Term
List the four main stages to produce simple cells. |
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Definition
1. the abiotic synthesis of small organic molecules such as amino acids and nucleotides 2. the joining of these small molecules into macromolecules including proteins and nucleic acids 3. the packaging of these molecules into "protobionts", droplets with membranes that maintain an internal chemistry diff. from that of their surroundings 4. the origin of self-replicating molecules that eventually made inheritance possible |
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Who confirmed that life arises only by the reproduction of preexisting life? |
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Definition
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Definition
the rate of change of a nucleotide in a gene |
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Term
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Definition
imprints or remains of organisms that lived in the past |
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Term
What is the mechanism for evolution? |
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Definition
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Term
Define natural selection. |
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Definition
natural forces having an effect on a population |
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Term
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Definition
a group of organisms with similar characteristics that can mate and produce fertile offspring |
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Term
Define artificial selection |
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Definition
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Term
What are the key points of evolution? |
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Definition
-individuals don't evolve -natural selection can amplify or diminish only heritable traits -evolution isn't goal oriented |
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Term
What were Darwin's two observations? |
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Definition
-heritable variation -overproduction of offspring |
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Term
What ware Darwin's two inferences? |
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Definition
-individuals with heritable variations are more likely to survive and reproduce -unequal production will cause favorable traits to accumulate |
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Term
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Definition
a frequent event in Earth's history resulting in the irrevocable loss of a species |
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Term
What contributions did Lamarck create? |
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Definition
stated that life evolves, inheritance of acquired traits, use and disuse |
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Term
What contributions did Lyell make? |
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Definition
wrote Principles of Geology that stated that over time modern species have arisen from ancestral species |
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Term
What was the main idea of "On the Origin of Species"? |
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Definition
strong logical explanation for evolution, descent with modification |
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Term
What contributions did Wallace make? |
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Definition
contributed to the publication of Darwin's book |
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Term
What contributions did Malthis make? |
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Definition
contended about human suffering was the inescapable consequences of human populations |
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Term
List 4 diff. types of adaptations. |
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Definition
behavioral, structural, biochemical, physiological |
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Term
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Definition
scientist who studies fossils |
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Term
Define comparative anatomy. |
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Definition
comparing anatomical characteristics of diff. organisms |
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Term
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Definition
footprints, burrows, and other remnants of an ancient organism's behavior |
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Term
When do entire fossils occur? |
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Definition
when the individual is buried in a medium that prevents bacteria and fungi from decomposing the corpse |
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Term
What contributions did Rosemary and Peter grant make? |
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Definition
worked on Darwin's finches |
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Term
List the four things that Darwin used to develop his theory? |
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Definition
-evidence from biogeography -examples of artificial selection -comparative anatomy -fossil record |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
Describe the orientation of fossils by age. (where are the oldest located, where are the youngest located) |
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Definition
top=youngest bottom=oldest |
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Term
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Definition
the sequence in which fossils appear within layers of sedimentary rocks |
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Term
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Definition
geographic distribution of species |
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Term
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Definition
similarity in characteristics that results from common ancestry |
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Term
Define homologous structures. |
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Definition
features that often have diff. functions, but are structurally similar b/c of common ancestry |
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Term
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Definition
structures that are of marginal or perhaps no importance to the organism |
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Term
Define evolutionary tree. |
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Definition
a branching tree that reflects a hypothesis about evolutionary relationships among organisms |
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Term
What does comparative anatomy illustrate? |
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Definition
evolution is a remodeling process in which ancestral structures become modified to take on new functions |
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Term
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Definition
a group individuals of the same species living in the same place at the same time |
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Term
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Definition
change in heritable traits in a population over generations |
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Term
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Definition
total collection of genes in a population at any one time |
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Term
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Definition
change in the relative frequencies of alleles in a gene pool over time |
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Term
Define population genetics. |
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Definition
studies how populations change genetically over time |
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Term
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Definition
connects Darwin's theory with population genetics |
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Term
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Definition
changes in the nucleotide sequence of DNA |
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Term
Define Hardy Weinberg principle |
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Definition
states that allele and genotype frequencies within a sexually reproducing diploid population will remain in equilibrium unless outside forces act to change those frequencies |
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Term
