Index Fossils and Geologic Time
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Transcript Index Fossils and Geologic Time
Index Fossils and
Geologic Time
“The Past is the Key to the
Present”
Determining
Relative Age
Rock layers
(strata) detail
sequences of
Earth’s events
the oldest rock
layers are on the
bottom and
youngest are on top
Relative Age
(Approximate)
Fossils
Determining
Absolute Age
Absolute Age =
Exact Age
Radioactive
Decay
Half-Life
Carbon Dating
Fossils
The Fossil Record
Remains or traces
of animals or
plants from a
previous geologic
time
Quick burial;
Sedimentary Rock
Used for absolute
and relative ages
Fossil succession
(fossils succeed
one another in a
definite order)
Kinds of Fossils
Hard Parts
Trace (footprint)
Imprints, molds and
casts
Coprolites (dino
doo-doo)
Gastroliths
(Digestive stones)
Index Fossils
Fossils found
exclusively in rock
layers of a
particular
geologic age
Present over a wide
area
Easily distinguished
Relatively short
geologic time span
Large numbers
within rock layers
More on Index Fossils
Used to establish the relative
ages of the rock layers in which
the fossils are found (trilobite)
Used to date rock layers found
in widely separated areas
Used to locate oil and natural
gas deposits
Geologic Time
Fossil record (worldwide) used to
construct a “geologic column”
which shows the ordered
arrangement of rock layers based
upon ages
Distinguished primarily by kinds of
fossils they contain
Fossils in the lower, older layers are
very different than those within the
younger layers
Divisions of Geologic
Time
Earth’s geologic history is
punctuated by major changes in the
earth’s surface or climate and by the
extinction of various species
Geologists use these events as the
basis for dividing the geologic time
scale (Eons) into smaller units
Eras
Periods
Epochs
Precambrian Time
4.6 bya to 570 mya
88% of Earth’s
history
Atmosphere forms
Fossils rare
Soft-bodied
Deformed rock
Bacterial reefs
Worms, jellyfish
and one-celled
organisms in late
precambrian
Paleozoic Era
570 mya to 245
mya
Dramatic
increase in plant
and animal
species
Rich marine and
land fossil
record
More on the
Paleozoic Era
First vertebrates (fishes) appear
First land plants and animals appear
First amphibians appear
First reptiles appear
Pangaea comes together
Mass extinctions mark the end of
this era
Marine invertebrates (trilobites,
eurypterids) due to retreat of the seas
Mesozoic Era
245 mya to 65 mya
Surface of the
earth changed
dramatically
(break-up of
Pangaea)
Conditions favored
the survival of the
reptiles
More on the
Mesozoic Era
Dinosaurs first appear
First mammals appear
Flying reptiles and first birds appear
First flowering plants appear
Mass extinctions (dinosaurs, marine
animals) mark the end of this era
Cretaceous-Tertiary Boundary (K-T)
Meteorite-Impact hypothesis
Cenozoic Era
65 mya to
present
Time of
increased
tectonic activity
Dramatic
changes in
climate (ice
ages)
More on the
Cenozoic Era
“Age of Mammals”
Divided into two periods:
Tertiary: time before the last
major ice age
Whales, Horses, deer, grazing herds,
wolves, raccoons
Quaternary: Last ice age
(Pleistocene) to present
Wooly mammoths, rhinos, humans