • Its carbon layers suggest soot once occurred at a
    global scale.
  • Evidence suggests a gigantic meteoric impact
  • Impact site Yucatán Peninsula (200 km Chicxulub
    crater)
  • Object a comet or asteroid 10 km in diameter
  • 100,000,000 megaton bomb (most massive human bomb
    was 50 megatons)
  • Glowing debris on global scale
  • Global tsunami events
  • Months of smoke and ash, resulting in global
    winter
  • Subsequent possible greenhouse phase
  • Possible oceanic poisoning by nitrites.

4
5
The big five mass extinctions
  • Ordovician-Silurian periods
  • 440-450 MYA 2nd largest claimed 27 (families),
    57 (genera). Likely due to climate changes not
    an impact.
  • Late Devonian period
  • 360-375 MYA Part of a series, claimed 19
    (families), 50 (genera), 70 (species).
    Instigated the arrival of amphibians.
  • Permian-Triassic periods
  • 251 MYA Largest 57 (families), 83 (genera).
    Opened the way for dinosaurs by removing
    amphibians and mammal-like reptiles.
  • Triassic-Jurassic periods
  • 205 MYA 23 (families), 48 (genera).
  • Cretaceous-Tertiary periods
  • 65 MYA 75 (species).
  • Current times
  • 1900s to 2100 50 (species). Caused by humans.

5
6
The extinction that takes us out
  • Causes
  • More asteroids/comets Magnetic field reversals
  • Supernovae Gamma-ray bursts
  • Ecological collapse Global volcanism
  • What about the next impact event? Global kill
    rate ??? ?? (families), ?? (genera).
  • Our space and military programs would be unable
    to respond effectively.

6
7
Hominid evolution
  • We now take the audacious step of applying the
    same techniques throughout the scientific
    processthe techniques that have created
    vaccines, ipods, and spacecraftand study the
    evolution of our own species.
  • Some basic misconceptions on (hominid) evolution
  • Its just a theory
  • There are no missing links
  • We did not evolve from monkeys, orangutans,
    gorillas, chimpanzees, or bonobos
  • Anthropologists are not in huge disagreement on
    the basic concepts of biological evolution
    (Project Steve).

7
8
Hominid evolution
  • An extensive record now exists of the development
    of humans over the last several million years.
    There are many players, and new fossils are being
    discovered frequently.
  • Most new fossils are simply repeat findings of
    previously known hominids.
  • Some fossil Australopithecus and Homo species
  • T1, A. africanus, 2.6 My
  • T2, A. africanus, 2.5 My
  • T3, H. habilis, 1.9 My
  • T4, H. habilis, 1.8 My
  • T5, H. rudolfensis, 1.8 My
  • T6, H. erectus, 1.75 My
  • B1, H. ergaster (early H. erectus), 1.75 My
  • B2, H. heidelbergensis, 300,000 125,000 y
  • B3, H. sapiens neanderthalensis, 70,000 y
  • B4, H. sapiens neanderthalensis, 60,000 y
  • B5, H. sapiens neanderthalensis, 45,000 y
  • B6, H. sapiens sapiens, Cro-Magnon, 30,000 y

8
9
We are all Africans
The prevailing (but not only theory) is that
while the Earth has had a number of species of
hominids, three entities were widespread until
recently
H. sapiens neanderthalensis Europe H. erectus
Asia H. sapiens Africa It seems that Homo
sapiens sapiens emigrated from Africa, and
displaced the other species/subspecies. Note we
did not evolve from existing apes!
9
10
Critical future mileposts in our evolution
  • Cultural evolution modifies evolutionary
    processes
  • Rise of agriculture
  • Rise of easy transportation modifies gene flow
  • Rate of cultural evolution dwarfs biological
    evolution.
  • Technological evolution rules evolutionary
    processes
  • Genetic engineering of plants and lower organisms
    commonplace
  • Creation of artificial life in progress (Craig
    Venters Mycoplasma mycoides)
  • 2014 insertion of dNaM-d5SICS (called XY)
    artificial base pair into E. coli
  • Genetic engineering of humans is inevitable
  • Ilya Ivanov inseminated female chimps with human
    sperm in 1927.
  • He prepared to inseminate five human females
    with orangutan sperm in 1929.
  • He was interrupted only by changes in Soviet
    politics.

10
11
Critical future mileposts in our evolution
  • Impending crises approach (we shall see)
  • Resource exhaustion?
  • Technological singularity?Moores lawthe of
    transistors on a chip doubles every two
    years.When CAD-facilitated computer
    construction reaches a point comparable to human
    intelligence, machine evolution will exceed human
    evolution.And we all know what that means

11
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