Wildlife of Gondwana
Transcription
Wildlife of Gondwana
Wildlife of Gondwana Unit of Work: Level 3 PrimeSCI! Credits This teacher resource booklet was devised and produced by the following members of the staff at the Monash Science Centre (1990 - 2012): Professor Pat Vickers-Rich Priscilla Gaff Dr. Corrie Williams Special thanks to: Kathy Smith, Dr. Sanja Van Huet and Cindy Hann - for the education framework and content Special thanks to: Peter Trusler - for the artwork The cliparts used in this kit are from CorelDraw 7. No part of this document may be copied or distributed without the written permission of PrimeSCI! This excludes the use of handouts for classroom activities in conjunction with this kit. Contact Us PrimeSCI! 9 Rainforest Walk Monash University Clayton, 3800 Victoria Australia The Education Team at the Monash Science Centre was proudly supported: The research on the fossils from the Precambrian included in the exhibition has been generously supported by: Phone: 613 9905 1370 Fax: 613 9905 1312 primesci.monash.edu IGCP493 Special Thanks The Monash Science Centre would like to thank Visions of Australia - an Australian Government Initiative, for their generous support for the 'Wildlife of Gondwana Exhibition'. The Monash Science Centre would also like to thank the School of Geosciences, Faculty of Science, Monash University, for their support of the scientific research and research materials that are on display in the 'Wildlife of Gondwana Exhibition'. Education Level of this Kit This education kit is suitable for the following year levels: Prep 1 2 3 4 5 7 6 2 8 9 10 11 12 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Index Item Page Credits How to Contact Us Index Key Understandings National Statement in Science Part 1: What do we know? Part 2: What do we want to find out? Part 3: How can we find out more information? Part 4: Processing the experience Activities 1 - 7 Part 5: Linking activities Background Information Glossary Resources 2 2 3 3 3 4 7 10 10 11-18 19 20-21 22-23 24 Grades 3 & 4: Key Understandings Key Understandings: 4A fossil is the preserved remains of once-living organisms 4Fossils can be formed in a variety of ways. 4Fossils may provide information about the changes that have occurred on Earth over time. 4Scientists use geological time periods to distinguish specific periods of time in Earth's history. 4Scientists use fossils to reconstruct living organisms. 4By studying these fossils, palaeontologists can begin to suggest what kind of food they ate, their behaviour, the conditions they lived in at the time, etc. 4Living things have changed over time. 4Fossils can be formed in a variety of ways. National Statement in Science: LEVEL 3: Life & Living - Biodiversity Change & Continuity 3.9 Explains why some living things have become extinct and identifies current endangered species. Earth and Beyond 3.2 Relates changes in the physical environment to physical processes. 3 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 PART 1: What do we know? 1. Locating the Boundaries of Experience. The experiences outlined in this document invite students to think about ideas and information related to the topic area. In many cases simple stimuli, both visual and auditory such as picture charts, multi media images from internet sites, pictures from books, texts, story telling, etc., have been selected to provide a way to promote discussion and prompt children to recall any existing relevant knowledge they may have to contribute to the exploration of the topic in the classroom. Creating a Thinking Board TEACHER BACKGROUND: 4Act as scribe for your class and create a “Thinking Board”. 4To find out what the students prior knowledge is on the topic of fossils, ask the students "What do you know about fossils?" 4Use the board to record the students ideas and information. 4This is also the place to record any questions that have been raised during, or as a result of sharing ideas. 4Alternatively, students ideas can be written in outlines of dinosaur shapes on the board. 4In this activity, all student ideas and contributions are valued and important. 4This board represents the students' areas of interest in relation to this topic and is therefore useful as a 'working display' in the classroom. 4The board can be returned to on a regular basis. It may be used many times; as a starting point for research work, to inform the selection of activities used in the classroom, to revise topic language, to display new pieces of information as appropriate and relevant, to contribute information when constructing a glossary of terms, etc. 4This input forms the basis for future direction and topic exploration within the unit. 4 some dinosaurs were very large birds can be fossils fish can be fos sils WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Follow Up: Student Journals Throughout the topic students write entries on a regular basis in their journals. The focus of these entries is to enable the student to record a new piece of information or an observation they made that