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Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect...

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Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess a lot of direct evidence of past life and its evolution, in the form of fossils. Fossils provide a lot of important information, some of which could never be inferred from modern life. Moreover, evolution occurred on Earth, and a lot is known about the past of the Earth itself. This is important, because: 1) We cannot understand fossils without knowledge of the Earth's history, 2) Abiotic conditions on Earth changed deeply, affecting evolving life. Indirect and direct evidence of past evolution Thus, we need to learn the basics of the history of the Earth.
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Page 1: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils.

So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess a lot of direct evidence of past life and its evolution, in the form of fossils. Fossils provide a lot of important information, some of which could never be inferred from modern life.

Moreover, evolution occurred on Earth, and a lot is known about the past of the Earth itself. This is important, because: 1) We cannot understand fossils without knowledge of the Earth's history, 2) Abiotic conditions on Earth changed deeply, affecting evolving life.

Indirect and directevidence of pastevolution

Thus, we need to learn the basics of the history of the Earth.

Page 2: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Key properties of the Earth

Let us start from the outcome of this history, the current Earth, because "the present is the key to the past“. Uniformitarianism, based on the assumption that laws of nature did not change, has been first proposed for geology.

We will briefly review 4 subjects:

1) The Earth's orbit

2) Structure of the Earth

3) Plate tectonics

4) Types of rocks and the Rock Cycle

Page 3: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

1) The Earth's Orbit: Milankovich's cycles

Changes in eccentricity, obliquity of the Earth's axis, and the positions of the equinoxes of the Earth's orbit. Lengths of time after which the dynamics of a parameter almost repeat themselves are shown in parentheses.

If the Sun and the Earth were dimensionless points, if the Earth's mass were zero, if there were no other plantes, and if there were no relativistic effects, the Earth's orbit would be described exactly by the Kepler's laws (remember them?).

However, this is not the case.

Quasiperiodic changes of the parameters of the Earth's orbit (Milankovich cycles) can be traced back, by solving Newton's equation for spheres, for ~20 Ma.

Page 4: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Comparison of the pattern of temperature changes inferred from sediments to "Solar (Astronomical, Orbital) Forcing", reverse-predicted from Milankovich cycling, shows that Solar Forcing is a major factor in long-term climate changes.

Page 5: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

2) Structure of the Earth

What sources of data do we have on the Earth’s inner structure? Geology studies present-day Earth uses essentially the same hypothetico-deductive method used for studying past life. Data on the inner structure of the Earth are from:

1) the Earth's magnetic field2) gravity3) emission of heat by the Earth4) propagation of seismic waves.

There are several kinds of seismic waves which are “X-raying” the Earth after each earthquake. Too bad we cannot consider this fascinating subject in detail.

Page 6: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.
Page 7: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

The Earth consists of:

I. CrustOutermost solid shell, 5-80 km thick, made of silicate rocks. Crust is separated from Mantle by Mohorovicic discontinuity (Moho) where velocity of seismic waves suddenly increases.

II. MantleExtends from below the crust to 2900 km, and composed of silicate rocks that are also rich in iron and magnesium. The temperature increases from ~700°C at the upper boundary to >4,000°C at the lower boundary. Still, the mantle is almost exclusively solid, due to enormous lithostatic pressure. Still, the mantle is solid, due to enormous pressure. There are 3 distinct layers in the mantle:

1) Uppermost mantle - resistant to deformation, relatively cool, extends to ~100km. Together with the crust, forms the lithosphere.2) Asthenosphere (weak sphere) - the least rigid layer of the mantle,

which extends from 100 to 250km.3) Lower mantle - again, a more rigid layer.

III. CoreThe innermost part of the Earth, consisting primarily from iron and nickel, and separated from mantle by a sharp boundary. Convection in the outer core gives rise to the Earth magnetic field. The core consists of:

1) Outer core - liquid2) Inner core - solid

Page 8: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

3) Plate tectonics and continental driftThe lithosphere (crust plus uppermost mantle) exists as separate and distinct tectonic plates, which rides on the fluid-like (visco-elastic solid) asthenosphere. Plate motions range from a few mm to about 15 cm per year. Dissipation of heat from the mantle is the original source of energy that drives plate tectonics.

