Mechs. of Select
Time for a Date
Spooky Scary Skeletons
Popular Jeans
Evolutionary Break Ups
100

Lamarck mistakenly believed evolution was driven by these behaviors of organisms.

What is use and disuse of organs?

100

This geological principle states that older, undisturbed volcanic or sedimentary rock layers lie beneath younger layers.

What is the principle of superposition?

100

These anatomical structures share a common origin and skeletal blueprint but can serve entirely different functions in modern species.

What are homologous structures?

100

This term describes the total collection of all alleles present within a specific, interbreeding population.

What is a gene pool?

100

This type of selection on polygenic traits favors both extreme phenotypes.

What is disruptive selection?

200

While natural selection acts directly on an organism's observable phenotype, evolution is defined as a change in these frequencies over time.

What are allele frequencies?

200

This method estimates a fossil's age by comparing its placement in rock strata (layers).

What is relative dating?

200

The wings of a dragonfly and the wings of a hawk serve the same function but evolved independently, making them this type of structure.

What are analogous structures?

200

This mechanism of evolution alters allele frequencies purely through random chance events, rather than environmental fitness.

What is genetic drift?

200

This specific mode of speciation occurs when a physical geographic barrier completely cuts off gene flow between populations.

What is allopatric speciation?

300

This specific type of selection explains why male peacocks maintain flashy, survival-hindering feathers to attract mates.

What is sexual selection?

300

This term defines the fixed amount of time required for a set amount of a radioactive isotope's atoms to decay.

What is a half-life?

300

Non-functional evolutionary remnants, like the human appendix or a whale's pelvic bones, are known as these types of structures.

What are vestigial structures?

300

This specific type of genetic drift occurs when a catastrophic event randomly and drastically reduces a population's size.

What is the bottleneck effect?

300

This macroevolutionary pattern is shown by a single species rapidly diversifying into many distinct species.

What is adaptive radiation?

400

This human-driven process reduces genetic diversity by breeding organisms for specific desired traits.

What is artificial selection?

400

If a radioactive isotope has a half-life of 5,000 years, this is the absolute age of a fossil with only 25% of the parent isotope remaining.

What is 10,000 years?

400

The fused elytra of a ground-dwelling beetle are an example of this type of structure.

What are vestigial structures?

400

To maintain a non-evolving Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, the population must experience this type of mating.

What is non-random mating?

400

This evolutionary model describes long periods of stability interrupted by brief, rapid bursts of change.

What is punctuated equilibrium?

500

Environmental factors like antibiotics or pesticides do not cause mutations; instead, they act as this type of evolutionary force.

What is a selective pressure?

500

The ancient, photosynthetic cyanobacteria caused this to happen 2.4 billion years ago.

What are rising oxygen levels?

500

Between DNA sequences, homologous structures, or analogous structures, this one provides the least reliable evidence for common ancestry.

What are analogous structures?

500

This notation, used in calculating Hardy-Weinburg equilibrium, represents the proportion of heterozygous individuals.

What is 2pq?

500

This reciprocal evolutionary pattern occurs when two closely interacting species exert selective pressures on each other's survival over time.

What is coevolution?

M
e
n
u