was of particular interest to them. These entries may be shared. At the completion of the first session related to the Thinking Board students are encouraged to record such an entry in their journal. Encourage the use of drawings and key words. Journals may be an effective strategy for encouraging students to reflect on new information and consider how this may link with their existing ideas. These entries are also a useful tool when assessing student involvement and interest in the unit topic and may determine the future direction of unit planning. Post Box Activity Equipment: " " " 4 boxes to be used as postboxes. Each box is labelled with a number between 1-4. Student activity sheets Post Box Activity (see blackline masters). This activity is designed to provide students with the opportunity to express their understanding of several questions related to the topic. The activity is completed anonymously, however, all answers must be a sensible response. This activity also exposes students to a range of views held within the class and provides an opportunity for students to consider views that are perhaps alternative explanations to their own. It is also very informative for the teacher to identify the range of views that exist within the class and the prevalence of these views. These findings can then be used to inform further teaching in this topic. i KEY REFERENCE: For further information on this teaching strategy refer to: Baird, J. Northfield, J. (Eds).(1995). Learning from the PEEL Experience. Monash University Printing Services. Procedure: «Distribute to students the blackline master sheet headed POSTBOX ACTIVITY. «Read through the questions that are listed on the sheet. «Explain the sequence of procedure to be followed. «Students work individually and complete their responses to the questions. «Students post their responses into corresponding boxes. «Students are placed into four groups. Each group receives one postbox, then the students read through the responses and categorize these to represent the range of views held. «Each group presents a report to the class group outlining the types of responses present in their box and the prevalence of these views. 5 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Post Box Activity 1 What are fossils? 2 What can fossils tell us? 3 How do fossils form? 4 What kinds of things can be fossilised? 6 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 PART 2: What do we want to find out? There is research evidence (Biddulph 1990, p.68) that when children have that opportunity in science they prefer learning from their own questions and value learning about other children's questions as this often challenges them to think about aspects of a topic they had not considered. Fleer, M. Hardy, T. 1996 Pinning Questions on the Wall 4Return to the Thinking Board constructed in the last session. Review the information. 4Working with students, discuss the information on the board. 4Encourage students to write one or two questions they hope will be answered during the unit. 4These questions are written in large print and pinned on the walls of the classroom. 4They are removed only when the author of the question feels it has been answered, such as after their visit to the exhibition. In fact, students could bring their question along to the exhibition, and write the answer on the back. This activity has the possibility to set an agenda for the unit, to involve the students in the structure and focus of the unit, to identify any gaps in information to be taught, to focus on a particular task each lesson and to reflect on what has been achieved and learned throughout the unit of work. How d o scie ntists what know dinosa urs at e? What is a fossil? did life where d n a n e Wh ? h begin on Eart (Reference: Learning from the PEEL experience Page 242) Follow Up: Student Journals At the completion of the 'Post Box Activity' and the 'Pinning Questions on the Wall,' students are encouraged to record an entry in their journal describing any knew information they now know about fossils. Encourage the use of drawings and key words. Journals can be an effective strategy to encourage students to reflect on new information and consider how this may link with their existing ideas. This entry will be a useful strategy when discussing the coming exhibition with students. 7 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Preparing for the Visit - Topic Vocabulary Across: 4. A kind of crustacean, often found as a fossil, that lived in the ocean before the time of the dinosaurs. Clues... Down: 1.The remains or any evidence, usually found in rocks, of life from the past. 2. A person who studies fossils. 3. An animal that has no backbone. 5. A massive supercontinent of the past, that included South America, Africa, Australia, Antarctica, New Zealand, India and China all being joined together. Across: 1. A type of rock most fossils are found in. 2. The name for the group of animals that have a backbone. 