Page 9: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Bridge across the Álfagjá rift valley in southwest Iceland, the boundary of the Eurasian and North American continental tectonic plates.

Page 10: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

There are 3 kinds of boundaries between adjacent plates.1. Transform - plates slide (grind) past each.2. Divergent - two plates slide apart from each other, e. g., at mid-ocean.3. Convergent - two plates slide towards each other, forming either a subduction zone (if one plate moves underneath the other) or a continental collision (if the two plates contain continental crust). Examples are the Andes mountain range in South America and the Japanese island arc.

Page 11: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

4) Three types of rocks and the rock cycle

Rock Cycle: Igneous rocks form directly by crystallization of hot melts made up of silicates combined with Fe, Mg, Ca, Al, Na, K, Ti, and H2O. They make up nearly all the mantle and crust. Rocks at the surface decompose/disintegrate by reaction with the atmosphere/hydrosphere to produce solid debris and soluble chemicals (sediments), that upon burial are converted to Sedimentary rocks. Previously formed rocks that are heated and pressurized when buried to shallow to moderate depths (5 to 70 km) of the crust recrystallize as solids to form Metamorphic rocks (some may melt). These processes comprise the Rock Cycle.

1) Igneous rocks - solidified from hot silicate melt, magma, or lava. Small crystals indicate fast cooling. Igneous rocks are suitable for radiometric determination of age.

2) Sedimentary rocks - layers of deposited particles on Earth surface (water, wind, ice). Fossils are preserved mostly within sedimentary rocks.

3) Metamorphic rocks - rock that changed, after primary formation.

granite

sandstone

marble

Page 12: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Of course, there is no real periodicity here, and an igneous or a sedimentary rock may persist for billions of years.

Page 13: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Lord Kelvin on the age of the Earthor

How humble biologists defeated a proud physicist

In 1862, Lord Kelvin used Fourier's theory of heat conductivity to calculate the age of the Earth. He knew the Earth's temperature increased one degree Fahrenheit for each 50 feet you went into the ground. He guessed that the Earth began as molten rock at 7000°F. By solving Fourier's equation, Kelvin found that it must have taken a hundred million years for the Earth's temperature to level out to one degree every 50 feet. Kelvin concluded that the Earth was far too young to satisfy geologists and Darwinists.

What was wrong with this analysis?

Why does the Earth remain hot?

Now we are ready to review the history of the Earth

Page 14: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Methods of studying history of the Earth

1) Geochronology

There is a number of methods for establishing the ages of rocks:

a) Radiometric – by measuring concentrations of a parent (radioactive) and a daughter (stable) isotope, in pairs such as:

238U/206Pb, 235U/207Pb, 40K/40Ar, 87Rb/87Sr, 147Sm/143Nd, 187Re/187Os, 10Be/10B, 14C/14N.

Big Bang did not produce atoms heavier than 7Li, and nucleosynthesis within ordinary stars does not produce atoms heavier than 56Fe. All heavier atoms were synthesized in supernovae explosions. Our Solar system belongs to a second-generation star. How can Pb be a daughter of U?

b) Measuring thermoluminescence.c) Amino acid racemization.d) Relating patterns in sediments to Milankovitch cycles of the Earth orbit.e) Relating data on paleomagnetism to reversals of the Earth magnetic poles.

Methods a), b), c), and d) are all based on “playing time back”, by studying an irreversible deterministic process.

Page 15: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

a) radiometric dating

Knowing concentrations of parent (P) and daughter (D) isotopes within a crystal, we can play back the dynamics of radioactive decay and, thus, calculate the age of the crystal t. Indeed, we know that P declines at rate proportional to P, with the coefficient of proportionality (decay constant).

1-dimensional phase space of the number P of radioactive atoms in a sample.Blue line: rate of P as a function of P:

dP/dt = -P

Red lines: P as functions of time t, depending on the initial number of atoms P0:

P(t) = P0e-t

where half-life = ln(2)/.

Radioactive decay is a (macroscopically) deterministic process - knowing the current number of atoms, we can predict this number for any moment in the future, and reconstruct it for any moment in the past.

