Title: You are responsible for reading these chapters
1Chapter 14, 15, and 17
- You are responsible for reading these chapterswe
will be discussing these slides in class,
however, we will not be going slow enough for
students to copy word-for-word
2General Info.
- This PowerPoint combines Darwin information from
both texts - It provides a lot of background information that
should better help you understand the development
of Darwins theories as well as give you a more
thorough foundation of the history of Earth.
3Plate Tectonics and Continental Drift Theory
- Complete the Chapter 15 WebQuest
ContinentalDriftQuest (located on the Biology
Exploring Life site - Try to explain how Plate Tectonics and
Continental Drift influenced evolution and
biodiversity - You will need to read "On the Move...Continental
Drift and Plate Tectonics." this is linked on
that site VERY USEFUL!
4The Fossil Record
- Fossils/Their Dating
- Fossil Record/Geologic Time Scale
- Continental Drift/Macroevolution
- Mass Extinctions
5Fossils
- Formed from remains of organisms buried by
sediments, dust, or volcanic ash - Soft body parts usually decay rapidly
- Hard body parts (shells, bones, or teeth) may
become preserved long-lasting - Hard body parts are hardened more
- Minerals dissolve in groundwater
- Seep into tissues of dead organisms and replace
its organic material - Plant/animal becomes petrified
6Fossils (cont.)
- Some rare fossils contain organic material
- Found as thin films
- Pressed between layers of sand stone or shale
- Ex. Idaho plant leaves millions of years old
that are still green with chlorophyll - Other Fossils footprints, animal burrows,
sediment impressions
7Preserved specimens
- Sometimes an organism happens to die in a place
where bacteria and fungi cannot decompose the
corpse - Ice
- Plant sap
8Fossil Record/Geologic Time Scale
- Fossil record is a rich storehouse of
information about macroevolution - Geologic Time Scale
- Precambrian
- Paleozoic
- Mesozoic
- Cenozoic
9Geologic Time Scale
- Periods are divided into epochs
- Boundaries between eras are marked by a major
change in forms of life and possibly mass
extinctions
10Dating Fossils
- Know age of fossils based on location in sediment
- Relative Ages reflect the order in which groups
of species existed compared to one another - Absolute Ages Actual ages in years
11Radiometric Dating
- Measurement of certain radioactive isotopes in
objects - Every isotope has a fixed rate of decay
- Number of years for 50 of original sample to
decay half-life - Unaffected by temperature, pressure and other
environmental conditions - Used to date rocks
- Fossils can sometimes be dated as well
12Figuring out age of Fossils
- Could contain isotopes of elements that
accumulated in the organisms when they were alive
- When organism dies, intake of isotopes stops, but
radioactive decay continues
13Fossils?
14Carbon Dating
- Dinner and a movie usually works! Just kidding.
- Can only be used to find the age of recent
fossils due to half-life of C-14 5,600 yrs - Any fossil older than 50,000 must be estimated
using the surrounding rocks that contain
Uranium-238 and other radioactive isotopes that
have longer half-lives
15Continental Drift
- Continents arent locked into place
- Landmasses on different plates change position
relative to each other as a result of continental
drift - Solution to many biological puzzles
- Matching fossils in totally different locations
- Differing plants in locations that became isolated
16(No Transcript)
172 Major Events
- 1. 250 million years ago, near end of Paleozoic
Era - Plates moved 1 supercontinent Pangea
- Variety of changes
- Shoreline reduced
- Sea levels dropped
- Shallow coastal seas were drained, destroying
shallow water environments and inhabiting species - Continental interiors influenced as well
- Isolated, evolving species came together and
competed cause mass extinctions
182 Major Events (cont.)
- 2. 180 Million years ago Continental Drift
- Pangea broke up
- Each continent became isolated
- Species on each continent diverged in their
evolution and adapted and diversified based on
new, separate continents
19Mass Extinctions
- Long periods of relative stability broken by
brief periods of great species loss - Extinction of dinosaurs (end of Cretaceous Period
65 million years ago) - Climate was cooling
- Shallow seas receding
- Large meteor hit Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico
during same time, sending dust into the
atmosphere - Blocked sunlight
- Reduced food production by photosynthesis
20The Positive to Mass Extinction
- Adaptive radiation of survivors
- In aftermath, biological diversity increased
again - Gives surviving organisms new opportunities
- Rise of mammals may have resulted from the void
left by the extinction of dinosaurs
21Taxonomy Relfects Evolutionary History
- Identification, naming, and classification of
species - Common names cause confusion
- Common name can refer to many different species
- Doesnt reflect organism
- Universal scientific name needed for all
scientists to clearly communicate
22Linneus
- Binomial Nomenclature two-part Latin naming
system for naming each species - Also a hierarchy of species into broader and
broader groups - Genus species (Ex. Panthera pardus)
- Closely related species are grouped into same
genus
23Classification and Evolution
- Phylogenetic Tree reflects the hypotheses of
evolutionary relationships - Homologous structures
- Basic underlying similarities if evolved from
single structure in a common ancestor - Greater number of homologous structures more
closely the species are thought to be related
24Convergent Evolution
- Not all structures are inherited from common
ancestor - Unrelated species from similar environments have
adaptations that seem very similar analogous
structures - Wings of insects and birds evolved
independently despite both are flight equipment
and built from entirely different structures
25Theories of Evolution
- Early 1800s
- Jean Baptiste Lamarck attempted to explain
Buffons observations - Proposed that life evolves/changes
- Species are not permanent
- Evolution is a process of adaptation
- Today unfairly remembered for mistaken
explanation of how adaptations evolve (make sure
you know what these are pg. 293)
26Darwin
- Voyage of the Beagle
- December 1831
- Mission chart poorly known stretches of the S.