3. A skeleton on the outside of an animals body. 6. A type of reptile, that is now extinct, and walks with their limbs held directly held under their body. 8. When a type of animal or plant is no longer living on Earth. 2 1 S P d 3 2 V e I n v 3 1 4 T r E o x F 7 b i E x s 5 6 i o n a u 8 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Topic Vocabulary - ANSWERS Clues... Across: 5. The remains or any evidence, usually found in rocks, of life from the past. Down: 1. A person who studies fossils. 2. An animal that has no backbone. 6. A massive supercontinent of the past, that included South America, Africa, Australia, Antarctica, New Zealand, India and China all being joined together. Across: 1. A type of rock most fossils are found in. 2. The name for the group of animals that have a backbone. 3. A skeleton on the outside of an animals body. 4. A kind of crustacean, often found as a fossil, that lived in the ocean before the time of the dinosaurs. 7. A type of reptile, that is now extinct, and walks with their limbs held directly held under their body. 8. When a type of animal or plant is no longer living on Earth. 1 1 S e 2 V d e m e n i t r e b 3 E t r x F 4 T r i l o s b i s P a r l y a e t e o n s t o e 2 n v e k 5 l g 7 e d i n o s t o n x t i n c t e b r o n d a u r i 6 e l r l o i I w a t n a e t 9 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 PART 3: How Can We Find Out More Information? Visiting the Exhibition and the students complete Scavenger Hunt Sheet. PART 4: Processing the Experience. TEACHER BACKGROUND: Exploring individual children's understanding of and opinions about science is an important component of science teaching as these ideas have direct implications for their learning and the teaching of science. Providing a range of ways for students to express their understandings is also crucial. Exposing students to a variety of alternative ideas and interpretations encourages them to consider alternative viewpoints to their own. This can enhance learning. It can also expose the students to how science really works: hypothesis, testing, and refinement or even rejection of ideas. The activities below are designed to encourage students to process and make sense of information they have covered in classroom research and through their visit to the exhibition. The following activities focus on visual representation of information, providing students with a vehicle for expressing their understandings and conveying these to others. A Period of Time Create a class mural depicting the periods of geological time. Use one colour as a background coding for each period of time. Students contribute to the mural by constructing representations of plant and/or animal life from each time period. Include bubbles of background information composed by students. Display the mural somewhere in the classroom or in a prominent display area. Fossil Diorama Have students select a fossil of their choice. Students share with the class their choice and their knowledge of this animal or plant. Working independently, in pairs or small groups, students now construct a diorama in a shoe-box depicting an interesting scene of this fossil's existence. Students may need to undertake further reading and research to find out more about the fossil they have selected to determine what other animals and plants are suitable for inclusion in their diorama. Dinosaur Vote Create a class room graph where each student votes for their favourite dinosaur. Each student must write their name on a piece of paper (all pieces of paper need to be the same size) with the name of their dinosaur, these pieces of paper can be used to create a bar graph in the classroom. 10 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 1: Fossil Sequence Cut & paste the following pictures into a logical sequence next to the sentences to tell the story of how the dinosaur became a fossil. The body of the dead dinosaur falls to the bottom of the river. Pressure from the sediments above makes the buried layers of mud and sand become rock. The muscles and flesh of the dead dinosaur rot away, leaving only the skeleton. Rock is eroded away by the weather e.g. wind and rain. Skeleton is covered by layers of mud and sand. Fossil is discovered by a palaeontologist. 11 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 2: Make your own Fossil Fossils are evidence of things that were living. Usually fossils are formed in rocks called sedimentary rocks. In the previous activity, the students should have sequenced the order of how a fossil can be formed in a sedimentary rock. Fossils can be skeletons (bone, shell, etc), imprints of left behind (such as leaves), or traces of activity (footprints). Sometimes when a shell or skeleton is fossilised, the original part of the animal dissolves and only a hole remains. This hole left by the fossil is called a mould. Sometimes a cast of the fossil is made when the hole is later filled in by other minerals, which then takes on the shape of the original fossil. In this activity students can make our own casts of fossil and modern skeletons and shells using plasticine