Introduction To Life Science
Introduction To Life Science
Introduction To Life Science
Paleontologists are scientists who collect, identify, and study pieces of evidence about earlier life forms and
try to determine how these have evolved into the organism today.
Fossil is a remnant or trace of a plant, an animal, or other organism that may have been replaced by rock
material or left imprinted on sedimentary rock deposited in riverbeds or on the ocean floor.
Stromatolites considered as the oldest fossils on Earth. These are sheet like sedimentary rocks that were
created by layers upon layers of cyanobacteria, a single-celled photosynthetic microbe.
KEY NOTES:
All organisms are made up of elements or a combination of elements called compounds. About 25 elements are
essential to organisms. Four of these elements make up about 96% of the weight of most organisms. These
elements are carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Organisms are made up of matter.
Domains Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya require the need to reproduce (genetics), adapt (evolution), and
metabolize (biochemistry). All organisms need to reproduce to preserve their future generations. These younger
generations should possess the needed biochemical components that will help them adapt to their
environment.
The diversity and abundance of these domains are controlled by resources (food) and condition of their habitat
(temperature, pH, and oxygen).
REFLECT UPON
How are early life-forms (simple organisms) related to your existence as a complex organism?