Essentials of Ecology

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CONCEPTS 4-2A AND 4-2B 81


The Fossil Record Tells Much


of the Story of Evolution


Most of what we know of the earth’s life history comes
from fossils: mineralized or petrified replicas of skel-


etons, bones, teeth, shells, leaves, and seeds, or impres-
sions of such items found in rocks. Also, scientists drill


cores from glacial ice at the earth’s poles and on moun-


taintops and examine the kinds of life found at differ-
ent layers. Fossils provide physical evidence of ancient


organisms and reveal what their internal structures
looked like (Figure 4-4, p. 82).


The world’s cumulative body of fossils found is


called the fossil record. This record is uneven and incom-
plete. Some forms of life left no fossils, and some fos-


sils have decomposed. The fossils found so far probably
represent only 1% of all species that have ever lived.
Trying to reconstruct the development of life with
so little evidence—a challenging scientific detective
game—is the work of paleontologists. GREEN CAREER:
Paleontologist

The Genetic Makeup


of a Population Can Change


The process of biological evolution by natural selec-
tion involves changes in a population’s genetic makeup
through successive generations. Note that populations—
not individuals—evolve by becoming genetically different.

Cenozoic
Mesozoic

Paleozoic

Millions of years ago
Precambrian

Origin of Earth

Earth cool enough
for crust to solidify

Oldest prokaryotic
fossils

Accumulation of
O 2 in atmosphere
from photosynthetic
cyanobacterium

Oldest
eukaryotic fossils

Origin of
multicellular
organisms

Plants
colonize land

Extinction of dinosaurs

First humans

Eubacteria Archaebacteria Protists Plants Fungi Animals

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

4,500

Prokaryotes Eukaryotes

Figure 4-3 Overview of the evolution of life on the earth into six major kingdoms of species as a result of natural selection.
For more details, see p. S46 in Supplement 7.

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