Apr 07, 2009 23:01
1. The picture above shows:
A. Mud cracks.
B. A sideways dinosaur track; the picture should be rotated ninety degrees counterclockwise to be right-side-up.
C. A sideways dinosaur track; the picture should be rotated ninety degrees clockwise to be right-side-up.
D. A right-side-up dinosaur track.
E. An upside-down dinosaur track.
This is a dinosaur track, from dinosaur ridge, and the dinosaur stomped down into the mud, so the track is right-side-up.
Points Earned: 1/1
Correct Answer: D
Your Response: D
2. Extinction of existing species:
A. Occurred at a low level throughout geologic history, punctuated by mass extinctions when many types were killed over very short times.
B. Occurred only at times of catastrophic mass extinctions.
C. Is a process that happened in the past but cannot happen today.
D. Occurred at a low level throughout geologic history.
E. Is an unconformity.
Extinction has happened slowly throughout geologic history, but with a few dramatic, catastrophic mass extinctions. We may be causing the latest of those mass extinctions.
Points Earned: 1/1
Correct Answer: A
Your Response: A
3. There are many large mammals on Earth today. This is because:
A. Small mammals were not able to outcompete the dinosaurs for big-animal jobs, but after the dinosaurs were killed, some large mammals evolved from small mammals to fill the large-animal jobs.
B. The warm blood of the many large mammals that lived before the meteorite impact allowed them to survive the cold from the meteorite impact that killed the dinosaurs.
C. Dinosaurs in hibernation were killed by acid rain, which didn't hurt things that could run away.
D. Small mammals wanted to become bigger, and after the dinosaurs were killed, the small mammals had their chance and so made themselves bigger.
E. The very large mammals that were alive on Earth with the dinosaurs have gotten smaller over time because the mammals don't have to be big to compete with the dinosaurs any more.
There are “big-animal” jobs-eating tall trees, eating smaller animals, etc. But the total number of big-animal jobs is limited. The dinosaurs filled the big-animal jobs before mammals really got going, and mammals were not able to displace the dinosaurs. Some small mammals survived the meteorite that killed the dinosaurs, and then evolved to give big mammals over millions of years and longer. There were almost no big mammals before the dinosaurs were killed off, volition has nothing to do with evolution, and running away doesn’t avoid acid rain.
Points Earned: 0/1
Correct Answer: A
Your Response: B
4. Considering long-term averages, and assuming that we don’t deploy space-based defenses against incoming meteorites, a reasonable estimate of the chance of an average U.S. citizen being killed by the effects of a meteorite or comet impact is that this risk is about the same as the chance of being killed by:
A. Choking on a Diet Pepsi can.
B. The various diseases that come from smoking, overeating and under-exercising for a long time.
C. Crash of a car.
D. Crash of a commercial airplane.
E. A dinosaur stampede.
Nobody that we know eats Pepsi cans, and while there are still meteorites in the solar system that can hit and kill, there are no dinosaurs left except on “The Flintstones”. A reputable study found that a meteorite impact might not occur for millions of years (or might occur next year…) but then might kill billions of people; plane crashes usually kill a few to a few hundred each year. Add up the deaths over a sufficiently long time, and plane crashes and meteorite impacts likely are similarly dangerous. But car crashes, smoking, and being fat and lazy are way more dangerous to us.
Points Earned: 0/1
Correct Answer: D
Your Response: E
5. Examine the two pictures above, labeled I and II. They are from the same sediment core collected in sea-floor muds from beneath the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of South Carolina. (The pictures are scanning electron micrographs by Brian Huber of the Smithsonian Institution, and the scale is the same on both, as shown at the bottom of each.) One picture shows a sample from just below the unique layer marking the extinction that killed the dinosaurs, and the other picture shows a sample from just above that unique layer.
Which is which?
A. I is from below the unique layer, and II is from above the unique layer.
B. I is from above the unique layer, and II is from below the unique layer.
Before the impact, biodiversity was high, as shown in I, which includes fossils from below the unique layer and thus deposited before the meteorite hit. After the impact, most of the living types were killed, giving rise to the limited diversity seen in II from above the unique layer after the impact.
Points Earned: 0/1
Correct Answer: A
Your Response: B