Interlude E 2

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These flashcards cover key terms and concepts from the lecture on evolution and the fossil record.

Last updated 1:39 AM on 11/18/25
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52 Terms

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Protolife

The earliest protein-like organic chemicals formed from chemicals that emerged when seawater evaporated.

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Archaean fossils

Fossils of early life forms that date back to about 3.7 billion years ago.

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Cambrian explosion

A period of rapid evolutionary development during which a vast number of shell-bearing invertebrates appeared.

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Phylogeny

The study of evolutionary relationships among organisms.

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Natural selection

The process by which individuals with favorable traits are more likely to survive and reproduce.

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Mass extinction

A widespread and rapid decrease in the biodiversity on Earth, often caused by catastrophic events.

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Extremophiles

Microbes that can survive in extreme environments, such as hot springs and salt lakes.

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Preservation potential

The likelihood that an organism will be buried and eventually transformed into a fossil.

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Extraordinary fossils

Fossils that include not just hard parts but also soft tissues, preserved under special conditions.

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Taxonomic classification

The hierarchical arrangement of organisms into categories based on observable characteristics.

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Stromatolites

Layered sedimentary structures formed by the growth of cyanobacteria, representing some of the earliest evidence of life on Earth.

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Miller-Urey Experiment

An experiment demonstrating that several organic compounds could be formed spontaneously by simulating the conditions of early Earth's atmosphere.

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Endosymbiotic Theory

The theory that proposes that mitochondria and chloroplasts in eukaryotic cells originated from prokaryotic cells living inside larger host cells.

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Adaptive Radiation

A process in which organisms diversify rapidly from an ancestral species into a multitude of new forms, particularly when a change in the environment makes new resources available, creates new challenges, or opens new environmental niches.

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Trace Fossils

Indirect evidence of past life, such as footprints, burrows, or coprolites, rather than the remains of the organism itself.

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Protein-like organic chemicals

Early chemical structures that formed protolife, often emerging from evaporated seawater.

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Evaporated seawater (early Earth)

A condition on early Earth that facilitated the formation of protolife from chemicals.

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Early life forms

Organisms that existed in the distant past, such as those represented by Archaean fossils dating back about 3.7 billion years ago.

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Rapid evolutionary development

A characteristic of periods like the Cambrian explosion, where many new species appear quickly.

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Shell-bearing invertebrates

A diverse group of animals lacking a backbone and possessing shells, which appeared in vast numbers during the Cambrian explosion.

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Evolutionary relationships

The patterns of ancestry and descent among organisms, studied in phylogeny.

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Favorable traits

Characteristics that increase an individual's chances of survival and reproduction, central to natural selection.

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Survival and reproduction

The outcome for individuals with favorable traits, leading to the perpetuation of species through natural selection.

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Biodiversity

The variety of life on Earth at all its levels, which decreases significantly during a mass extinction event.

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Catastrophic events

Major geological or environmental changes, often causing mass extinctions.

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Microbes

Tiny organisms, including bacteria and archaea, some of which are extremophiles capable of thriving in harsh conditions.

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Extreme environments

Habitats with conditions such as very high temperatures (hot springs) or high salinity (salt lakes), where extremophiles can survive.

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Hot springs

Geothermally heated bodies of water that are an example of an extreme environment where extremophiles thrive.

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Salt lakes

Inland bodies of water with high concentrations of dissolved salts, serving as extreme environments for halophilic extremophiles.

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Fossilization process

The sequence of events through which an organism's remains are buried and transformed into a fossil.

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Burial of organisms

A crucial first step in the fossilization process, increasing an organism's preservation potential.

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Soft tissues (fossils)

Parts of an organism like muscle, skin, or organs that are rarely preserved but can be found in extraordinary fossils under special conditions.

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Hard parts (fossils)

Durable components of an organism, such as bones, teeth, or shells, which are more commonly preserved in the fossil record.

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Special preservation conditions

Unique environmental factors (e.g., anoxic conditions, rapid burial) that allow for the fossilization of soft tissues, leading to extraordinary fossils.

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Hierarchical arrangement (biology)

The organizational structure used in taxonomic classification, ranging from domain to species.

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Observable characteristics

Features of organisms that can be seen or measured, used as a basis for taxonomic classification.

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Layered sedimentary structures

Physical formations, such as stromatolites, built up by microbial mats over time.

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Cyanobacteria

Photosynthetic bacteria, instrumental in forming stromatolites and contributing to Earth's early oxygen atmosphere.

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Earliest evidence of life

Remains or traces, like stromatolites, that indicate the presence of life billions of years ago.

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Organic compounds (early Earth)

Complex carbon-containing molecules, such as amino acids, believed to have formed spontaneously under early Earth conditions, as simulated by the Miller-Urey Experiment.

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Early Earth's atmosphere

The gaseous envelope surrounding Earth billions of years ago, which was vastly different from today's, lacking free oxygen and involved in abiogenesis.

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Mitochondria

Organelles within eukaryotic cells responsible for cellular respiration, thought to have originated from free-living prokaryotes via endosymbiosis.

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Chloroplasts

Organelles found in plant cells and other eukaryotic photosynthetic organisms, responsible for photosynthesis, also believed to have prokaryotic origins via endosymbiosis.

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Eukaryotic cells

Cells characterized by a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles, which according to the Endosymbiotic Theory, incorporated prokaryotic cells.

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Prokaryotic cells

Simple cells lacking a membrane-bound nucleus and other organelles, believed to be the ancestors of mitochondria and chloroplasts through endosymbiosis.

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Host cells (endosymbiosis)

The larger cells that engulfed prokaryotic cells, leading to the development of eukaryotic organelles like mitochondria and chloroplasts.

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Ancestral species (adaptive radiation)

A single species from which many new, diverse species evolve rapidly to fill various ecological niches.

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Environmental niches

The specific role and position a species has in its environment, including its resource use, interactions, and habitat, often exploited during adaptive radiation.

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Footprints (fossil)

A type of trace fossil that provides evidence of an organism's movement.

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Burrows (fossil)

A type of trace fossil indicating areas where organisms dug into sediment for shelter or food.

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Coprolites

Fossilized feces, a type of trace fossil that can reveal an ancient animal's diet.

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Indirect evidence of past life

Clues like trace fossils (footprints, burrows, coprolites) that show an organism's activity rather than its physical remains.