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8.7: Key Points

  • Page ID
    46072
    • Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts
    • OpenGeology

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    1. Earth is 4.6 billion years old.
    2. Uniformitarianism suggests the chemical and physical laws of nature have not changed over the course of Earth’s long history which allows geologists to study present day processes and assume things happened at similar rates in the past. This allows them to build a timeline.
    3. Relative dating allows geologists to put geologic events in order of occurrence but does not give timeframes to any of the events.
    4. The principle of superposition tells geologists sedimentary beds are generally older at the bottom and younger at the top of a stacked sequence.
    5. The principle of faunal succession allows geologists to determine two different sedimentary beds containing similar fossils in two different areas are the same age.
    6. The principle of original horizontality tells geologists that tilting events occur after the deposition of sedimentary beds.
    7. The principle of lateral continuity allows geologists to connect sedimentary beds across valleys.
    8. The principle of cross-cutting relationships tells geologists that faults and intrusions are younger than the rocks they cut through.
    9. The principle of inclusions tells geologists a piece of rock included in another rock is older than the rock that surrounds it.
    10. Unconformities represent time that is missing from the rock record due to a pause in deposition or the occurrence of erosion.
    11. Fossils are remnants of past animal or plant life in rocks. If we know when that species lived, we can narrow down the time period in which a particular rock formed.
    12. An index fossil represents a species that lived for a short time but was very widespread. It is useful because it lived widely but for a short period of time so it really narrows down the age of the rock.
    13. Numerical dating allows geologists to know the exact age of a rock or geologic event in years.
    14. Radiometric dating is the most common form of numerical dating which uses the decay of isotopes in the minerals of a rock to calculate the age of the rock.
    15. One of the major limitations of radiometric dating is it can not be used on clastic sedimentary rocks since they are made of pieces of pre-existing rocks that each have their own age.
    16. The geological time scale organizes Earth’s 4.6-billion-year history into a series of nested time units dividing time into eons, eras, periods, epochs, and ages, based on major events such as mountain building, climate shifts, and changes in life forms preserved in the fossil record.

    This page titled 8.7: Key Points is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Callan Bentley, Karen Layou, Russ Kohrs, Shelley Jaye, Matt Affolter, and Brian Ricketts (OpenGeology) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.