Earth Forms and Life Begins
Charles Darwin
Evidence of Evolution
Evidence of Evolution 2
Micro and Macro Evolution
100
What is Extinction?
Where a species completely dies out, and no members survive
100

What is Darwin's theory?

The theory of evolution; orginims change over time

100

What does a Paleontologist do?

Study fossils

100

Who were the eyewitnesses to evolution?

Peter and Rosemary Grant

100

What is macroevolution?

Over geologic time, results from microevolution over many generations

200

What are fossils?

Preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived in the past

200

What is the HMS Beagle?

The ship that Charles was on
200

What is comparative anatomy?

The study of similarities and differences in the structures of different species
200

Who studied Darwin's finches on Galapogos Islands?

Peter and Rosemary Grant
200

What is microevolution?

Short period of time 

300

What makes up a good fossil?

Quick burial, hard parts like teeth or bones, and traces such as footprints

300

What were Charles' first observations?

Diversity of life ( tropical rainforests with many species)

300

What is a homologous structure?

Similar structures are inherited from a common ancestor

300

On the Galapagos Islands, what caused the decline in seeds?

Drought

300

Define population

Numbers of species in a given area

400

What is absolute dating?

Raidometic materials to find a date for the rock

400

Who was an influence on Charles Darwin?

Jean Baptiste

400

What is an analogical structure?

Structures that are similar in unrelated organisms

400

What are the forces of evolution?

Mutation, gene flow, genetic drift, and natural selection 

400

What is a gene pool?

All genes of all the members of a population

500

What is relative dating?

The position of rocks

500

What did Wallence (same theory as Darwin) push Charles to do?

Pushed Darwin to finish his book

500

Do we need the vestigial structures?

No

500

What is directional selection?

Two extreme phenotypes are selected for; Grant's observation of the finches

500

What is Hardy-Weinberg's theory?

Alleles in a population don't change if, no mutations, no migration, a very large population, mating is random, and no natural selection

M
e
n
u