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Evidence of Evolution > Palaeontological Evidences

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  • Definition: Fossil
  • Definition: Carbon Dating
  • Key Points: Palaeontological Evidences
Maharashtra State Board: Class 10

Definition: Fossil

The preserved remains, impressions, or traces of ancient organisms found in Earth's crust, which provide evidence of past life and evolution, is called a fossil.

Maharashtra State Board: Class 10

Definition: Carbon Dating

The method of determining the age of dead plants or animals by measuring the radioactive decay of Carbon-14 (C-14) in comparison to Carbon-12 (C-12) is called carbon dating.

 
Maharashtra State Board: Class 10
CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Palaeontological Evidences

  • Fossils are the preserved remains or impressions of organisms buried under the Earth due to natural disasters.
  • The study of fossils helps understand the organisms that lived millions of years ago and their evolutionary history.
  • The carbon dating method measures the radioactivity of C-14 to estimate the age of fossils and ancient remains.
  • Willard Libby developed the carbon dating method and received the Nobel Prize in 1960 for this invention.
  • Fossil records suggest that vertebrates have gradually evolved from invertebrates over geological eras.
  • Fossils occur in various forms such as petrification, compression, impressions, moulds and casts, coal balls, and unaltered fossils.
CISCE: Class 12

Definition: Palaeontology

Fossils are preserved remains or impressions of past organisms found mainly in sedimentary rocks, and their study is called palaeontology.

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