Sovi.AI - AI Math Tutor

Scan to solve math questions

QUESTION IMAGE

1. how do weathering, erosion, and deposition work together to create s…

Question

  1. how do weathering, erosion, and deposition work together to create sedimentary rock layers?
  2. what evidence in the cross section suggests that tectonic forces acted after deposition?
  3. how do fossils help scientists interpret both the relative age and past environments of rock layers?
  4. why are both relative dating and absolute dating necessary to understand earths history?
  5. how does the carbon-14 decay graph demonstrate that radioactive decay occurs at a constant rate?
  6. explain in 1-2 full sentences how scientists can reconstruct a regions geologic history even when they cannot observe past events directly.

Explanation:

Brief Explanations
  1. Weathering breaks bedrock into sediments; erosion moves these sediments; deposition layers them over time. Compaction and cementation turn layered sediments into sedimentary rock.
  2. Evidence includes tilted/folded rock layers, faults cutting through existing layers, or intrusions that cross deposited layers (all formed after the layers were laid down).
  3. For relative age: Index fossils show rock layers are the same age across locations, and the law of superposition uses fossil positions to order layers. For past environments: Fossil types match known habitats (e.g., marine fossils mean the area was once ocean).
  4. Relative dating orders geologic events without exact ages, while absolute dating provides numerical ages for rocks/fossils. Together, they create a complete timeline of Earth's history.
  5. The carbon-14 decay graph is a curve with a consistent half-life: the time for half the isotope to decay is constant, regardless of the initial amount, showing a fixed decay rate.
  6. Scientists use principles like superposition, cross-cutting relationships, and fossil correlation, along with radiometric dating, to piece together events from rock layers, fossils, and geologic features, even without direct observation.

Answer:

  1. Weathering breaks down bedrock into sediment, erosion transports the sediment to a new location, deposition drops the sediment in horizontal layers over time, and compaction/cementation of these layered sediments forms sedimentary rock layers.
  2. Tilted, folded, or faulted rock layers, or igneous intrusions that cut through existing deposited layers, indicate tectonic forces acted after deposition.
  3. For relative age: Index fossils and the law of superposition let scientists order rock layers by age. For past environments: Fossil organisms' known habitat requirements reveal the environmental conditions when the rock formed (e.g., coral fossils mean a warm, shallow marine environment).
  4. Relative dating establishes the sequence of geologic events, while absolute dating provides specific numerical ages for rocks and events. Combining them creates a complete, contextualized timeline of Earth's history.
  5. The carbon-14 decay graph shows a consistent exponential curve where the half-life (time for 50% of the isotope to decay) is constant, meaning the rate of decay does not change over time.
  6. Scientists use geologic principles (like superposition and cross-cutting relationships), fossil evidence, and radiometric dating to infer and reconstruct a region's geologic history by analyzing rock layers and features that record past events.