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Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay? 100% Ur- 239 ½ ¼ 1/8 First Half-life Second Half-life Third Half-life 80 000 yrs 80 000 yrs 80 000 yrs = 240 000 years It takes 240 000 years for Uranium-239 to decay to 1/8 of its original amount (3 half-
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Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Review: Radiometric Dating

If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

100% Ur-239 ½ ¼

1/8

First Half-life Second Half-life Third Half-life

80 000 yrs 80 000 yrs 80 000 yrs

= 240 000 yearsIt takes 240 000 years for Uranium-239 to decay to 1/8 of its original amount (3 half-lives).

Page 2: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Evidence for Evolution II: Biogeography,

Homologous, Analogous and Vestigial Features

Page 3: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Biogeography: the scientific study of the geographic distribution of organisms based on both living species and fossils

Biogeography

Page 4: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Remember Pangaea–Fossils of the same species are found

on entirely different continents – Africa, India, and Antarctica

Fossil Distribution

Page 5: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Break up of Pangaea

Page 6: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Mesosaurus – fossils found in both South America and Africa

• Lived during the Permian, when Africa and South America were joined

Fossil Distribution

Page 7: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Similar species are found on different continents• Share a common ancestor that lived when the

continents were connected• When the continents separated, the populations

were isolated and they diverged into different species.

• Example: Different species of elephants are found in Africa and India

Current Distribution of Species

Page 8: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Current Distribution of Species

Indian Rhino African Rhino

Old World Monkeys (Africa/Asia)

New World Monkeys (America’s)

African Lion

American PumaIndian Tiger

Big Cats

Monkeys

Rhinos

Page 9: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• All of these species share common ancestors but are found far from each other today

• By looking at their current distribution and comparing it with the fossil record, we can establish both current and ancient biogeography

The Link with Biogeography

Page 10: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Example: Australian Marsupials• Australia has the largest and most diverse

population of marsupials in the world• Most other continents mostly have placental

mammals• Why is this??

Page 11: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Australian Marsupials• Marsupials evolved before placental mammals• When placental mammals began outcompeting

marsupials on other continents Australia had already separated and was isolated from them

• This allowed marsupials to diversify and evolve on Australia without competition from placental mammals

Page 12: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?
Page 13: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Homologous Features

“What can be more curious than the hand of a man, formed for grasping, that of a mole for digging, the leg of a horse, the paddle of a porpoise, and the wing of a bat, should all be constructed on the same pattern, and should include the same bones, in the same relative positions?”

-Darwin

Page 14: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Homologous Features• A flipper or a wing has

no use for fingers, so why should they have a five-fingered structure?

• Why should giraffes have the same number of neck bones as humans?

• If these features were built from scratch, there are more efficient ways to do it

Page 15: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Homologous Feature: A structure with a common evolutionary origin that may serve different functions in modern species

Homologous Features

Page 16: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• In the forearms of different mammalian species, the same features can be seen

Homologous Features in Mammals

Page 17: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Homologous Features in Mammals

• We can use homologous features to “define” groups of organisms

• In fact those hallmark features of mammals are also homologous:– Live-birthed young–Milk-producing

mammary glands– Hair

Page 18: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• For species to share a homologous feature, they must share a common ancestor

All in the Family

Page 19: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Leaves and cactus spines

Examples of Homology

Page 20: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Nest building behaviour

Examples of Homology

Page 21: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Genes that Code for Eyes

Examples of Homology

Page 22: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Embryos

Examples of Homology

Page 23: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Embryos

Examples of Homology

Page 24: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Embryos

Examples of Homology

Page 25: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Some homologous features indicate common ancestry, but are no longer used

Some Features go out of Style

Page 26: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Analogous Feature: a structure that performs the same function as another but is not similar in origin or anatomical structure

Analogous Features

Page 27: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• We observe similarities between unrelated species

• Consider dolphins and sharks

Similarities in Unrelated Species

Page 28: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• We can expect to see analogous features between species that fill similar ecological niches

Analogous Features

Page 29: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Wings

Examples of Analogous Features

Page 30: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

Evolution of Flight or Near-Flight

Page 31: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Jointed Legs

Examples of Analogous Features

Page 32: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Beaks in squid and birds

Examples of Analogous Features

Page 33: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?
Page 34: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Vestigial Feature: A non-functioning, or only marginally functioning, structure that is homologous to a full functioning structure in closely related species

Vestigial Features

Page 35: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Vestigial features are homologous features– They just aren’t used by that species any more

Vestigial Features

Page 36: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Dandelion Sex Organs

Examples of Vestigiality

Page 37: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Hind Legs and Hips in Whales

Examples of Vestigiality

Page 38: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Wings on Flightless Birds : Kakapo

Examples of Vestigiality

Page 39: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• When a feature is not used, it is more likely to become vestigial in time

• This can only happen if lack of use does not hurt a population’s chance of survival

• Birds can only become flightless if they have no need for wings

Why do Features become Vestigial?

Page 40: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

• Birds can only become flightless if they have no need for wings– In the case of the

Kakapo, what might we guess about predators?

• No predators in New Zealand

Why do Features become Vestigial?

Page 41: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?
Page 42: Review: Radiometric Dating If Uranium-239 isotope has a half-life of 80 000 years, how many years would it take for all but 1/8 of the uranium to decay?

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