American coastline for the British navy - Charles Darwin, 22, was on the ship
- Interested in studying geology, plants, animals
encountered on voyage - Pivotal trip in that it changed the thinking of
many
27Darwin (cont.)
- Darwins Observations
- Darwin spent a lot of time on shore while ships
crew surveyed - Collected many species of plants and animals
- Documented everything in extensive journals
(observations, studies, personal thoughts) - Journals documented Darwins thoughts from before
the journey until he returned to port in England
28Darwin (cont.)
- Darwins Observations (cont.)
- Noticed that plants and animals all had definite
S. Am. Character - Distinct from species in Europe
- Deduced that species in S. Am. descended from
ancestral species on that continent - Intrigued by life on Galápagos Island
- Species were similar to plants and animals on
nearest mainland (not exactly same) - Allowed Darwin to suggest that species that left
the mainland adapted to new lives on islands
29Darwin (cont.)
- Ideas from Geology
- Darwin read a lot despite puking
- Read from Lyells writings
- Proposed that gradual and observable geologic
processes (erosion) could explain the physical
features of todays Earth - River erosion deep, river-carved canyon
- Mountain range rises earthquakes
30Still Darwin
- Ideas from Geology (cont.)
- Darwin personally experienced an earthquake in
Andes Mountains - He collected fossils of ocean organisms high in
the Andes - Concluded that (based on Lyells work) that the
earthquakes gradually lifted the rock. - 2 conclusions
- Slow processes of mountain building and erosion
suggested an Earth that must be very cold - These slow and gradual processes occurring over
vast spans of time could cause enormous change on
Earth
31Darwin (cont.)
- Darwin was at sea for 5 years
- Over this time he sent letters and specimens back
to England - This established his reputation with other
scientists - Left as young graduate
- Returned as a famous naturalist
- After analysis of his data, he became convinced
that Earth was ancient and that species change
through time.
32Darwin (cont.)
- Thomas Malthus (wrote essay few decades before
Darwin) - Contended that much of human suffering was due to
the human populations potential to grow - Populations grow IF food supplies and other
resources can be produced - If this does not happen it is a struggle for
existence - This helped Darwin to propose a mechanism of
evolutionary change.
33Darwin (cont.)
- Darwins essay (1844)
- 200 pages
- Didnt release it to the public
- Colleagues urged Darwin to publish before someone
else did - Alfred Wallace (1858) came to same conclusion and
wrote to Darwin explaining his findings - Within a month, both had findings presented to
public together - Darwin published The Origin of Species about a
year later
34Darwins 2 Points
- Darwin made 2 main points in his book
- He argued from evidence that the species of
organisms living on Earth today descended from
ancestral species - Life has a history of change
- Descendants of the earliest organisms spread into
various habitats over millions of years - Accumulated different modifications Descent
with Modification - Accounts for diversity of life
35Darwins 2 Points (cont.)
- Darwins 2nd point
- His argument for natural selection was the
mechanism for evolution - Natural selection can cause a population to
change over time - Result adaptation
-
36Evolution in Process 15-3
- Homologous vs. Analogous Structures (evidence of
evolution) - Homologous similar features that originated in
a shared ancestor (see page 289 in your
text)-or-complete online activity 14.2 in
Exploring Life - Look different but have similar skeletal
structure - Derive from same structures in embryo
- Analogous serve identical functions and look
somewhat alike - Very different embryological development
37This has nothing to do with Evolution
- Just keeping you on your toes!!!!!