Page 16: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

tePtP 0)(

)1()( 0tePtD

Pdt

dP

1)1(

)(

)(

0

0

t

t

t

eeP

eP

tP

tD

In particular, if the number of radioactive parent atoms is equal to the number of stable daughter atoms, the age of the crystal is years, where is half-life.

can be measured now - due to enormous sensitivity of measurements of radioactive decay - and is almost independent of anything. 270 Kbars pressure increases for electron capture 7Be > 7Li decay by only 0.6%.

Formal treatment:

1) The equation of radioactive decay is

2) Its solution is

3) Because P+D (D – fraction that decayed) = P0,

4) Thus,

5) From this, we recover t )1ln(1

P

Dt

Page 17: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

A very useful exercise: how do we know that a differential equation

Pdt

dP

indeed describes exponential decline of P:

tePtP 0)(Let us solve this equation, using the following general theorem: Generally, a solution x(t) of the autonomous differential equation dx/dt = f(x) which satisfies the condition that at some moment of time t0 the value of the dependent variable x was x0 can be found by integrating this equation:

This excercise prepares you for solving a slightly more complex equation, which describes a selection-driven allele replacement, the key mechanism of evolution:

)1( xsxdt

dx

0

)(

0 0)(

ttdyf

dytx

x

t

t

Page 18: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Applying the general theorem to

Pdt

dP

we obtain:

dtP

dP ttP

P

dzy

dy

0

)(

0

tP

tP 0

)(ln=> =>

=>tePtP 0)(

Page 19: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Radiometric dating is the most important method of determining the age of rocks. Potassium-argon dating based on the 40K/40Ar isotope pair is particularly important.

Potassium (K) exists in 3 isotopes - 39K (93.2581%), 40K (0.0117%), 41K (6.7302%). The radioactive isotope 40K decays to 40Ar and 40Ca with a half-life of 1.26x109 years. After the rock solidifies, radiogenic 40Ar will begin to accumulate in the crystal lattices. K and Ar can be measured separately, but this is not the best option. Argon-argon method is a variety of potassium-argon dating. The sample is first irradiated in a nuclear reactor and a known fraction of 39K is converted to 39Ar. The relative abundances of the radiogenic daughter 40Ar and of 39Ar (a proxy for the parent 40K) are measured in the same sample by a mass spectrometer, with a very high precision. In particular, argon-argon method was successfully used to determine the (known) age of volcanic ash that buried Pompeii in 79 CE, although only a tiny amount of 40Ar accumulated since then.

Radiocarbon method, based on the presence of a known fraction of radioactive 14C in atmospheric CO2 and, thus, in all "live" C, can be used to establish the age of relatively recent organic matter, because the half-life of 14C is only 5730 years. Radiocarbon dates can be affected by contamination with the younger organic matter.

Page 20: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Another variety of radiogenic dating: counting the damage tracks left by fragments of 238U nuclei that underwent spontaneous fission. As always, the decay rate is known, and the concentration of parent nuclide has to be measured.

Page 21: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

b) Measuring thermoluminescence

Natural crystals contain "traps" (defects) which can hold electons excited by radiation. When a crystal is heated, these trapped electrons are released, emitting a weak light, proportional to the total dose of radiation accumulated by the crystal since the moment when it was last heated or exposed to light. This dose is a proxy of time.

Page 22: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

c) Amino acid racemization

Amino acid racemization is the process of interconversion of amino acids from one chiral form (the L - laevo amino acids which are the building blocks of proteins) to a mixture of L- and D- (dextro) forms following protein degradation.

The observed proportion of D-amino acids (a function of time and temperature) can be used to estimate the age of a sample.

Page 23: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Comparison of the pattern of Solar Forcing reverse-predicted from Milankovich cycling to changes of the temperature recorded in sediments can be used for dating sediments that are younger than ~20 Ma.

d) Relating patterns in sediments to Milankovitch cycles

Page 24: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

e) Relating paleomagnetism to reversals of the Earth magnetic poles

Occasionally, the Earth's magnetic poles switch their locations, and the global record of these switches is well-established.

Such switches occur very rapidly, on the geological scale. Still, occassionally the movements of the poles during a transition can be traced.

Page 25: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

2) Stratigraphy

Sedimentary rocks are especially important for paleontology. Continuous deposition of sediments may occur for many millions of years. Interpretation of sequences of sedimentary rocks are a subject of stratigraphy and are based on these principles (proposed by the Danish geologist Nicholas Steno, 1638-1686):

1) Superposition: in a sequence of layered rocks, layers are arranged in a time sequence, with the oldest on the bottom and the youngest on the top, unless later processes disturb this arrangement.

