Topic 1 Life Events : For this topic, you will choose two (2) topics from the at
ID: 286964 • Letter: T
Question
Topic 1 Life Events: For this topic, you will choose two (2) topics from the attached list and construct two one-page concept sketches. Remember that a concept sketch consists of a sketch (or series of sketches), labels, and complete sentences written around the sketch describing the important processes or parts of the sketch.
Mesozoic Era
Great Dying: what it is, when it occurred, what types of life it affected, and a summary and evaluation of each of the possible causes
Earliest dinosaurs and their ancestors: what they were, when they lived, what factors led to the dominance of dinosaurs
Jurassic and Cretaceous dinosaurs: the names and characteristics of the main types, and how they lived
Ammonites: what they were, where and how they lived, their variation in characteristics with time, and importance for determining the ages of Mesozoic rocks
Rudist reefs: what they are, what types of organisms form them, how they are expressed in the rock record and some examples
Rocks and fossils of the Petrified Forest and Painted Desert (AZ): the age, name, and sequence of rocks, the environments in which they are interpreted to have formed, and how the geologic events led to these places
Dinosaur National Park (UT-CO): the age, name, and sequence of rocks, the environments in which they are interpreted to have formed, and how later geologic events affected the rock layers
Early mammals: what they were, when they lived, how they lived, and what later creatures are related to them
Rise of angiosperm (flowering plants): when this type of plant first developed, what the characteristics are, how they are expressed in the rock record (including pollen), and how they changed the appearance of landscapes and the behavior of creatures
Jurassic rocks of Zion National Park (UT): the age and characteristic of each formation in the sequence of rocks, the environment in which each formation is interpreted to have formed, and how the sequence of rocks is expressed in the scenery
Capitol Reef and Grand Staircase (UT): the ages, names, and characteristics of Mesozoic formations, the environments in which the main layers formed, and later geologic events that helped shape the scenery
Mesa Verde National Park (CO): the age and characteristic of each formation in the sequence of rocks, the environment in which each formation is interpreted to have formed, and how the sequence of rocks is expressed in the scenery and influenced the people who built the cliff dwellings
Sierra Nevada (CA): the ages and types of rocks exposed in the high part of the Sierra Nevada, the tectonic setting in which they are interpreted to have formed, and processes that resulted in present-day scenery
Franciscan Formation and Great Valley sequence (CA): what they are, their characteristic rock types and structures, and the tectonic setting in which they are interpreted to have formed
Geologic Events (choose 2) Life Events (choose 2)
Sonoma orogeny: what and where it is, when it occurred, its tectonic setting, and how it is expressed in the rock record
Nevadan orogeny: what and where it is, when it occurred, its tectonic setting, and how it is expressed in the rock record
Sevier orogeny: what and where it is, when it occurred, its tectonic setting, and how it is expressed in the rock record
Breakup of Pangaea and dispersal of Gondwana: how the distribution of continents changed due to the breakup of Pangaea and Gondwana, and when different ocean basins were formed
Wrangellia: what it is, its characteristic ages and sequence of rocks, the tectonic setting in which it is interpreted to have formed, and its present-day distribution and interpretations of this distribution
Formation of the Atlantic Ocean and resulting movement of North America: when and how different parts of the Atlantic Ocean formed, and how continents on either side moved with time
Cretaceous interior seaway: what and where it is, when it occurred, its tectonic setting, and how it is expressed in the rock record
Bisbee Group of southern Arizona: what and where it is, when it occurred, its tectonic setting, and how it is expressed in the rock record
Laramide calderas of southern Arizona: what and where they are, the types of rocks they contain, and how they are interpreted to have formed (e.g., Tucson Mountains, Silverbell Mountains, and Tombstone Hills)
Monoclines of the Colorado Plateau: what and where they are, when they formed, models for how they formed, overall tectonic setting, how they are expressed in the scenery, and names and location of examples
Laramide copper deposits (AZ and NM): what they are, where they occur, their characteristic rock types, hydrothermal alteration and mineralization, how they are interpreted to have formed
San Juan Basin and energy resources: the location and structural setting of the basin, the main sequence of rock layers, the environment in which each layer is interpreted to have formed, the types of energy resources discovered in the basin, and how each resource is extracted
Overthrust belt of central Utah and eastern Idaho: what it is, some typical structural geometries, when it formed, and its importance in petroleum resources
Uranium deposits in Mesozoic rocks of the Colorado Plateau: the characteristic of each type of uranium deposit hosted by Mesozoic rocks, where each type occurs, and how each is interpreted to have formed
Great Dying: what it is, when it occurred, what types of life it affected, and a summary and evaluation of each of the possible causes
Earliest dinosaurs and their ancestors: what they were, when they lived, what factors led to the dominance of dinosaurs
Jurassic and Cretaceous dinosaurs: the names and characteristics of the main types, and how they lived
Ammonites: what they were, where and how they lived, their variation in characteristics with time, and importance for determining the ages of Mesozoic rocks
Rudist reefs: what they are, what types of organisms form them, how they are expressed in the rock record and some examples
Rocks and fossils of the Petrified Forest and Painted Desert (AZ): the age, name, and sequence of rocks, the environments in which they are interpreted to have formed, and how the geologic events led to these places
Dinosaur National Park (UT-CO): the age, name, and sequence of rocks, the environments in which they are interpreted to have formed, and how later geologic events affected the rock layers
Early mammals: what they were, when they lived, how they lived, and what later creatures are related to them
Rise of angiosperm (flowering plants): when this type of plant first developed, what the characteristics are, how they are expressed in the rock record (including pollen), and how they changed the appearance of landscapes and the behavior of creatures
Jurassic rocks of Zion National Park (UT): the age and characteristic of each formation in the sequence of rocks, the environment in which each formation is interpreted to have formed, and how the sequence of rocks is expressed in the scenery
Capitol Reef and Grand Staircase (UT): the ages, names, and characteristics of Mesozoic formations, the environments in which the main layers formed, and later geologic events that helped shape the scenery
Mesa Verde National Park (CO): the age and characteristic of each formation in the sequence of rocks, the environment in which each formation is interpreted to have formed, and how the sequence of rocks is expressed in the scenery and influenced the people who built the cliff dwellings
Sierra Nevada (CA): the ages and types of rocks exposed in the high part of the Sierra Nevada, the tectonic setting in which they are interpreted to have formed, and processes that resulted in present-day scenery
Franciscan Formation and Great Valley sequence (CA): what they are, their characteristic rock types and structures, and the tectonic setting in which they are interpreted to have formed
Explanation / Answer
1. life events in sonoma orogeny: Terrestrial life of plant's, fungi and arthropods saws massive desert. This orogeny was period of mountain building activity in western America. 2. Nevadan orogeny: occurred during Jurassic to early Cretaceous time which is approximately from 155 to 145 million years an area of western margin of North America. The fossil are ammonites, inoceramids, and other typical maine fossils.
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