Sunday 18 September 2011

Geologic Time and Earth History complete notes


Two Conceptions of Earth History:

Catastrophism

  • Assumption: Great Effects Require Great Causes
  • Earth History Dominated by Violent Events

Uniformitarianism

  • Assumption: We Can Use Cause And Effect to Determine Causes of Past Events
  • Finding: Earth History Dominated by Small-scale Events Typical of the Present.
  • Catastrophes Do Happen But Are Uncommon

Two Kinds of Ages

Relative - Know Order of Events But Not Dates

  • Civil War Happened Before W.W.II
  • Bedrock in Wisconsin Formed Before The Glaciers Came

Absolute - Know Dates

  • Civil War 1861-1965
  • World War II 1939-1945
  • Glaciers Left Wisconsin About 11,000 Years Ago

Relative Ages

Superposition - Young Events Leave Traces Behind of Older Rocks

  • Young Rocks Laid Down on Older Rocks
  • Intrusions Are Younger Than The Rocks They Intrude
  • Folds And Faults Are Younger Than The Rocks They Occur in
  • When Rocks Are Tilted, It is Possible to Determine Which Way Was Originally Up

Absolute Ages

Early Attempts

Bible

  • Add up Dates in Bible
  • Get an Age of 4000-6000 B.C. For Earth
  • John Lightfoot and Bishop Ussher - 4004 B.C. (1584)
  • Too Short

Salt in Ocean

  • Rivers bring dissolved solids to ocean
  • If we know rate salt is added, and how much salt is in ocean, can find age of oceans.
  • Gave age of about 100 million years.
  • Problems
    • Is rate at which salt is added constant?
    • How much salt leaves ocean?

Sediment Thickness

  • Add up Thickest sediments for each period
  • Estimate rate of deposition to find age
  • Problem: rates of deposition very variable!
  • Indicated ages of at least 100 million years

Age of The Sun

One of the Great Scientific Controversies of the 19th Century

  • If sun gets its heat from burning, could only last 10,000 years or so.
  • Best That 19th century astronomers could guess was that sun was slowly contracting.
  • Problem: only 30 million years ago, sun would have extended out to earth's orbit!
  • Geologists wanted more time, but you can't fight the laws of physics...
  • We now believe sun gets its heat from nuclear reactions. These release enough energy to keep sun going for billions of years
  • The Geologists were right after all.
  • Score One For My Team

Absolute Ages

Use Radioactive Decay to Date Rocks.
Radioactive atoms give off particles and change into different types of atoms.
Radioactive atoms decay at a certain rate. They have half lives. After each half life, half of the atoms will have decayed.

Half-life

Half-life of radioactive atoms

Example I

  • You have $20 in pennies (2000)
  • You flip all of them, and any that come up heads you put aside
  • An hour later you flip the pennies that came up tails and put the heads aside
  • Each hour, you repeat the process. Each time, the number in the tails' pile is cut in half
  • Someone can figure out how long it's been since you started, if they know how many pennies there were originally and how many heads and tails there are.

Example II

  • You have a large bowl full of jelly beans. You like the green ones but not the red ones.
  • Every time you dip into the bowl and get a green bean, you eat it.
  • Every time you dip into the bowl and get a red bean, you put it back.
  • The number of green beans you eat is large at first but tapers off. However, it may take a very long time to get that last green jelly bean.

Why Radiometric Dating is Different from Earlier Methods

Physical Processes

Vary in Kind, Rate, Intensity

  • Erosion, Weathering
  • Salt Addition to Oceans
  • Tectonic Activity
  • Continental Drift
  • Growth of Organisms

Physical Laws

Underlie Physical Processes
Do Not Vary

  • Speed of Light
  • Laws of Thermodynamics
  • Gravity
  • Electromagnetism
  • Quantum Mechanics
  • Nuclear Physics (Radioactive Decay)

Dating Methods

C-14

  • Half-life 5500 Years
  • Organic Material Only
  • Range: Younger Than 50 - 100,000 Yr.

K-40

  • Half-life 1.3 Billion Yr.
  • Range: Older Than a Few 100,000 Yr.

U-Th-Pb Many Methods

  • U-235 Half-life 700 M.Y.
  • U-238 Half-life 4.5 B.Y.
  • Th-232 Half-life 14 B.Y.
  • Fission: 1 U Decay/1,000,000
  • Fission track dating range: 0 - billions of years

Rb-87 - Half-life 50 B.Y.


Present Radiometric Dating Methods

Cosmogenic

  • C-14 5700 Yr.
  • Be-10 2.5 M.Y.

Primordial

  • K-Ar (K-40) 1.25 B.Y.
  • Rb-Sr (Rb-87) 48.8 by
  • U-235 704 M.Y.
  • Th-232 14 B.Y.
  • U-238 4.5 B.Y.
  • Nd-Sm (Sm-147-Nd-143) 106 B.Y.
  • Re-187 43 B.Y.
  • Fission
  • Lu-Hf (Lu-176) 36 B.Y.

The Geologic Time Scale

Cenozoic Era

Quaternary 0-2 MY

  • Holocene (10,000 years ago - present)
  • Pleistocene (Ice ages, humans)

Tertiary 2-67 MY

  • Pliocene
  • Miocene
  • Oligocene
  • Eocene
  • Paleocene

Mesozoic Era 67-220 MY

  • Cretaceous
  • Jurassic (First birds, mammals)
  • Triassic

Paleozoic Era 220-570 MY

  • Permian (First reptiles)
  • Carboniferous (Coal forests)
    In North America, subdivided into:
    • Pennsylvanian (mostly terrestrial rocks)
    • Mississippian (mostly marine rocks)
  • Devonian (First amphibians)
  • Silurian (First fish, land animals)
  • Ordovician
  • Cambrian (First abundant fossils)

Precambrian 570-4600 MY

  • 3000 (Earliest Life?)
  • 3900 (Oldest Known Rocks)
  • 4600 (Formation of Earth)

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