2) Original horizontality: layers of sediment are originally deposited horizontally.

3) Lateral continuity: layers of sediment initially extend laterally in all directions. Thus, rocks that are otherwise similar, but are now separated by a valley or other erosional feature, can be assumed to be originally continuous.

4) Biotic succession: different strata contain particular types of fossilized flora and fauna, and these fossil forms succeed each other in a specific order.

Page 26: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Of course, these principles are based on uniformitarianism - but not on gradualism. Indeed, interpretation of sedimentary rocks can be complicated by drastic patterns of the following kinds:

1) hiatus (no deposition for a while)2) angular unconformity (different angles in two superpositional rocks)

An angular unconformity between Tertiary sedimentary rocks (tilted beds) and loosely consolidated Quaternary conglomerates and sandstones (horizontal beds) near Pacific Beach on the Olympic Peninsula, Washington.

Page 27: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Flat-lying sedimentary rocks from Kaibab Limestone (Permian) at top to Bright Angel Shale (Cambrian) at base of section.

Page 28: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Ripple Marks on sandstone of the Triassic Chinle Formation - sometimes fine details are preserved in sedimentary rocks.

Page 29: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Stratigraphy can reconstruct successions of events that produced even very complex successions of layers of sedimentary rocks.

Composite stratigraphy of the Hadar Formation, with the positions of hominid fossils indicated by asterisks.

Page 30: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

3) Continental drift

The face of the Earth is constantly changing. Even major features, including locations of oceans and continents and their relief, are not invariant. Several methods are used to study paleogeography:

1) Tectonic reconstructions, based on knowledge of movements of tectonic plates,

2) Data on paleomagnetism, which reveal orientation of forming rocks relative to the contemporary positions of magnetic poles,

3) Data on local paleoclimates, which may provide information on the geographical latitude of a particular location in the past,

4) Biological correlations (provincialism), which reveal ancient continuity of ranges of species.

This last method illustrates, together with the principle of biotic succession, the utility of fossils for all Earth Sciences. The idea is simple: lands populated by the same (or tightly related) organisms at some moment in the past must have been in close proximity to each other at that moment.

Page 31: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Glossopteris was a seed fern that was widely distrubuted over the southern land masses during the Permian and Triassic periods (roughly 300 to 200 mya).

Page 32: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Distribution of the Permian Glossopteris flora reveals a continuous Southern continent, Gondwana.

Page 33: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

4) Paleoenvironments

Climate underwent profound changes, both globally and locally. Data on paleoclimates are provided by ratios of stable isotopes of the same element.

Some important ratios are 18O/16O, 11B/10B, 13C/12C, 87Sr/86Sr, and 98Mo/95Mo.

For example, there are three stable isotopes of oxygen, 16O, 17O, and 18O, and the ratio of molar concentrations of 16O and 18O is conventionally characterized by 

18O = (18O:16Osample - 18O:16Ostandard)/18O:16Ostandard x 1000 where 18O:16Ostandard is 2005.20.

18O in sediments depends on a number of factors, mostly because a lighter H216O

evaporates at a higher rate. Thus, 18O in a sedimentary rock or ancient ice is affected by the overall volume of ice on the Earth at the corresponding time (the ice is enriched by 18O, so that when a lot of ice is present, the remaining water is enriched with 16O) and by the temperature at a site of the deposition.

Page 34: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

A drastic temporary reduction in 13C at the boundary between Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic eons (and Ediacaran and Cambrian periods) indicates rapid changes of the global environment (perhaps, oxygenation of deep Ocean), which probably triggered the replacement of Ediacaran biota with Cambrian biota.

Page 35: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

5) Drastic events

There were many drastic global events in the history of the Earth - some of which took thousands of years and some others being trully sudden. Possible signs of a past disaster due to an extraterrestrial impact:

a) craterb) iridium anomalyc) shocked quartz and microtektites of impact-melt glassd) tsunami deposits

Page 36: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Chicxulub is an impact crater buried partially underneath the Yucatán Peninsula and partially under the sea. Reconstruction of the crater (left) and its structure revealed by slight changes in the intensity of gravitation on the surface, which reflect different degrees of compression of underlying rocks (right).

