When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

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Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26 Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the A. middle of October. B. first half of December. C. second half of December. D. first half of February.

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When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the. middle of October. first half of December. second half of December. first half of February. When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the. middle of October. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Page 1: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

A. middle of October.

B. first half of December.

C. second half of December.

D. first half of February.

Page 2: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

A. middle of October.

B. first half of December.

C. second half of December.

D. first half of February.

Explanation:

Amazing as it may seem to many people, dinosaurs are a recent phenomenon in Earth’s long history.

Page 3: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The present is the key to the past is a fundamental part of

A. catastrophism.

B. plutonism.

C. neptunism.

D. uniformitarianism.

Page 4: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The present is the key to the past is a fundamental part of

A. catastrophism.

B. plutonism.

C. neptunism.

D. uniformitarianism.

Explanation:

Uniformitarianism holds that the physical, chemical, and biological principles that operate today also operated in the past. Thus, the present is the key to the past.

Page 5: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Which of the following is NOT a principle of relative dating?

A. Original horizontality.

B. Faunal superposition.

C. Cross-cutting.

D. Inclusion.

Page 6: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Which of the following is NOT a principle of relative dating?

A. Original horizontality.

B. Faunal superposition.

C. Cross-cutting.

D. Inclusion.

Explanation:

Faunal succession and superposition are the other two principles.

Page 7: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is the principle of superposition?

A. Each sedimentary layer is older than the layer above.

B. Each sedimentary layer is younger than the layer above.

C. Each new layer of sediment is laid down nearly horizontally.

D. Each new layer of sediment is laid down accordingly.

Page 8: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is the principle of superposition?

A. Each sedimentary layer is older than the layer above.

B. Each sedimentary layer is younger than the layer above.

C. Each new layer of sediment is laid down nearly horizontally.

D. Each new layer of sediment is laid down accordingly.

Explanation:

Superposition relates to age of sediments. It is impossible for a layer of sediment to get deposited underneath a layer that was already in place.

Page 9: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is the principle of original horizontality?

A. Each sedimentary layer is older than the layer above.

B. Each sedimentary layer is younger than the layer above.

C. Each new layer of sediment is laid down nearly horizontally.

D. Each new layer of sediment is laid down accordingly.

Page 10: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is the principle of original horizontality?

A. Each sedimentary layer is older than the layer above.

B. Each sedimentary layer is younger than the layer above.

C. Each new layer of sediment is laid down nearly horizontally.

D. Each new layer of sediment is laid down accordingly.

Page 11: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

In a thick bed of sedimentary rocks, we find an igneous dike. The order in which the rocks formed is

A. simultaneously.

B. igneous before sedimentary.

C. sedimentary before igneous.

D. unknown.

Page 12: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

In a thick bed of sedimentary rocks, we find an igneous dike. The order in which the rocks formed is

A. simultaneously.

B. igneous before sedimentary.

C. sedimentary before igneous.

D. unknown.

Page 13: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The principle that different forms of animals throughout Earth’s past occurred in a definite order is called the principle of

A. fossil assemblage.

B. faunal succession.

C. conformable fossils.

D. fossil determination.

Page 14: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The principle that different forms of animals throughout Earth’s past occurred in a definite order is called the principle of

A. fossil assemblage.

B. faunal succession.

C. conformable fossils.

D. fossil determination.

Page 15: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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What is an unconformity?

A. A scientific debate between Earth scientists.

B. Younger igneous plutonic rock above older sediments.

C. A continuous sequence of sedimentary layers.

D. A gap in an otherwise continuous time-sequence of rock layers.

Page 16: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is an unconformity?

A. A scientific debate between Earth scientists.

B. Younger igneous plutonic rock above older sediments.

C. A continuous sequence of sedimentary layers.

D. A gap in an otherwise continuous time-sequence of rock layers.

Explanation:

Unconformities represent a missing record of time, like pages missing from a book.

Page 17: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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The time it takes for 50% of a radioactive substance to decay is known as

A. radiometric dating.

B. carbon-14.

C. the proportion of atoms remaining.

D. the half-life.

Page 18: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The time it takes for 50% of a radioactive substance to decay is known as

A. radiometric dating.

B. carbon-14.

C. the proportion of atoms remaining.

D. the half-life.

Page 19: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

By radiometric dating, the oldest mineral in a sedimentary rock was found to be 1.4 million years old. What is the age of the sedimentary rock?

A. Radiometric dating does not work for sedimentary rocks.

B. 1.4 million years.

C. No older than 1.4 million years.

D. No younger than 1.4 million years.

Page 20: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

By radiometric dating, the oldest mineral in a sedimentary rock was found to be 1.4 million years old. What is the age of the sedimentary rock?

A. Radiometric dating does not work for sedimentary rocks.

B. 1.4 million years.

C. No older than 1.4 million years.

D. No younger than 1.4 million years.

Explanation:

The principle of inclusions tells us that the sedimentary rock cannot be older than the minerals of which it is composed.

Page 21: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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The numerical dates associated with events on the geologic time scale were determined by

A. radiometric dating.

B. relative dating.

C. superposition.

D. fossil assemblages through time.

Page 22: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The numerical dates associated with events on the geologic time scale were determined by

A. radiometric dating.

B. relative dating.

C. superposition.

D. fossil assemblages through time.

Explanation:

Presently, the only way to obtain numerical dates is with radiometric dating.

