Chapter 16 Vocabulary Absolute & Relative Dating
cross cutting relationships (Hutton)
an igneous intrusion (dike) or a fault must be younger than the rocks they cut across
uniformitarianism
basic principle of geology stating that earth processes occurring today are similar to those that occurred in the past
mold
cavity in rock that has the shape of a fossil that was trapped there; water dissolved the fossil away, leaving its imprint
extinct
describes an organism species that no longer lives anywhere on earth
absolute dating
determining the ages of rocks using the radioactive decay in them
relative dating
determining the order of events and the relative age of rocks (older or younger) by examining the positions of rocks in layers
carbonaceous film
fossil impression in rock, consisting only of a thin carbon deposit
index fossil
fossil of a species that existed briefly and was widespread geographically, used in determining the relative ages of rock layers
Law of Superposition
law stating that, in layers of undisturbed rock, the oldest are on the bottom, and rocks become younger toward the top
unconformity
one or more missing layers in a sequence of rocks; this is a result of a gap in the time record
petrified remains
plant or animal remains that have been petrified, or "turned to rock"; this happens when minerals carried in groundwater replace the original material
fossil
remains or traces of a once-living organism; usually preserved in rock
radioactive decay
the decay of an atom of one element to form another element, occurring when an alpha particle or beta particle is expelled from the original atom
half life
the time it takes for half of the atoms of an isotope in an object to decay
cast
type of fossil formed when an earlier fossil in rock is dissolved away, leaving behind the impression of that fossil (a mold), and new sediments or minerals enter the mold