Module 2 Flashcards

1
Q

**relative dating

A

Dating methods that arrange material evidence in a linear sequence, each object in the sequence being identified as older or younger than another object.

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2
Q

**absolute/numerical dating

A

Dating methods based on laboratory techniques that assign age in years to material evidence.

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3
Q

stratum

A

Layer; in geological terms, a layer of rock and soil.

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4
Q

law of (stratographic) superposition

A

A principle of geological interpretation stating that layers lower down in a sequence of strata must be older than the layers above them and, therefore, that objects embedded in lower layers must be older than objects embedded in upper layers.

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5
Q

law of crosscutting relationships

A

A principle of geological interpretation stating that where old rocks are crosscut by other geological features, the intruding features must be younger than the layers of rock they cut across.

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6
Q

biostratigraphic dating

A

A relative dating method that relies on patterns of fossil distribution in different rock layers.

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7
Q

seriation

A

A relative dating method based on the assumption that artifacts that look alike must have been made at the same time.

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8
Q

**assemblage

A

Artifacts and structures from a particular time and place in an archaeological site.

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9
Q

**isotopic dating

A

Dating methods based on scientific knowledge about the rate at which various radioactive isotopes of naturally occurring elements transform themselves into other elements by losing subatomic particles.

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10
Q

**nonisotopic dating

A

Dating methods that assign age in years to material evidence but not by using rates of nuclear decay.

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11
Q

**dendrochronology

A

Dendrochronology yields numerical dates for trees and objects made of wood. Crosscut section of a mature tree exposes a series of concentric rings, which normally accumulate annually over the tree’s life.

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12
Q

**Radiocarbon dating

A

Absolute dating method
once something dies, stops taking in nonradioactive carbon, and the radioactive carbon decays at a known rate, so can use this to determine how old yo

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13
Q

**Potassium_Argon Dating

A

Can use to tell when molten lava cools and crystallizes, as potassium 40 stays and then decays into argon.

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14
Q

**Typology

A

Classifying fossils or artifacts into a series of types on the basis of their similarities and differences

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15
Q

Fission Track Dating

A

Based on decay of radioactive material in rock, looks at tracks of uranium 238 as it splits in rock, atoms leave tracks. More time passes, more splits happen.

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16
Q

Uranium-Series Dating

A

Uses Uranium and Thorium to date soil deposits that formed in ancient lake or sea beds.

17
Q

Electronic Spin Resonance (ESR) Dating

A

Based on fact that tooth enamel in a living organism is free of uranium but begins to absorb uranium after burial. Detects rate at which uranium accumulated in tooth after burial.

18
Q

Molecular clock

A

Based on assumption that genetic mutations accumulate in DNA at a constant rate, most accurately measured in mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA). Deduces time between species since they shared a common ancestor.

19
Q

Ocean and Ice Cores

A

Source of information on past climates. Ocean waters and dead Foraminefera (they sink down to bottom of ocean floor when dead) contain O16 and O18. Bla bla bla.