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100

Remnants of organisms such as imprints, bones and feces.

Fossil

100

Sudden elimination of a species due to a catasthropic event.

Mass exinction

100

Study of embryological development in vertebrates that has led to support the theory of common ancestry among vertebrates. 

Embryology

100

The study of prehistoric life that allows scientists to make connections between current and extinct species. 

Paleontology

100

Study of body structures to provide evidence of evolution. 

Anatomy

200

The wings of flightless birds, like the ostrich, are an example of this.

Vestigial Stuctures

200
Rapid evolutionary change. 

Punctuated equilibrium

200

When two organisms, such as predator and prey, evolve in response to one another. 

Coevolution 

200

Evolution that results in the formation of analogous structures.

Convergent evolution

200

Slow elimination of species caused by small environmental changes over extended periods of time. 

Gradual extinction

300

Study of nucleic acids and proteins to show evolutionary relationships.

Biochemistry

300

Biological change over time that causes descendants to be different from their ancestors.

Descent with mod.

300

When traits that favor reproduction, even though they make decrease in organism's ability to survive, become more common over time.

Sexual selection

300

All of genes available in a population.

Gene pool

300

Evolution that results in the formation of homologous structures.

Divergent evolution

400

Migration

Gene Flow

400

Principle of natural selection that explains how beneficial traits should become more common over time, causing a change in allelic frequencies.

Evolution

400

When allelic frequencies are stable and unchanging, therefore evolution is not occurring.

Genetic equilibrium

400

Slow change in allele frequencies over long periods of time. 

Gradualism

400

Similar body structures, such as fins, due to organisms living in the same environment, not same ancestry.

Analogous structures

500

A physical trait that increases an organism's ability to survive in its enviroment.

Adaptation

500

Body structures that are similar in orientation, but completely different in function due to organisms living in different environments.

Homologous Structure

500

When isolation, such as geographically, causes two populations of organisms to become so different that they can no longer reproduce with each other and create viable offspring.

Speciation

500

Organisms with traits that make them better adapted to their environments will live longer and reproduce more than less adapted to the environments. 

Natural selection

500

Study of the physical distribution of plants and animals.

Biogeography

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