Vredefort in South Africa, the oldest and largest of known impact craters is 2,023 Ma old and 250-300km in diameter.

Page 37: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Ir is found in concentrations up to 100 times normal in many thin geological layes world-wide. As Ir is much more abundant in asteroids and comet bodies, an Iridium Anomaly is an evidence of alarge impact.

There are several well-studied iridium anomalies, uncluding the one at the Cretaceous-Tertiary (K-T) boundary 65 mya, due to the Chicxulub impact.

<---------------------Ir anomaly occurred at the Triassic-Jurassic boundary 200Mya.

Page 38: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Shocked quartz is a form of quartz that has a peculiar microscopic structure. Under intense pressure (but limited temperature), the crystalline structure of quartz will be deformed along planes inside the crystal. These planes show up as lines under a microscope, which are called shock lamellae.

Microtektites are submillimeter-size dark-colored, rounded silicate glass particles, often aerodynamically shaped. Microtektites form by impact melting of terrestrial sediments.

Page 39: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Debris flows, exotic boulders, and turbulence features associated with 3,470 Ma old asteroid impact triggered-tsunamis, Pilbara Craton, Western Australia.

Page 40: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Direct evidence of past life and its evolution

Key points:a) Usually fossils are found in sedimentary rocks (so a fossil must be found between layers of igneous rocks, for a reliable direct determination of its age)b) Fossils can be formed only under rather restrictive conditions (fast burial, no oxygen, etc.). Fossilization is a complex chemical process.c) Nevertheless, fossils are very abundant. There are ~250,000 described fossil "species".d) There are body (micro and macro) and trace fossils.e) As fossils show that life evolved, they are direct evidence for past evolution.f) Fossils is the only source of information on those ancient forms of life that left no descendants (below).

Page 41: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

A "routine" path to fossilization (top left). "Lyuba", a baby mammoth preserved in permafrost for ~40,000 years (top right). Spider fossil in amber (bottom left). An assembly of crustaceans from the order Malacostraca found in Montceau-les-Mines Lagerstätte in France (bottom right).

Fossilization is usually an exceptional occasion

Page 42: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Cross-section of a petrified tree trunk, in which all the organic material have been replaced with silicates (left).

A permineralized trilobite , Asaphus kowalewskii (right).

After fossilization, profound changes can occur, similar to diagenesis of sediments.

Page 43: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

However, sometimes organic matter, including macromolecules, can be preserved in fossils.

Micrograph of vessels and matrix in demineralized bones (top left) of Brachylophosaurus canadensis, a 80-million-year-old dinosaur (top right). A phylogeny, based on collagen sequences of three extinct (two dinosaurs and mastodon Mammut; boldfaced) and a number of extant species (bottom).

Page 44: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Body fossils are the most important kind of fossils

Proterozoic bacterium (top left). 60 Ma old radiolarians, unicellular eukaryotes (top right). Microscope picture of a 460 Ma old fungal spore with attached hypha (middle left). A print fossil of unclear affinities Dickinsonia, found in the Ediacaran (middle right). Ichthyosaur (bottom left). Fossil ferns from the Permian (bottom right). 3.5 Ma old Australopithecus afarensis, very likely our direct ancestor (very bottom).

Page 45: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Trace fossils can also be very important

Vertebrate traces in the Permian Coconino Sandstone, Arizona (left).

A fossilized dwelling burrow, probably of a marine crustacean from the Cretaceous Bad Heart Formation in Alberta (right).

Page 46: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

a, Parapandorina fossils from the Doushantuo, China have features akin to those of animal embryos. This image of a two-cell Parapandorina 'embryo' was derived using X-ray microtomography. The cells' interiors are dominated by what seem to be membrane-bound vacuoles or yolk particles.

b, However, the fossils could be bacteria similar to Thiomargarita (right). The bacterium shown has divided into four cells, in which the vacuoles are clearly visible.

Interpreting fossils can be tricky

Page 47: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

For some organisms, in particular, marine plankton with hard shells, fossil record can be very detailed and reveal gradual anagenesis ...

Page 48: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

... or even cladogenesis.

Page 49: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

In other cases, however, fossil record is very incomplete, and establishing exact ancestor-descendant relationships may be difficult. An example of such incomplete record is provided by known fossils that span the gap between sarcopterygians and amphibians.

