Unit 5 - Evidence For Evolution Flashcards

1
Q

Paleontology

A

The study of the fossil record.

Scattered throughout the world => Clarkia, Vantage, Burgess Shale

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2
Q

Fossil formation

A

For this to occur, two processes must be avoided: decomposition and scavenging. Rapid burial or encasement of organisms facilitates fossil formation => amber, tar pits.

Most fossils are formed by:
1. Decay Resistant Structures (bones, shells)

  1. Typically in Sedimentary Rock (typically forms in aquatic environments)
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3
Q

Dating fossils (2 ways)

A
  1. Relative Dating
    - Attempt to assign a chronological age: oldest to youngest.
    a. Superposition - Done in undisturbed sedimentary deposits.
    b. Fossil Correlation - Use index fossils to date strata. Rocks with similar fossils are similar in age. This contributed to the geologic time scale.
  2. Absolute Dating
    - Attempt to assign a real age by using radioisotopes.
    a. Half life - time required to change 1/2 parent element into a daughter element.
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4
Q

Difficulties With Absolute Dating

A
  1. Erosion of parent/daughter
    - This leads to artificially old or young dates.
    - erode parent out = artificially old
    - erode daughter in = artificially young
    • assume closed system
  2. Igneous works best
    - it contains the radioisotopes involved, but no fossils. So we correlate igneous deposits with sediment deposits.
  3. Assume initial ratio
    - Starting conditions of parent : daughter
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5
Q

Basis of Paleontoloty

A

The present is key to the past

backwards expiramental method

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6
Q

Scientific validity of paleontology

A
  1. Historical Reconstruction
    - Science should be repeatable, history is not
  2. Hypothesis Characteristics
    - Must be testable and capable of falsification
  3. Sample Size - Often limited in the fossil record which prevents use of inferential statistics
  4. Interpretation - If a bone fragment is identified as an occipital bone, the curvature is used to extrapolate cranial volume
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7
Q

Cambrium Explosion

A

The “rapid” appearance of all major phyla during cambrium time period (540 mya). No new phyla since. Biological Big Bang.

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8
Q

Biogeography

A

The biological distribution of life forms on earth. Organisms in similar environments have similar adaptations.
=> placental vs marsupial

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9
Q

Embryology Recapitulates Phylogeny

A

Development Retraces Evolutionary Relationships. Discredited

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10
Q

Homologous Structures

A

Structural similarity but functional diversity. Suggests common ancestry.

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11
Q

Vestigial Structures

A

These have no known function, which suggests common ancestry. => pelvic girdle in whales.

Human Examples - appendix (actually immune role), tonsils (immune), tailbone, body hair.

Original List of 186 - vein valves, pineal glands, tear glands.

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12
Q

Molecular Evolution

A

DNA w/ universal codons
suggests common ancestry

ATP - energy transfer molecule.
suggests common ancestry.

Proteins - related organisms have higher similarity in protein sequences.

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13
Q

Mitochondrial DNA
Inheritance?
Changes?
Placental analysis?

A

Inheritance - Only from mother due to unequal cytokinesis during oogenesis. Only passed on by daughters.

Changes in mtDNA - only by mutation. clock mechanism

Placental Analysis - Berkeley Study: gene analysis of mtDNA in 147 placentas revealed a common female to all members. Mitochondrial “Eve” is estimated to live 200,000 years ago.

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