September 14 th

38
September 14 th Are you ready for some Fossil time?

description

September 14 th. Are you ready for some Fossil time?. Candy Toss. Science style…. In what type of rock do fossils form?. The law of superposition helps geologists determine the absolute age of a rock layer. T or F. What is the law of superposition?. What is the law of Uniformitarianism. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of September 14 th

Page 1: September 14 th

September 14th Are you ready for some Fossil

time?

Page 2: September 14 th

Candy TossScience style…..

Page 3: September 14 th

In what type of rock do fossils

form?

Page 4: September 14 th

The law of superposition helps

geologists determine the absolute age of

a rock layer. T or F

Page 5: September 14 th

What is the law of

superposition?

Page 6: September 14 th

What is the law of Uniformitarianism

Page 7: September 14 th

What is the law of original

horizontality?

Page 8: September 14 th

Explain radioactive decay

Page 9: September 14 th

Fossil investigation

Can you name the fossil?

Page 10: September 14 th

Migrate to each of the 12 fossil samples Complete columns 1 – 3 Complete column 4 after I place the Fact Cards

next to each fossil sample. Scrambled fossil names:

Fossil Lab

• fish • brachiopod • gastropod • trilobite • echinoderm • tree

• pelecypod • coral • shark's tooth • cephalopod • allosaur claw • fern

Page 11: September 14 th

Quiz Answers

Date: 9/14

Section: GD

Title: Geological Dating Quiz

Page:

Page 12: September 14 th

Quiz Answers 1.

Page 13: September 14 th

Fossil Lab Chart – Separate Sheet of Paper

Lab AssessmentSample Observations Inference (Fossil Name)

Actual Name + Facts

1      2      3      4      5      6      7      8      9      10      11      12      

Page 14: September 14 th

Fossil Coffee Talk

What did you discover?

Page 15: September 14 th

What are Fossils?

Fossils are the remains or traces of prehistoric life. They are important components of sediment and sedimentary rocks. The type of fossil that is formed is determined by the conditions under which an organism died and how it was buried.

Page 16: September 14 th

2. Altered vs. Unaltered Remains

Page 17: September 14 th

A. Unaltered Remains• Some remains of organisms—such

as teeth, bones, and shells—may not have been altered, or may have changed hardly at all over time.

Page 18: September 14 th

B. Altered Remains

• The remains of an organism are likely to be changed over time.

• Fossils often become petrified or turned to stone.

• Molds and casts are another common type of fossil.

• Carbonization is particularly effective in preserving leaves and delicate animals. It occurs when an organism is buried under fine sediment.

Page 19: September 14 th

Indirect Evidence

• Trace fossils are indirect evidence of prehistoric life.

3. Indirect evidence

Page 20: September 14 th

Trace Fossil

Page 21: September 14 th

4. Preservation

Conditions Favoring Preservation

Most organisms do not become fossils…

• Two conditions are important for preservation: rapid burial and the possession of hard parts.

Page 22: September 14 th

Preservation

Page 23: September 14 th

5. What are the different kinds of fossils?

Page 24: September 14 th

a. AmberAmber

Page 25: September 14 th

#1 Amber

Page 26: September 14 th

b. Asphalt&

Tar

Page 27: September 14 th

#2 Asphalt/Tar

□Asphalt wells up in thick sticky pools.

□Trapped and preserved organisms in asphalt.

Page 28: September 14 th

c. Petrified

Page 29: September 14 th

#3 Petrified Fossils

□A process in which minerals replace the organism’s tissues.□Different types:

□Pore space in bone/wood fills up with mineral

□Organisms tissues are replaced by minerals

Page 30: September 14 th

d. Frozen

Page 31: September 14 th

#4 Frozen

Page 32: September 14 th

e. Molds &

Casts

Page 33: September 14 th

Molds and Casts

Page 34: September 14 th

f. Trace

Page 35: September 14 th

Trace

Page 36: September 14 th

6. Environments

a. Interpreting Environments• Fossils can also be used to interpret and

describe ancient environments and changes that occurred (polar areas once being tropical)

• They can identify extinct species and effects of catastrophism (floods, volcanic eruptions, earthquakes).

• They can describe geologic changes (mountains once under water, Pangaea)

Shark tooth in Georgia?!?!

Page 37: September 14 th

b. Fossils on a Mountaintop?

□Rocks on the mountain formed at the bottom of the ocean.

□Using fossils, scientists can tell whether the climate was cooler or more wet than present.

Page 38: September 14 th

Title Page: Fossilization Include definitions, illustrations, and examples.How do fossils form?What are trace fossils?What are tar/asphalt fossils?What are frozen Fossils?What petrified fossils?What are mold/cast fossils?What does the fossil evidence tell us?

The Fossil Foldable – Tier 2 Fossilization