and plaster. Equipment: 4Lots of plasticine 4Stirring sticks 4Shells - lots! 4Small paper or plastic plates 4Plaster (with cup) 4Foam or plastic cups Procedure: ðChoose a shell you would like to make a cast from. ðFlatten a piece of plasticine into a round disc, and ensure the disc is about 3cm thick. ðPress the plasticine disc onto a paper plate. ðPress a shell into the plasticine, so as you leave an impression of the shell. ðRoll some plasticine "sausages". Use these to build a wall around the edge of your plasticine pad. ðPlace two tablespoons of water in a cup. ðAdd three tablespoons of plaster and stir with a stick until the water is mixed through. ðMake sure your plaster isn't too dry or wet - you may need to experiment with this. ðSlowly pour the plaster mixture onto your plasticine shell impressions and fill the well. ðGently pat the mixture with your stick to encourage bubbles to float to the top. ðLeave for about 20 minutes or until the plaster is hard. ðPeel off the plasticine to reveal your very own fossils! ðTo make it look more authentic, the students can paint their fossils, and even add sand to the paint to make it look more like a rock. 12 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 3: Creatures of the Slime Creatures of the Slime - these animals (if they are indeed animals!) - predated the dinosaurs by millions of years! They lived in the oceans on Earth during a time know as the Precambrian, from around 600 to 542 million years ago. Some of the best fossils of these organisms are from Australia, Namibia and Russia. The Flinders Ranges in South Australia is one of the places where these kinds of fossils have been found in great numbers. The following activities allow students to become familiar with these early multicellular organisms - some of which may be our ancestors! Fossilised creatures of the slime! Background information The Ediacaran organisms are all soft bodied (a bit like a worm or soft coral). This means they had no hard parts such as a skeleton, like you and I have, or hard shells on the outside, like a crab or insect. It is much easier for the hard-parts (like bones and shells) to end up as fossils than the soft-parts - which usually wear away or rot before they have a chance to be fossilized. This experiment explores how difficult it is for a soft-bodied animals to end up being preserved as a fossil. Equipment: 4soft jelly lollies - like raspberry lollies or jelly beans (to be your 'soft bodied animal) 4shells (to be your 'hard bodied animal' 4plastic cups 4sand or mud Procedure: ª The students work in groups of 4. ª Each group has a 2 cups, a 'soft animal' and a 'hard animal'. ª Place sand or mud at the bottom of each cup. ª Then lay an 'animal' at the bottom of the cup. ª Next fill each cup with water. ª This is left for a few days, and checked each day to see what happens to their 'fossils'. ª Extra: one group might like to 'cover' their animals in sand and then pour water over. Discussion Questions: What happened in your experiment? Which animal lasted the longest? Why do you think so? Can you think of any soft-bodied animals you have met? Can you think of any animals with hard parts? What does this experiment tell you about how fossils are formed and what sorts of organisms are most likely to end up as fossils? 13 raspberry lolly in water hard shell in water WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 4: Creatures with No Eyes! Ediacarans (organisms which lived about 548-575 million years ago) lived in the dark because they had no eyes! We rely on sight to identify objects, to find out way, to appreciate changes in our environment and just to get through our life each day. Imagine - what it would be like to live in a world where you could not see? Procedure: 4Put students in groups of 4. 4Give each group a picture of one of the Ediacaran animals (pictured below). 4Each group, or student, first needs to make a model of their animal in play-dough or plasticine. 4Check their animals with the picture - make sure they didn’t add any eyes to the animals. 4Next, each group needs to brainstorm about how they think each animal survived in its environment if they couldn’t see. They might like to brainstorm the following questions: Is it possible, and how would it: ð find food? ð tell when it found another one of its own kind if it couldn’t see the other animals? ð tell if it is night or day? And would it matter? ð tell if it is winter or summer? ð tell if other animals are nearby? Remind the students that these animals couldn’t talk like you and I - they had no voice box! All of these creatures lived in oceans that covered Australia, parts of Namibia, northern Russia, 545-575 million years ago! Dickinsonia This animal lived about 550 to 565 million years ago. It looked like a kind of worm but it may have been something completely different! It moved slowly along the ocean floor, eating the slimy microbial (like algae) mats. Charniodiscus This animal lived 540 to 553 million years ago. It most likely lived like a modern 'Sea Pen', attached to the ocean floor and filter feeding or absorbing food from the water. 