Title: Living Things
1Earths History - Course 2
4-3 Radioactive Dating Essential Question How
do Scientist study Earths past? What is
Radioactive Decay? What is Radioactive
Dating? How do Scientist Determine Earths Age?
2My Planet Diary pg. 152
- Marie Curie
- In 1896, French scientists named Marie and Pierre
Curie heard about experiments that had been done
by another scientist, Henri Becquerel. - Becquerel had shown that by placing some uranium
salt on a photographic plate, covered with black
paper, the plate would be affected as if light
had fallen on it. The effect is produced by
special rays which are emitted by the uranium
salt. My determinations showed that the emission
of the rays is an atomic property is an atomic
property of the uranium. - Marie Curie later described what happened The
property that Becquerel and the Curies discovered
was called radioactivity. Today, radioactivity is
used for many purposesincluding finding the age
of rocks! - What did Marie and Pierre Curie discover about
radioactivity? - __________________________________________________
____ - 2. What does the discovery of radioactivity tell
you about how scientists work together?
_________________________________________________ - __________________________________________________
__________
3What is Radioactive Decay? Pg. 153
- Some elements decay, or break down, over time,
releasing particles and energy. This process is
called radioactive decay, and the elements are
considered to be radioactive. - During radioactive decay, the atoms of one
element break down to form atoms of another
element. - The half-life of a radioactive element
- is the time it takes for half of the
- radioactive atoms to decay.
- The rate of decay of each
- radioactive element never changes.
4Radioactive Dating
Half-Life The half-life of a radioactive element
is the amount of time it takes for half of the
radioactive atoms to decay. What pattern do you
see in the graph?
5Assess Your Understanding pg. 153
- I get it! Now I know that radioactive decay
occurs when - __________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
__
6What is Radioactive Dating? Pg. 154
- Radioactive elements in igneous rocks decay over
time into other elements. This slowly changes the
composition of the rock. - Geologists use radioactive dating to determine
the absolute ages of rocks. - In radioactive dating, scientists first
determine the amount of a radioactive element in
a rock. Then they compare that amount with the
amount of the stable element into which the
radioactive element decays. - They calculate the age of the rock using this
information and the half-life of the element.
7Radioactive Dating pg. 154
- A rock contains 25 of the potassium-40 it
started with. How old is the rock? - Step 1 Determine how many half-lives have
passed. - -After one half-life, 50 of the potassium would
remain. After two half- lives, 25 of the
potassium would remain. So two half-lives would
have passed. - Step 2 Find the half-life of potassium-40.
- -The half-life of potassium-40 is 1.3 billion
years. - Step 3 Multiply the half-life by the number of
half-lives that have passed. - -1.3 billion years/half-life x 2 half lives
2.6 billion years, so the rock is about 2.6
billion years old. - Calculate A rock from
- The moon contains 12.5 of
- The potassium-40 it began
- With. How old is the rock?
- Hint 12.51/8
- 2. Calculate A fossil contains
- 1/16 of the carbon-14 it began
- With. How old is the fossil?
8Potassium-Argon Dating and Carbon-14 Dating
- Some elements used by scientists in radioactive
dating include potassium-40 and carbon-14. - Potassium-40 has a long half-life, which is
useful in dating the most ancient rocks. - All plants and animals contain some carbon-14,
which decays after the organism dies. - Scientists measure the amounts of carbon-14 to
determine the age of a rock sample. - Real World Inquiry using Carbon-14 Dating
- Scientists have dated these skeletons to
5,000-6,000 years ago. But they do not use
radioactive dating to find the age of stone
artifacts made by people. Why not? - __________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
________
9Assess Your Understanding pg. 155
- Identify Scientists use the method of
(radioactive dating / relative dating) to find
the absolute age of a rock. - Apply Concepts The half-life of thorium-232 is
14 billion years. A rock with 25 of its
throrium-232 remaining is __________years old. - Challenge A scientist finds stone tools in the
ruins of an ancient house. The house also has
ashes in a fireplace. How could the scientist
estimate the age of the stone tools?
__________________________________________________
__________________________________________________
______ - I get it! Now I know that radioactive dating is
done by _____________ - __________________________________________________
_____
10How Do Scientists Determine Earths Age? Pg. 156
- To determine Earths age, scientists use
radioactive dating and evidence from rocks on
Earth and the moon. - Using radioactive dating, Earth rocks are
estimated to be between 3.8 and 4.28 billion
years old. - However, Earth rocks have changed over time due
to the processes of plate tectonics and erosion. - Moon rocks, fortunately, have not changed over
time. - According to one theory, scientists infer that
the moon formed when another object collided with
Earth. - Since the moon came from Earth, the moon is about
the same age as Earth. - Radioactive dating estimates moon rocks to be
4.6 billion years old. Scientists estimate that
Earth is about the same age.
11Radioactive Dating pg. 157
Formation of the Moon According to one theory, a
planet-sized object struck Earth. Material from
the object and material from Earth were knocked
into orbit around Earth. Gravity pulled the
material together to form the moon. How do moon
rocks help scientists estimate the age of Earth?
12Assess Your Understanding pg. 157
- I get it! Now I know that scientists determine
Earths age by - __________________________________________________
_______ - Rock Dating
- This rock is from the Jack Hills in Australia.
- Tiny zircon crystals in this rock have survived
- From some of the earliest rocks that formed
- on Earth. The crystals preserved minerals that
- were trapped inside when the crystals formed.
- By examining these minerals, cientists can
- determine the conditions under which the
- crystal formed.
- Why would only tiny crystals from the earliest
- rocks have survived?____________________
- _____________________________________