1.5 Animals of the past

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BiologieMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 17 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 2 videos.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Slide 1 - Slide

1.5 Animals from the past

Slide 2 - Slide

Learning objective
You will learn how to investigate animals that lived in prehistoric times, how fossils are formed and how to determine the age of a fossil.

Slide 3 - Slide

How do we know what lived in the past?
Some animals are extinct, such as dinosaurs.

We can find out what they looked like from fossils (remains of plants or animals)


Slide 4 - Slide

How do we know what lived in the past?
Sometimes whole organisms, sometimes just a small part
Fossil research: paleontology
A scientist who investigates fossils: paleontologist

Reconstruction: trying to rebuild an organism as it really was by observing the fossils


Slide 5 - Slide

Slide 6 - Slide

How are fossils formed?
Dead animals and plants

Fossils must be buried quickly

River delta -> river flows into the sea
Desert

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What are fossils?
A
Animal remains
B
Remains of plants
C
Remains of plants and animals
D
Human remains

Slide 8 - Quiz

How are fossils formed?
  • Dead animals sank to the bottom of the sea. The soft parts decomposed.
  • The hard parts were covered by layers of sediment.
  • The pressure and heat of the earth made the soil layers as hard as stone. This is called petrifaction.

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How are fossils formed?
Slowly the sea became land.

Wind and water caused erosion: pieces of soil wore away

The fossils 'emerged' again

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True or false? Fossils can only be found underwater
A
True
B
False

Slide 11 - Quiz

How do you determine the age of a fossil?
If you know in which layer of stone a fossil is located, you can determine its approximate age.

Oldest layers are on the bottom, newest layers are on top



Slide 12 - Slide

Slide 13 - Video

Index fossils
Fossils that are used to determine the age of a stone layer.
  • come from organisms that only have lived a short period of time
  • were very common at that time
  • are distributed in a wide area
  • easy to recognise
ammonite (250-65 million years ago)

Slide 14 - Slide

How do you determine the age of a fossil?
Substances change over time
Carbon exists in living and dead things, and it changes at known rates

By looking at that substance, scientists know how long ago the organism ended up in the soil

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Slide 16 - Video

Homework
Choose from:
- Create a summary of 1.5
- Create a mind map of 1.5
- Do assignments from 1.5 (3-11)

Slide 17 - Slide