Course
Discontinued
Yes
Course Code
GEOL 2320
Descriptive
Paleontology: Life Through Time
Department
Earth & Environmental Sciences
Faculty
Science & Technology
Credits
4.00
Start Date
End Term
201910
PLAR
No
Semester Length
15
Max Class Size
Class 36, Lab 18
Contact Hours
2 hours lecture / 2 hours lab / 2 hours seminar
Method(s) Of Instruction
Lecture
Lab
Seminar
Learning Activities
This course will involve 2 hours/week of direct lectures; 2 hours of lab in which students will directly examine fossil samples or work with specific interpretive problems; and 2 hours of seminar in which instructor and students will discuss key topics, view slide or film presentations, or work on individual projects. Field trips will be scheduled when appropriate. Readings will be assigned to supplement the lectures.
Course Description
This course investigates the nature and interpretation of the fossil record. Students will learn how fossils are used to indicate evolutionary changes, the structure of ancient populations, and the nature of ancient environments. A wide variety of invertebrate, vertebrate, and plant fossils will be examined in the lab to show how they are identified, named, and classified, and how the lifestyles of the original organisms are reconstructed. Field trips may be required.
Course Content
- Defining fossils
- Fossilization types
- Taxonomy, classification and systematics
- Taphonomic theory and examples
- Individuals and populations
- The fossil record
- Precambrian organisms
- The rise of animals with hard parts
- Marine Invertebrates of the Paleozoic
- Land plants and their origins
- Paleozoic vertebrates
- Marine Invertebrates of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic
- Mesozoic vertebrates
- Cenozoic vertebrates
- What we learn from the record
- Biostratigraphy
- Reconstructing lifestyles: form and function
- The mechanisms of evolution
- The record of evolution
- Paleoenvironmental reconstruction
- Paleobiogeography
- Fossils and sedimentary rocks
- Trace fossils
Learning Outcomes
Upon successful completion of this course the student should be able to:
- Use a variety of means to identify and classify a wide variety of fossils.
- Describe and provide examples of taphonomic theory.
- Describe the major changes in life through geologic time and the evidence used to support the interpretation(s) of the fossil record.
- Show an understanding of how the principles of Biostratigraphy are used to reconstruct ancient environments.
- Show an understanding of the mechanisms of evolution.
- Show an understanding of how fossils can be used to reconstruct tectonic plate boundaries.
- Describe the uses of trace fossils and be able to identify a variety of trace fossils.
Means of Assessment
Mid-term exam | 25% |
Lab paper / Project | 20% |
Lab exercises (5, bi-weekly) | 25% |
Final exam | 30% |
Textbook Materials
Textbooks and Materials to be Purchased by Students
Stearn, Colin W. and Robert L. Carroll (1989), Paleontology: The Record of Life. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York.