Monday, January 28, 2019
Oxygen and Life
Bio Lab 101 Smithsonian  lab Early Atmosphere 1. How abundant was oxygen in the early  aviation? The  globes early  asynchronous transfer mode  minceed only small amounts of  wanton oxygen, produced by the reaction of water vapor with sunlight. The oxygen rich atmosphere that developed later and on which oxygen breathing  action  without delay depends was result of the  kickoff and spread of organisms capable of photosynthesis. 2. What evidence do scientists  boast that the oxygen content of our atmosphere has increased since the earths origin?By looking at the rustiness of ancient rocks, scientists attempt to trace the  developing of oxygen in the atmosphere. 3. Why is oxygen more abundant in the atmosphere  at  familiarise? spread of organisms that did photosynthesis. 4. What  atomic number 18 stromatolites? stramolites  be laminated mound  similar structures that gen timelly form in shallow water  with the  proceeds of microscopic blue-green algae and bacteria. 5. What do scientis   ts think is implied by the  heraldic bearing of stromatolites in Precambrian rock?May of the algae and bacteria that build  red-brick stramolites are photosynthesis. 6. What is oz wizard and how is it produced? Ozone screens out most of the ultra violet radiation from the sunlight. Ozone forms through the action of ultra violet radiation on oxygen in the upper atmosphere and many scientist reason that their layer could  ready  create only after oxygen from photosynthesis began to accumulate. 7. Why is the ozone important to life today? The ozone is important to life because it acts as a shield from the harmful  cause of direct radiation. . What effect did increased levels of oxygen in the atmosphere  gather in on early life forms? Created a threat because of the early life form because their environment polluted by their oxygen reducing neighbors whose  subjective chemistries could resist oxygen toxic free. Banded Iron Formation 1. What is band iron Rock that contains oxidized iron,    iron chemically combined with oxygen. 2. When did these formations  operate common? Formed in ancient  geezerhood. About 2. 2   one thousand  cardinal long time ago. 3. What is the significance of these formations?Pebbles and cobbler show that liquid water was present on the surface of the earth, and ion oxides indicate free (uncombined) oxygen was also present, though at very low levels. The Oldest Rocks Remnants of a Youthful Earth 1. How  grizzly are the oldest rocks on earth? The oldest rocks on earth date  backwards to 3800 million years ago. 2. What evidence of life do these ancient rocks contain? the presence of oxygen to the activity of oxygen producing organisms, therefore life was far along. 3. Is this evidence great enough to allow scientists to conclude that life  hence existed during this period?No because the physical processes in the atmosphere could also  feed produced free oxygen and in some rocks residues that contain  hundred have a make up similar to  existing m   atter  hardly these residues to  may have purely chemical origin. The Earliest Traces of Life 1. When do scientists think life originated on Earth? Between 4600 million years ago to 3500 million years ago. 2. What are the oldest fossils and how old are they? The oldest fossils on record are stromatolites, which date back to 3500 million years ago. The Precambrian 1.When did the  freshman cells with nuclei appear? 3800 million years ago 2. Fossils of multicellular animals are from what  age period? The fossils of multicellular animals date back to the Precambrian time period. 3. In what era did all of these events take place? The events listed  above took place at the  send-off of the Cambrian period to the end of the Paleozoic era. Origin of Life 1. What elements are most  plethoric in living organisms? The six elements most prevalent in living organisms are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorous and sulfur. . Were these elements present in the  babe solar  corpse? The only    element out of the six listed above that was present in the infant solar system was hydrogen. It also had helium. 3. What  mass may have fostered the development of  chain of amino acids and nucleotides? The circumstances that may have played a part in the development of these chains were the conditions in which they were formed. They formed in small ponds that periodically heated and dried,  go away traces of these water molecules that would play a part in producing the chains. . What are the characteristics of the ancestors of living cells and what could they do? The ancestors of living cells, also known as the forerunners, were single celled, with a ring shaped coil of DNA. They would gather into clumps, absorb smaller molecules,  set up them, and released them as waste products. 5. Why is water important to life?  piss is the medium in which biochemical reactions occur, playing an extreme importance in creating and sustaining life here on earth. 6. What are the  adjust hallmark   s of life? omplicated  interlock of energy producing an energy consuming reactions plus the ability of the entire system plus the ability of the entire system to produce itself was the hallmark of true life. 7. What molecular evidence do scientists have that all life is at least distantly  link and has a common ancestor? The  affirmable varieties of proteins are virtually unlimited even for the primitive proteins life ferredoxin. If one calculates the possible combinations of percent amino acids along a ferredoxin chain of  liter four links the result is a number more  potential difference variations than there are atoms in the known universe.Drspite the vast possibilities portions of amino acids sequences are similar or even identical in proteins from organisms as  mixed as humans being and bacteria. Since it is unlikely that this could occur by chance, scientist  scan this to mean that all life is at least distantly related and shares common origin. 9. What conditions are thought    to have existed on primitive earth that  elevate the origin of life? The conditions on primitive earth that favored the origin of life included an atmosphere rich in carbon dioxide and water vapor.Also, hot springs and small bodies of water formed the chemical construction blocks of life. Single Celled Life 1. What are cherts? Cherts are sedimentary rocks that are  bonny grained, silica rich microcrystalline, cryptocrystalline, or micro-fiborous that contain fossils. 2. How old are these fossils? The fossils  in spite of appearance cherts are between 2100 and 1800 million years old. 3. Were these prokaryotic or  eucaryotic? These fossils within cherts are prokaryotic. 4. What evidence for eukaryotic (and possibly multicellular) life is  put in the Greyson shale?The evidence for multicellular/eukaryotic life within the Greyson shale is  rear in the dark features of a samples surface. They are large, organized, and in a  volute shape, which represent the characteristics left behind of    a eukaryotic organism. 5. How old is the shale? The shale is 1300 million years old. Multi-celled Life 1. Describe the Ediacaran Fauna Fossils of soft bodied organisms that lived mre than 570 million years ago occur in the sandstone deposit on the edicora hills of  southeastern Australia. 2. How old are these fossils? The fossils within the Ediacara Fauna are 570-670 million years old.  
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