What do public health scientists use the Hardy Weinberg principle for? |
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Definition
estimate frequencies of disease-causing alleles in the human population |
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Term
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Definition
change in the gene pool of a population due to chance |
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Term
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Definition
movement of individuals between population and can alter allele frequencies |
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Term
Define bottleneck effect. |
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Definition
leads to a loss of genetic diversity when a population is greatly reduced |
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Term
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Definition
when a few individuals colonize a new habitat |
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Term
What are 3 main causes of evolutionary change? |
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Definition
natural selection, genetic drift, gene flow |
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Term
Define stabilizing selection. |
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Definition
favors intermediate phenotypes, acting against extreme phenotypes |
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Term
Define directional selection |
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Definition
acts against individuals of one of the phenotypic extremes |
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Term
Define disruptive selection |
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Definition
favors individuals at both extremes of phenotypic range |
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Term
Where is stabilizing selection common? |
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Definition
where environments are stable |
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Term
When is directional selection common? |
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Definition
during periods of environmental change, or when a population migrates to a new and diff. habitat |
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Term
When is disruptive selection likely? |
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Definition
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Term
Define sexual dimorphism. |
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Definition
where males and females show distinctly diff. appearances |
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Term
Define intrasexual competition. |
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Definition
involves competition for females, usually by males (males against males) |
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Term
Define intersexual competition. |
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Definition
individuals of one sex are choosy on picking their males (females choose males) |
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Term
What is the excessive use of antibiotics leading to? |
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Definition
the evolution of antibiotic resistant bacteria |
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Term
What can selection only act on? |
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Definition
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Term
What can natural selection not conjure up? |
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Definition
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Term
What is evolution limited by? |
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Definition
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Term
What are adaptations often regarded as? |
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Definition
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Term
What three things interact regarding evolution? |
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Definition
chance, natural selection, and the environment |
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Term
Define paleoanthropology. |
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Definition
the study of human origins and evolution |
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Term
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Definition
speices that are more closely related to humans than to chimpanzees and are therefore on the human branch of the evolutionary tree |
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Term
What does the term hominoid refer to? |
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Definition
apes, including humans, and that anthropoid |
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Term
What is a common misconception of the hominid branch? |
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Definition
to think of human evolution as a parade of hominids leading directly from an ancestral hominoid to Homo sapiens |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
What is a clue to upright stance? |
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Definition
the location of the opening in the base of the skull through which the spinal cord exits |
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Term
Define adaptive radiation. |
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Definition
the evolution of many diverse species from a common ancestor |
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Term
Define punctuated equilibria. |
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Definition
in the fossil record, long periods of apparent stasis in which a species undergoes little or no morphological change interrupted by relatively brief periods of sudden change |
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Term
Define divergent evolution (gradual model). |
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Definition
one species slowly "diverges" into two species |
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Term
Define convergent evolution. |
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Definition
species from different evolutionary branches may come to resemble one another if they live in similar environments and natural selection favors similar adaptations |
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Term
Give an example of convergent evolution. |
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Definition
Australian mole and North American mole |
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Term
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Definition
series of reciprocal evolutionary changes in two species |
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Term
Describe the atmosphere of early Earth. |
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Definition
thick with vapor, carbon dioxide, methane, ammonia, hydrogen, and hydrogen sulfide -lightning, volcanic activity, and UV radiation were much more intense |
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Term
What did the Miller-Urey experiments demonstrate? |
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Definition
that the abiotic synthesis of organic molecules is possible |
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Term
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Definition
that conditions on early Earth could have generated organic molecules |
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Term
What is the Hardy-Weinberg equation? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the five conditions for the Hardy-Weinberg principle? |
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Definition
1. very large population 2. no gene flow between populations 3. no mutations 4. random mating 5. no natural selection (Population, Flow, Mutation, Mating, Natural) |
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Term
Fill in the blank: Natural selection doesn't -------- genetic diversity, it ------ genetic diversity. |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
the contribution of an individual makes to the gene pool of the next generation relative to the contributions of other individuals |
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Term
Identify the type of natural selection. [image] |
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Definition
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Term
Identify the type of natural selection. [image] |
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Definition
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Term
Identify the type of natural selection.[image] |
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Definition
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