14 Pteridinium This animal lived in the oceans about 565 to 545 million years ago. It may have lived partly buried in the ocean floor sediments. Palaeontologists still need to keep studying this creature to really understand it! WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 5: Dinosaur Footprints Some dinosaurs were really big. Others were not so large, but many left footprints in sands and clay when they walked. Some of these were fossilised and have been found by palaeontologists, both amateur and professional. On the back of this page are several drawings of a real Australian dinosaur trackway, found near Winton in southwestern Queensland, Australia. Interpreting the Fossil Footprints Photocopy the track-way for each student. Let the students know that they are now 'palaeontologists', as they will be studying fossil footprints, much like a palaeontologist would who studies 'trace fossils' - otherwise know as 'ichnofossils'. Discuss the following questions with the class: 1. How many animals made the trackway? 2. What kinds of animals do you think they were? Why do you think this? Give evidence. 3. How many toes did each animal have? How can you tell? 4. In what direction did the animals move? 5. Did they change speed or direction? How can you tell? 6. What do you think might have happened to produce this trackway? Students could either: $ write their own story $ work together and roll play their story $ draw a cartoon of the story Remind students that they can interpret the track-way however they like, so long as they can justify their story using the evidence. Alternative stories might be: the animal leaving behind the small footprints was a bird and it flew away, or a baby dinosaur and it got on its mother's back, or maybe one of the dinosaurs was eaten! 15 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 5: Dinosaur Footprints 16 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 6: Body Bits Aim: To become familiar with the names of bones in the vertebrate body of a dinosaur. Equipment: ð coloured pencils or textas ð photocopy of this sheet Procedure: 1. To get to know the names of dinosaur bones, colour the different bones of the dinosaur using the colour chart below. 2. After you have finished colouring in the dinosaur, create your own jig-saw puzzle by cutting up the picture. Then try to put all of the pieces back together. Orbit (eye socket) Nostril Sacral vertebra Ilium Mandible Scapula Humerus Ischium Phalanx Ulna Radius Femur Pubis Rib Fibula Tibia Metatarsal Phalanyx Colour chart: Humerus and femur Ulna, radius, tibia and fibula Skull and jaws Neck and tail Ribs red yellow blue pink black 17 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Activity 7: Megafauna Mural After the time of the dinosaurs, some amazing large animals - known as Megafauna lived in Australia. Many of these animals lived in Australia about 50,000 years ago, and have become extinct. Animals like giant pythons, huge kangaroos, enormous wombatlike creatures, and VERY BIG birds! As a class, research these animals and create a classroom mural. Students could work in pairs to create their contribution to the mural. Each pair should provide information about their animal, just like a museum provides information about the fossils or animals on display. Students could then practise their communication skills by giving the class an oral presentation about their chosen animal. Use the following website to find out information about the kinds of animal you might like to chose: 8 http://www.abc.net.au/science/ozfossil/megafauna/fauna/fauna.htm 8 http://abc.net.au/beasts/ 8 http://abc.net.au/science/ausbeasts/factfiles/ 8 http://www.parks.sa.gov.au/naracoorte/wonambi/animals/extinct/index.htm Here are animals you might like to chose that lived in Australia about 50,000 years ago! Diprotodon: a giant wombat that was about 2 meters tall. Procoptodon: a giant short-faced kangaroo that was 2 to 3 meters tall. Thylacoleo: a marsupial lion that was the largest meat eating marsupial to have ever lived in Australia. Megalibgwilia ramsayi: a very large long-beaked echidna. Megalania: a 6 meter long giant lizard. Genyornis: a 2 meter tall flightless bird. Wonambi: a 5 to 6 meter long snake. 