Page 50: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Relating fossils to extant life.

A correspondence between the timing of the first appearance of a trait state in the fossil record and its position within the hierarchy of traits of extant organisms.

Trait states that appeared later are nested within trait states that appeared earlier.

Page 51: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

Useful concepts: crown and stem groups. All organisms, extant and extinct, which originated from the most recent common ancestor of extant birds belong to the crown group of birds. They include both direct ancestors of some modern bird species and extinct forms that left no descendants. Extinct organisms that diverged before the last common ancestor of living birds but still are more tightly related to birds than to any other living organisms belong to the stem group of birds. Together, the crown and the stem groups of a clade of living species comprise its total group.

Page 52: Topic 5. Lecture 8. Earth and Fossils. So far, we studied past evolution of life using indirect evidence, contained in modern life. However, we also possess.

History of abiotic conditions on Earth

1) Climate

In the past, global climate underwent many deep changes, caused by orbital variations, continental drift, changes in the Sun luminosity, changes in volcanism (caused by plate tectonics), changes in the atmosphere composition, and extraterrestrial impacts. As the result, periods of warm temperatures alternated with Ice Ages, where a substantial fraction of Earth was covered by ice.

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Average global temperature, relative to the current one, estimated through 18O, during the Phanerozoic eon.

Well-established Ice Ages include:1) Huronian, 2,400-2,100 mya;2) Cryogenian, 850-630 mya. This Ice Age included two major glaciations,

Sturtian (725-710 mya) and the Marinoan (660-635 mya);3) Andean-Saharan, 460-430 mya;4) Karoo, 330-260 mya;5) Pliocene-Quaternary, which started 2.58 mya and continues until the

present, with glaciations alternating with periods of higher temperatures.

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2) Geography

Important milestones:1) ~1100 mya, most of Earth's landmass formed one supercontinent, Rodinia, which broke up ~750 mya, probably into three continents.

2) ~600 mya, a single supercontinent Pannotia was formed , to break up 540 mya, probably into four continents.

3) ~300 mya, a single supercontinent Pangea appeared again.

4) The break-up of Pangea began ~200 mya, first into two supercontinents (Gondwana to the south and Laurasia to the north), thereafter into the continents that exist today.

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3) Oceans

Durin the history of the Earth, there were times when ocean waters contained high concentrations of dissolved Fe2+ (ferruginous conditions), H2S (sulfidic, or euxinic conditions), and O2 (oxic conditions). To complicate the matters further, the ocean was often stratified, with different layers of water having very different properties.

Initially, the oxygen released by cyanobacteria reacted with oceanic Fe2+, to form insoluble iron oxides Fe2O3 and Fe3O4. These oxides were deposited on the ocean floor as banded iron formations (BIFs). Accumulation of BIFs was very common between ~2,500Mya and ~1,800Mya, after which it almost stopped for ~1000 Ma.

The BIF, deposited at the sea bottom 2,700 mya, was folded by the movements of plates (left). Some prominent BIFs, used as iron ore (right).

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It seems plausible that the ultralow-velocity zones observed floating on the Earth's core may be ancient BIFs that sunk there through the mantle.

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Probable history of chemical conditions in oceans (OMZ, oxygen minimum zone, is a layer of water below surface waters). Surface waters became oxygenated ~2,400 mya. Dashed lines represent postulated or uncertain histories. Vertical lines represent Sturtian Marinoan, and Gaskiers glaciations (left to right). Sulfidic deep waters for ~1000 Ma between the 1st and the 2nd periods of accumulation of BIFs was likely due to prevalence of anoxygenic photosynthesis below surface waters. Oxygenation of middle waters after Gaskiers glaciation and of deep waters after the Ediacaran period, probably due to changed patterns of circulation, apparently triggered diversification of animals and the origin of Cambrian biota.

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4) Atmosphere

Changes in the concentration of oxygen in the atmosphere deeply affected evolving life and were caused to a large extent by the activity of living beings. Presumably, the atmosphere of the primordial Earth mostly consisted of H2 and He. There gases were rapidly lost into space, because the Earth's gravity is not strong enough to hold them, and replaced by volcanic gases.