Page 23: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Life forms in the Precambrian include

A. trilobites.

B. brachiopods.

C. coelacanths.

D. cyanobacteria.

Page 24: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Life forms in the Precambrian include

A. trilobites.

B. brachiopods.

C. coelacanths.

D. cyanobacteria.

Page 25: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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Development of Earth’s oceans was likely due to

A. water-rich meteors bombarding Earth’s surface.

B. volcanic outgassing in Precambrian time.

C. slow convection in the mantle.

D. volcanic outgassing in the early Paleozoic.

Page 26: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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Development of Earth’s oceans was likely due to

A. water-rich meteors bombarding Earth’s surface.

B. volcanic outgassing in Precambrian time.

C. slow convection in the mantle.

D. volcanic outgassing in the early Paleozoic.

Explanation:

Comets are thought to contribute some water to the oceans, but the majority of water on Earth is from outgassing that occurred very early in Earth’s history.

Page 27: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

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The most important event during the Cambrian period was the

A. emergence of the fishes.

B. ability of organisms to form an outer skeleton.

C. emergence of the trilobite.

D. ability of organisms to develop lungs.

Page 28: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The most important event during the Cambrian period was the

A. emergence of the fishes.

B. ability of organisms to form an outer skeleton.

C. emergence of the trilobite.

D. ability of organisms to develop lungs.

Explanation:

The evolutionary development of an outer skeleton increased survival rates.

Page 29: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Ancient geologic processes as revealed in Paleozoic rock layers were

A. predominantly volcanic in origin.

B. primarily glacial.

C. predominantly processes of erosion and sedimentation.

D. very similar to processes seen today.

Page 30: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Ancient geologic processes as revealed in Paleozoic rock layers were

A. predominantly volcanic in origin.

B. primarily glacial.

C. predominantly processes of erosion and sedimentation.

D. very similar to processes seen today.

Explanation:

Remember: The present is the key to the past!

Page 31: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Which of the following is NOT true of the fossil record?

A. The fossil record spans about 3.5 billion years of Earth’s 4.5 billion year age.

B. The most common fossils are those organisms that had hard parts like shells and bones.

C. The first fossils were simple, anaerobic algal plants.

D. The Paleozoic era is credited with the emergence of life.

Page 32: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Which of the following is NOT true of the fossil record?

A. The fossil record spans about 3.5 billion years of Earth's 4.5 billion year age.

B. The most common fossils are those organisms that had hard parts like shells and bones.

C. The first fossils were simple, anaerobic algal plants.

D. The Paleozoic era is credited with the emergence of life.

Explanation:

Life emerged in Precambrian time, which precedes the Paleozoic era.

Page 33: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Coal is composed of

A. petrified wood.

B. buried plant material that has partially decayed.

C. buried animal material that has partially decayed.

D. a combination of oil-rich sediments and calcareous ooze.

Page 34: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Coal is composed of

A. petrified wood.

B. buried plant material that has partially decayed.

C. buried animal material that has partially decayed.

D. a combination of oil-rich sediments and calcareous ooze.

Page 35: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Most coal deposits were formed in the

A. Cenozoic era.

B. Mesozoic era.

C. Paleozoic era.

D. Precambrian time.

Page 36: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

Most coal deposits were formed in the

A. Cenozoic era.

B. Mesozoic era.

C. Paleozoic era.

D. Precambrian time.

Explanation:

Specifically, most coal deposits formed in the Carboniferous period, which is in the Paleozoic era.

Page 37: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The formation of the supercontinent of Pangaea

A. resulted from the collision of all major landmasses.

B. produced widespread mountain building in the Himalayas.

C. resulted in extensive volcanic activity and flood basalts.

D. resulted from all of these.

Page 38: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The formation of the supercontinent of Pangaea

A. resulted from the collision of all major landmasses.

B. produced widespread mountain building in the Himalayas.

C. resulted in extensive volcanic activity and flood basalts.

D. resulted from all of theses.

Explanation:

There was extensive mountain building, for example in the Appalachians, but the Himalayas are a recent occurrence.

Page 39: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The Mesozoic era is known as the age of the

A. dinosaurs.

B. synapsids.

C. fishes.

D. reptiles.

Page 40: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The Mesozoic era is known as the age of the

A. dinosaurs.

B. synapsids.

C. fishes.

D. reptiles.

Explanation:

Dinosaurs are but one group of reptiles.

Page 41: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is an explanation for the discovery of ancient coal beds in Antarctica?

A. Antarctica’s climate was once mild enough to support swamplands.

B. The ancient coal beds were frozen in the Antarctic ice.

C. Antarctica was at one time located in the Northern Hemisphere.

D. Massive upheavals occurred during the Mesozoic era.

Page 42: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

What is an explanation for the discovery of ancient coal beds in Antarctica?

A. Antarctica’s climate was once mild enough to support swamplands.

B. The ancient coal beds were frozen in the Antarctic ice.

C. Antarctica was at one time located in the Northern Hemisphere.

D. Massive upheavals occurred during the Mesozoic era.

Explanation:

Climate has been quite variable over geologic time.

Page 43: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The birth of the San Andreas Fault corresponds to

A. the collision of the Pacific Plate and the Hawaiian islands.

B. the collision of the Pacific ridge system and North America.

C. the movement of the Pacific Plate over a turbulent zone.

D. the collision of India and Eurasia.

Page 44: When comparing geologic time to a calendar year, the time of the dinosaurs is in the

Conceptual Integrated Science—Chapter 26

Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Addison-Wesley

The birth of the San Andreas Fault corresponds to

A. the collision of the Pacific Plate and the Hawaiian islands.

B. the collision of the Pacific ridge system and North America.

C. the movement of the Pacific Plate over a turbulent zone.

D. the collision of India and Eurasia.