18 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Part 5: Linking activities Planning for learning requires the inclusion of explicit activities that 'focus on building a richer meaning for the knowledge presented by the teacher by linking it to elements of memory.” (p.187 Baird.J & Mitchell, I. 1995). In this unit, concept mapping is used as a strategy to provide valuable feedback about the effectiveness of the processing activities outlined earlier in the unit. The activity outlined below allows the students to work in groups and explore all the possible links they can think of between key concepts covered to date. How well students understand the content covered to date may be reflected in the types responses each group composes. Activity: Completing Statements from the Stem Students complete responses to sentence stems. Some examples include: $ We know about animals that lived in the past because…………….. $ Some fossils tell us that………………. $ My favourite fossil was _________ because ………………… Students complete sentences and these are shared with rest of the class by displaying them in a special area of the room. Students can be encouraged to go on a print walk and read other students responses. For the younger students, the sentence stem can be written on the board, and the teacher can list for the students all the ideas they have for sentence endings. Activity: Group Concept Maps Concept mapping is a procedure that assists students in their understanding of the connections between the major concepts in a content area. (Baird.J & Mitchell, I. 1995). «Using key words from the topic list select 5 and paste on large cards. fossil «Place these cards on the floor in a random arrangement. «Place students in teams of at least 4. Each team is given a piece of streamer. «The team must select two words from the floor ,and when it is their turn they must place their strip of streamer between these cards and dinosaur explain their understanding of how these words could be linked. «On a sheet of paper record the main ideas expressed (in key words) and place this sheet on the piece of streamer. «Continue until all groups have had a turn. If there are further ideas, continue again for another round. This can also be completed on a pin board, and the results can be left on display. This activity provides informative feedback about how students are making sense of the information which has been covered through the unit, and also exposes students to other students' ideas. 19 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Background Information What are fossils? Fossils are the remains of once living organisms. How do fossils form? Fossils are usually found in sedimentary rocks. Sedimentary rocks are often made up of particles sand, silt or gravel. When an organism dies, it may be covered by layers of sediment, which later consolidate into sedimentary rocks. Sediments are usually deposited in the bottom of lakes, rivers or in the sea, or even from windblown sand dunes. These layers can sometimes enclose the remains of the organism. If conditions are right, the layers will consolidate (solidify) into rocks, and the preserved remains of the dead organism will become fossils. How old is the Earth? The Earth began to solidify and divide into its layers, and have a solid surface, about 4.6 billion years ago, or in other words that's 4600 million years ago long, long ago! When did life begin? The oldest records of life on Earth are 3.8 billion years old that's 3800 million years ago! What did the first life look like? Very small! Microscopic. The oldest life forms on Earth were so small, to see them you would need a microscope. These organisms were single celled - made up of only one cell. We are multicelled animals, made up of many cells. When did the first vertebrate animals appear? The first fossils of backboned (vertebrate) animals are Cambrian in age, dating back nearly 530 million years. These first vertebrates were fish but fish that had no jaws. Can fossils tell you the age of a rock? Fossils can give a relative date, not a date in years. Trilobites are found in rocks that lie below those that contain dinosaurs, and so trilobites lived before the dinosaurs. Trilobites became extinct approximately 245 million years ago, so if you find a rock with a trilobite in it you know the rock must be older than 245 million years old. When did the biggest extinction event occur? The extinction of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous time period (some 65 million years ago) was nothing when compared to what happened on Earth at the end of the Permian about 245 million years ago. Some palaeontologists have suggested that up to 97% of life was wiped out at that time. Life was almost lost at the end of the Permian. What happened to cause such a massive wipe out of species at the end of the Permian? There are many theories, but for the moment this is one of the big mysteries that is not so well explained. In the millions of years before the end of the Permian, there had been a lengthy glaciation big ice sheets moved from the north and the south affecting many continents. So, times were cold. But during the Permian, glaciation subsided and at the end of Permian times there were great volcanic outpourings and Earth may have been blasted by a large meteorite! With all the water tied up in ice, the sea level was lowered and many of the areas of the world that form the shallow marine waters around the continents were laid bare. These are areas where most marine animals today thrive and would have in the Late Permian. So, those shallow marine animals would have been under great stress. We know that the was vast volcanic activity at this time would have thrown ash up in the air which would have caused climatic change that affected animals and