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Chapters 11 and 12

Chapters 11 and 12. The Origin of Life? And Evolution. Extraterrestrial origin ? No solid proof. Divine Creation ? Cannot be tested scientifically. Spontaneous Origin ? Can be tested scientifically! Many scientists try to prove the spontaneous origin theory.

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Chapters 11 and 12

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  1. Chapters 11 and 12 The Origin of Life? And Evolution

  2. Extraterrestrial origin? No solid proof. Divine Creation? Cannot be tested scientifically. Spontaneous Origin? Can be tested scientifically! Many scientists try to prove the spontaneous origin theory. Life on Earth?

  3. An Evolutionary Timeline: • Earth is estimated to be 4.5 billion years old! • The earliest fossils are about 3.5 billion years old. • How could life have arisen? • Theories: • Creation, Primordial soup model, and micelles.

  4. Primordial Soup Model • 1920’s – A.I. Oparin proposed that organic molecules could have formed in Earth’s early oceans if energy were added. • 1953 – Harold Urey and Stanley Miller tested this hypothesis.

  5. Urey and Miller’s Experiment • The following substances were believed to be in Earth’s early atmosphere and oceans. • Nitrogen • Hydrogen • Water • Methane • Ammonia

  6. Miller and Urey’s Experiment • Electrical energy was added to the compounds to simulate lightning. • The following compounds were formed: • Amino Acids • Fatty Acids • Hydrocarbons • Significance? These are the basic units of life!!

  7. How Were Cells Formed? • Microspheres – proteins and lipids tend to aggregate in water. These form phospholipids (cell membranes). • Cannot be considered living until it can pass on hereditary information. • DNA or RNA • Life is still a mystery scientifically!!!

  8. Theory of Evolution • Evolution – Change in the genetic make-up of a population or species over time. • Charles Darwin – conducted studies of populations all over the Earth while traveling on his ship, the Beagle. • He studied the living things that lived in the GalapagosIslands.

  9. Theory of Evolution • Variation exists in genes of all species. • Some individuals are better suited for survival. This leads to naturalselection, or survival of the fittest. • Over time, change within a species leads to a new species (speciation) and the extinction of an old species. • Adaptation – the changing of a species that results in its being better suited for its environment. • Fossils show species have evolved from ancestral forms.

  10. Early Theories of Evolution • Jean-BaptisteLamarck – Believed evolution resulted by acquiredcharacteristics. This idea stated that individuals changed and passed these adaptations on to their offspring. • Example: Giraffes stretching their necks to reach leaves led to longer-necked offspring. • Lamark’s theory was wrong!

  11. Darwin’s Theory: • Darwin found that finches on the Galapagos Islands closely resembled the finches on the mainland, but developed (adapted) special modifications for survival(naturalselection). • Over time, the birds became so different that they could no longer interbreed. This led to the formation of a new species, or speciation.

  12. Types of Speciation: • Geographicalisolation – Groups are physically separated. • Ecologicalisolation- Groups occupy different habitats. • Temporalisolation- reproduce at different times of the day. • Behavioralisolation- no attraction. • Mechanicalisolation- structural differences. • Reproductivefailure- no fertile offspring.

  13. Microevolution- a shift within a species gene frequency over time. • Does NOT constitute a new species. • Examples: • Broccoli and Cabbage • Peppered moth – 1850 in Europe during the industrial revolution. • Sickle-cell anemia – high in African populations, helps with malaria.

  14. Peppered Moth- normal and dark Pollution caused the Trees to become dark. Which moth variation would survive?

  15. The chart and map show The selection for dark- Colored moths.

  16. Macroevolution – a new species being formed because the small changes have accumulated and made the groups too different to interbreed. • Example: Dinosaurs were replaced by mammals. • Evidence: • Fossils • Amino acid sequences • Homologous structures • Vestigal structures

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