38ReallyLook at t his picture
39Other Evidence of Evolution
- Vestigial Structures features seem to serve no
useful function now (humans tailbone) but may
have done so historically - Similarities in Embryology See page 291, Figure
15-9 - Ernst Haeckel embryological development repeats
evolutionary history! (slightly exaggerated
similarities fade as development proceeds) - Similarities in Macromolecules - homologous
proteins RNA and DNA amino acid sequence is
similar between different species
40Patterns of Evolution
- Coevolution change of 2 or more species in
close association with each other - Predators and their prey parasites and hosts
plant-eating animals and their chosen plant - Convergent Evolution Organisms appear to be
similar but are not closely related at all
analogous structures are similar adaptations that
result from this - Divergent Evolution 2 or more related
populations become more and more dissimilar - Adaptive radiation
- Artificial selection
41Adaptive Radiation
42Artificial selection
43Chapter 17 The Study of Human Origins
Page 321differences between human and ape
44Primate Characteristics
- Anthropoid Primate
- Marmosets
- Monkeys
- Apes
- Humans
- Prosimian Primate
- Lemurs
- Lorises
- Tarsiers
45Primate Characteristics
- Movable fingers and toes
- Most have flattened nails rather than claws
- Some have prehensile hands (grasping)
- Color vision (due to activity during day)
46Characteristics
- Anthropoids
- Ex. Gibbon
- Well-developed collarbone
- Rotating shoulder joints
- Partially rotating elbow
- Opposable thumb
- Similar dental formula
- Large brains
- Humans
- Specific anthropoid
- Bipedal
- Cup-shaped pelvis
- S-shaped spine
- Larger brain
47First Hominds
- Bipedalism defines first hominid line
- 1974 Donald Johanson found Lucy in the Afar
Valley region of Africavery well preserved - Cranial capacity size of chimpanzee
- Originally thought that bipedalism and large
- brain evolved at same time, but the Lucy
- find proved that upright walking
48Australopithecus afarensis
- Lucy was given this name
- Means southern ape of Afar Valley
- About 3.2 million years old
49Australopithecus africanus
- Dates from about 2.3 3 million years ago
- Probably descended from A. afarensis
- Taller and heavier than Lucy
- Had a slightly larger cranial capacity
502 more findsheavier skulls and larger teeth
- Australopithecus robustus
- May have descended from Lucy but were probably
not ancestral to modern humans
- May have descended from Lucy but were probably
not ancestral to modern humans
51Ardipithecus ramidus
- In 1995, Tim White discovered fossils that may
- Predate earliest known australopithecines by
- 200,000 years
- Unsure whether it is ancestral to
australopithecines
52Homo habilis
- Found with stone tools
- Handy Human
- Between 1.6-2.5 million years old
- Region of the brain essential to speech may have
existed - Tool marks on animal bones found near fossils
suggest H. habilis ate meat
53Homo erectus
- Upright human
- 1.8 million 50,000 years ago
- Thick skull
- Large brow ridges
- Low forehead
- Large, protruding teeth
- Average brain size 2/3 that of modern humans
- Adults could easily have been as tall as modern
humans - Charred bones found near fossils indicate H.
erectus were hunters who used fire (cooking and
heat) - In colder climates, may have lived in caves
54Homo sapiens
- Neanderthals
- 230,000 30,000 years ago
- Heavy bones, thick brow ridges, protruding teeth
- Cranial capacity slightly larger than modern
humans - Stone tools led scientists to believe that they
wore animal skins - Not ancestral to modern humans
- Disappeared approximately same time as modern H.
sapiens arrived (killed off Neanderthals or
killed by disease)
55Homo sapiens
- Modern Homo sapiens
- Fossils about 35,000 years old
- Found in southwestern France
- Cro-Magnons
- Cranial capacity equal to that of modern humans
- High forehead
- Lack of protruding brow ridge and teeth
- Taller than Neanderthals
- Oldest are 100,000 years old
56(No Transcript)
57Multiregional Evolution
- Parallel populations of H. sapiens evolved from
different H. erectus populations around the world
58Recent-African-Origin-hypothesis
- Modern H. sapiens evolved in Africa and spread
throughout the world, replacing populations of H.
erectus and early H. sapiens
5914.3 Origin of Heredity
- RNA molecules can take on a great variety of
shapes (t-shaped tRNA)dictated by H bonds
between particular nucleotides - Much like the shape of the protein depends on the
H bonds between particular a.a. - Speculation that some RNA molecules might
actually behave like proteins and catalyze chem.
rxns.
60Ribozyme
- Thomas Cech
- Ribozymeact as an enzyme
-
611st Prokaryotes
- Early Earth had little or no O, so first cells
must have been anaerobic fossils indicated that
they were prokaryotes and probably heterotrophs - ChemosynthesisCO2 serves as C source for
assembly of organic moleculesmany archaebacteria
(live in extreme and harsh conditions) obtain E
this way - Photosynthesis and Aerobic Respiration
- O was damaging to some unicellular organism
- Early function of aerobic may have been to
prevent the destruction of essential organic
compounds by O
621st Eukaryotes
- Believed that between 2.0 and 1.5 billion years
ago a type of small aerobic prokaryote entered
(endosymbiosis) and began to live and reproduce
inside larger, anaerobic prokaryotes - Lynn Margulis proposed that invasion turned
mutually beneficial giving way to mitochondria - Second invasion may have been related to
cyanobacteriaeventually gave rise to chloroplasts