plants the world around. And the recent evidence that a gigantic meteorite hit Earth and caused rapid and catastrophic climatic cooling, wildfires, acid rain may well have also contributed to the mass extinctions that occurred at this time. Thankfully life survived - but maybe only just! 20 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Background Information What killed the dinosaurs? The debate still rages between palaeontologists as to what killed the dinosaurs, some 65 million years ago, it may have been instantaneous or prolonged over a period of hundreds of thousands or possibly even a few million years. At present, there are two main ideas about what wiped out the dinosaurs. Asteroids and comets? One theory suggests that the extinction of the dinosaurs was brought about by the impact of an extraterrestrial object, a comet or an asteroid. Such an impact could have brought about an immediate rise in the surface temperature of the Earth, causing widespread wildfires, dramatic increase in global ocean temperatures, and a short period of terrible acid rain. This short-term event may have then been followed by a longer term cooling of Earth temperatures because of the dust particles kicked up in the atmosphere by the impact, restricting the amount of sunlight reaching the Earth's surface. Volcanic activity? A second theory about dinosaur extinction suggests that intensive volcanic activity filled the atmosphere with particles and reduced the amount of energy reaching the surface of the Earth from the Sun. Effects of even small volcanic eruptions such as Krakatoa, Pinatubo or Mount St Helens have shown a temperature drop due to volcanism. Or a double whammy? Some scientists have suggested that perhaps the impact of a comet or asteroid triggered massive volcanic activity on Earth, such as that in India at about this same time. In any case, the biological consequence of one or both of these events brought about a relatively rapid turnover in the vertebrate and invertebrate fauna of the Earth. What happened to life on Earth after the dinosaurs become extinct? During the last 65 million years, once most of the dinosaurs became extinct, the world changed a great deal. From the warm Greenhouse conditions of the Cretaceous some 100 to 65 million years ago, the Earth's climate began to cool. It was during this time, without the dinosaurs that mammals and birds, insects and teleost fishes exploded into many different kinds of new species. The flora changed too. Plants bearing flowers became dominant and so the whole smell of the world changed from that of the green conifer forests of the Mesozoic to the blossom-bearing shrubs and trees that are typical of today. What is megafanua? Megafauna is defined as reptiles, birds, and mammals over 40 kilograms in weight. During the Plesitocene Period (1.8 million years to 10,000 years ago), Australia supported a diverse assemblage of megafaunal mammals such as Diprotodon, megafaunal birds such as Genyornis, and megafaunal reptiles such as Megalania. Why did the megafauna in Australia become extinct? A few theories have been suggested as possible explanations of what caused the extinction of the megafauna of Australia. Natural climate change is one theory, habitat change resulting from human burning of the bush is another, and hunting of the megafauna by humans is yet another theory. Were mammals living during dinosaur times? Yes, mammals lived and developed at the same time as the dinosaurs. But as long as dinosaurs were around, mammals were relatively small, and probably nocturnal. Once the dinosaurs were gone, mammals took over the world! 21 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Glossary Absolute date: a method which determines the time order in rock sequences, measured in years by radiometric techniques that is, those techniques which depend on the regular and statistically predictable decay of radioactive elements (Carbon14 for example). Amphibian: animals that live in water and on land during their life. However, some amphibians were completely aquatic and some were completely terrestrial. Ancient: old Aquatic: living in water. Bacteria: microscopic single-celled organisms, they lack chlorophyll, and they reproduce by fission. Biostratigraphy: ordering of rock sequences, to determine their approximate age, based on the fossils found in the rock. Carnivore: an animal that eats mostly meat. Cell: the smallest living unit that makes up most living things. Character: a distinguishing feature. Conifer: a plant that reproduces through the production of seeds in cones. Cycad: an ancient type of seed plant that was around at the dinosaurs, and still lives today. Deposit: to lay down in one place, eg: sediments are deposited in lakes. Erosion: wearing away of the land surface by the transportation of debris by wind or water. Evolution: changes over generations in the characteristics of plants and animals. Fossil: From the Latin word meaning to "dig up". The remains or impressions of life, that lived in the past. Gondwana: a massive supercontinent of the past, that included South America, Africa, Antarctica, Australia, New Zealand, India, and perhaps parts of China. Glacier: a large mass of ice on the land or over a water body, which moves in a definite direction. Habitat: a place where an animal or plant lives. Herbivores: an animal that eats mostly plants. Extinct: no longer living on the Earth. Hibernate: to pass the winter in a torpid state. During this state, the animal's metabolism slows down and there is no need to eat. Fauna: animals living in one area or at a particular time. Invertebrate: animal that has no backbone. Flora: a group of plants living in on area or at a particular time. Labyrinthodont: crocodile-like amphibians that lived before and along side the dinosaurs. 