O2 build-up in Earth's atmosphere (upper and lower curves represent the range of estimates): 1) 3,850–2,400Mya: no O2, 2) 2,400–1,800Mya: O2 produced but reached only a low concentration, being mostly absorbed in oceans and seabed rock, 3) 1,800–0,800Mya: O2 produced but mostly absorbed by land surfaces and formation of ozone layer, 4) 800–540Mya: O2 sinks filled and the gas accumulates, 5) 540 mya – present: near-current concentrations of O2.

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Concentration of CO2 also changed substantially in the past, affecting global climate due to greenhouse effect. The end of Cryogenian Ice Age may be caused a a rapid increate of the CO2 concentration, perhaps due to global release of methane from low-latitude permafrost. More reliable inferences on CO2 concentration are currently available for the Cenozoic era.

Atmospheric CO2 concentrations were above 2,000 p.p.m. from 60 to 52 mya and declined after that, perhaps due to reduced CO2 outgassing from ocean ridges and volcanoes and increased carbon burial. Since 24 mya, atmospheric CO2 concentrations stayed below 500 p.p.m. These conclusions are based on estimates of the pH of ocean water from the 11B in fossil foraminifer shells.

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5) Geological time scale

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Sorry - here you will need to memorize some things! Go to http://www.geosociety.org/science/timescale and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geologic_time_scale)

for legible figures.

Geological time scale organizes all the data on history of the Earth and life on it.

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KEY FACTS ABOUT HISTORY OF THE EARTH AND LIFE

ARCHEAN eon: 3,850 - 2,500Before 3,500: Origin of life3,466-3,430: Earliest fossils of prokaryotes, including stromatolites2,900: Likely origin of cyanobacteria and oxygenic photosynthesis2,600: The first likely traces of terrestrial prokaryotes

PROTEROZOIC eon: 2,500 - 542PALEOPROTEROZOIC era 2,500 - 1,600

2,500-1,840: Massive accumulation of Banded Iron Formations (BIFs)2,400-2,320 Substantial accumulation of previously absent O2 in the atmosphere

2,400-2,100: Huronian Ice Age2,023: Vredefort, the oldest and largest (diameter ~300km) impact crater known1,800: The first plausible fossils of unicellular eukaryotes1,800-800: Probably, high concentrations of H2S in deep oceanic waters

MESOPROTEROZOIC era 1,600 - 1,0001,300: Abundant fossils of eukaryotes, including some multicellular forms1,100-750: Supercontinent Rodinia

NEOPROTEROZOIC era 1,000 - 542Tonian period: 1000-850

850: Diversification of multicellular eukaryotesCryogenian period: 850-635

800-600: Second period of accumulation of BIFs800-640: Initial diversification of animals725-710: Sturtian glaciation660-635: Marinoan glaciation

Ediacaran period: 635-542600-540: Supercontinent Pannotia580: Gaskiers glaciation575-542: Ediacaran biota, the first record of diverse macroscopic animals

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PHANEROZOIC eon: 542 - presentPALEOZOIC era: 542-251Cambrian period: 542-488

542-520: First fossils of almost all phyla of animalsOrdovician period: 488-444

460-430: Andean-Saharan Ice Age450: First known liverwort fossils

Silurian period: 444-416425: First known vascular plant fossils420: Likely origin of jawed fishes

Devonian period: 416-359400: First known insect fossils380-365: Origin of tetrapods

Carboniferous period: 359-299360-260: Karoo Ice Age314: First definite amniote fossils300-200: Supercontinent Pangea

Permian period: 299-252265: Origin of therapsids, mammal-like reptiles251: End-Permian mass extinction

MESOZOIC era: 252-65Triassic period: 252-202

230: Origin of dinosaursJurassic period: 202-146

200: Break-up of Pangea into Gondwana and Laurasia170: Diversification of mammaliforms and early mammals150: Oldest known bird fossils

Cretaceous period: 146-65125: First known fossils of flowering plants125: First known fossils of placental mammals65: KT mass extinction

CENOZOIC era: 65-present~6: Divergence of Pan and Homo lineages2.58-present: Pliocene-Quaternary Ice Age

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Quiz:

Draw a chart which displays ~15 important milestones (definite and conjectural) in the history of abiotic conditions on Earth, with times of their occurrence and brief descriptions - and memorize these milestones!


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