22 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Glossary Lungfish: most of these fish breathe in oxygen from the air rather than taking it from the water. They are a particular group. Mammal: a group of vertebrates that usually give birth to live young. Mammals usually have hair, are warmblooded, and feed their young with milk. Marsupial: a mammal that gives birth to its young at a very early stage. The baby marsupial crawls into the pouch and grabs onto a teat where it stays, drinking milk, for a while, until developed enough to get about on its own. Megafauna: very large animals, generally animals that weigh more than 40 kilograms. Vertebrate: Animals with a backbone. Meteorite: a solid body from outer space; there are two kinds; - those that are mostly stone and those that are mostly iron. Multicelled: many cells, an animal that is multi-cellular is made up of more than one cell. Nocturnal: active at night. Organism: a living bacteria, plant, fungi or animal; they can duplicate itself. Omnivore: an animal that eats both plants and meat; thus has a varied diet. Plesiosaur: an extinct group of seadwelling reptiles. Plesiosaurs had a barrelshaped body, a short tail and paddle-like limbs perfect for swimming. Placental Mammal: mammals that give birth to highly developed young, with a specialised tissue the placenta - which nourishes the developing embryo. Reptile: a group of vertebrates (have a backbone), which are covered by scales, and lay eggs on land to reproduce. Sedimentary Rocks: rocks formed of sediments deposited by water or air, e.g.: claystone, sandstone, siltstone or conglomerates. 23 Sediments: the grains and organic debris that are the result of rocks weathering (breaking down) and the 'debris' being transported by wind and water, laid down in some kind of sedimentary environment (e.g.: a lake, ocean or sand dune). Skeleton: the bones that make up the internal structure of a vertebrate animal, or the external covering of an invertebrate animal (such as a crab shell). Solidify: to become solid or firm. Species: a unique kind of animal or plant, e.g.: Homo sapiens (the scientific name for humans). Weathering: the break down of rocks into smaller pieces by exposure to wind, water, sun, heat, cold and chemicals. Vegetation: plants growing in a place. e.g.: all of the plants growing in Southeast Australia. WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015 Resources Web Sites http://primesci.monash.edu This is the website for PrimeSCI! (previously the Monash Science Centre) at Monash University. http://www.dinosaurdreaming.net/ This is the official site of the dinosaur dig in Victoria. This site gives excellent information about the Inverloch dinosaur dig and the dinosaurs found there. It also has links to other dinosaur sites around the world. http://www.abc.net.au/dinosaurs/ This site has more information about Australian dinosaurs from around the world. http://www.nhm.ac.uk The Natural History Museum, London site has data files on the most well known dinosaurs, plus it has great suggestions for classroom activities on dinosaurs. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/fosrec/Learning.html This sites lists classroom activities on dinosaurs and fossils. It also has excellent interactive lessons online, including topics such as geological time. http://www.dinosaurvalley.com/activity_guide/ This site contains free pictures of dinosaurs to colour in. You could print out some of the pictures and make dinosaur jig-saw puzzles of your own. http://www.museum.vic.gov.au/dinosaurs/ The Museum Victoria fossil project web site. This site contains lots of information on fossils, fossilisation, megafauna and dinosaurs. http://www.oum.ox.ac.uk/thezone/fossils/games.htm http://www.sdnhm.org/exhibitions/current-exhibitions/fossil-mysteries/ Interactive activities for students about fossils. http://www.nhm.ac.uk/nature-online/evolution/ Watch a short video on the evidence for evolution http://www.abc.net.au/science/ausbeasts/ Information and games about Megafauna. http://www.monash.edu/science/research-groups/earth-atmosphere-environment/precsite Information about Precambrian life and environments. 24 WILDLIFE OF GONDWANA EXHIBITION Level 3 Education Booklet PrimeSCI! © 2015
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