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  2. Conceptual Integrated Science Explorations
  3. Chapter 26: The Evolution of Life

Conceptual Integrated Science Explorations

Chapter 26: The Evolution of Life

  • 26.1 The Origin of Life
  • 26.A Did Life On Earth Come From Mars?
  • 26.2 How Living Things Change Over Time
  • 26.3 The Key to Evolution: Natural Selection and How It Works
  • 26.4 Adaptation
  • 26.B Staying Warm and Keeping Cool: How Animals use Physics in Thermoregulation
  • 26.5 Genetics and Evolution
  • 26.6 How a New Species Forms
  • 26.7 Evidence of Evolution
  • 26.8 How Humans Evolved
The Evolution of Humans

For Your Consideration:

 

What is a hominid?

Be sure to study this Chapter Section of your textbook.

 

Table of Videos

  • Self Study Course Descriptions
  • Chapter 1: About Science
    • 1.1 The Nature of Science
    • 1.2 A Brief History of Advances In Science
    • 1.3 Mathematics and Conceptual Science
    • 1.4 The Scientific Method--A Classic Tool
    • 1.5 The Scientific Hypothesis
    • 1.6 The Value of Scientific Experiment
    • 1.7 Facts, Theories, and Laws
    • 1.8 Science Has Limitations
    • 1.9 Science, Art, and Religion
    • 1.10 Technology--The Practical Use of Science
    • 1.11 What Is Integrated Science?
    • 1.A An Investigation of Sea Butterflies
  • Chapter 2: Newton's First Law
    • 2.1 Aristotle On Motion
    • 2.2 Galileo's Concept of Inertia
    • 2.3 Speed and Velocity
    • 2.A Comparing Speeds
    • 2.4 Motion Is Relative
    • 2.5 Newton's First Law of Motion
    • 2.6 Net Force--The Sum of All Forces On an Object
    • 2.7 Equilibrium for Objects at Rest
    • 2.8 The Support Force--Why We Don’t Fall Through the Floor
    • 2.9 Equilibrium for Moving Objects
    • 2.B Earth Moves Around the Sun
  • Chapter 3: Newton's Second Law
    • 3.1 What Is Acceleration?
    • 3.2 Force Causes Acceleration
    • 3.3 Mass Is a Measure of Inertia
    • 3.4 Mass and Acceleration Are Related
    • 3.5 Newton’s Second Law
    • 3.6 Friction
    • 3.7 Objects In Free Fall Accelerate at the Same Rate
    • 3.8 Why Objects in Free Fall Accelerate at the Same Rate
    • 3.9 Air Drag
    • 3.A Friction In Your Fingertips
    • 3.B Gliding
  • Chapter 4: Newton's Third Law
    • 4.1 A Force Is Part of an Interaction
    • 4.2 Newton's Third Law--Action and Reaction
    • 4.3 A Simple Rule Helps Identify Action and Reaction
    • 4.4 Action and Reaction On Objects of Different Masses
    • 4.5 Action and Reaction Forces Act On Different Objects
    • 4.6 The Classic Horse-Cart Problem--A Mind Stumper
    • 4.7 Action Equals Reaction
    • 4.A Animal Locomotion
    • 4.8 Summary of Newton's Three Laws
  • Chapter 5: Momentum
    • 5.1 Momentum Is Inertia In Motion
    • 5.2 Impulse Changes Momentum
    • 5.3 Increasing Momentum—Increasing Force, Time, or Both
    • 5.4 Practical Uses of the Impulse-Momentum Relationship
    • 5.A The Impulse-Momentum Relationship In Sports
    • 5.5 Momentum Is Conserved When No External Force Acts
    • 5.6 Momentum Is Conserved In Collisions
  • Chapter 6: Energy
    • 6.1 Work--Force x Distance
    • 6.2 Power--How Quickly Work Gets Done
    • 6.3 Mechanical Energy
    • 6.4 Potential Energy Is Stored Energy
    • 6.5 Kinetic Energy Is Energy of Motion
    • 6.6 The Work-Energy Theorem
    • 6.7 Conservation of Energy
    • 6.8 Machines--Devices That Multiply Forces
    • 6.9 Efficiency--A Measure of Work Done for Energy Spent
    • 6.A Alternative Sources of Energy
    • 6.B Energy for Life
  • Chapter 7: Gravity
    • 7.1 The Falling Apple and the Falling Moon
    • 7.2 Newton's Law of Universal Gravitation
    • 7.3 Gravity, Distance, and the Inverse-Square Law
    • 7.4 The Universal Constant of Gravitation, G
    • 7.A Ocean Tides
    • 7.5 Weight and Weightlessness
    • 7.6 Projectile Motion
    • 7.7 Fast-Moving Projectiles--Satellites
    • 7.B Earth Satellites
  • Chapter 8: Heat
    • 8.1 Thermal Energy
    • 8.2 Temperature
    • 8.3 Absolute Zero--Nature's Lowest Possible Temperature
    • 8.4 What Is Heat?
    • 8.5 Heat Units Are Energy Units
    • 8.6 The Laws of Thermodynamics
    • 8.7 Entropy
    • 8.8 Specific Heat Capacity
    • 8.A Specific Heat Capacity and Earth's Climate
    • 8.9 Thermal Expansion
    • 8.10 Heat Transfer: Conduction
    • 8.11 Heat Transfer: Convection
    • 8.12 Heat Transfer: Radiation
  • Chapter 9: Electricity
    • 9.1 Electric Charge Is a Basic Characteristic of Matter
    • 9.2 Coulomb's law--The Force Between Charged Particles
    • 9.3 Charge Polarization
    • 9.4 Electric Current--The Flow of Electric Charge
    • 9.5 An Electric Current Is Produced By Electrical Pressure--Voltage
    • 9.6 Direct Current and Alternating Current
    • 9.7 Ohm's Law--The Relationship Between Current, Voltage, and Resistance
    • 9.A Electric Shock
    • 9.8 Direct Current and Alternating Current
    • 9.9 Electric Power--The Rate of Doing Work
    • 9.10 Electric Circuits--Series and Parallel
  • Chapter 10: Magnetism
    • 10.1 Magnetic Poles--Attraction and Repulsion
    • 10.2 Magnetic Fields
    • 10.3 Magnetic Domains
    • 10.4 Magnetic Fields Around Electric Currents
    • 10.A Earth’s Magnetic Field
    • 10.5 magnetic Forces on Moving, Charged Particles
    • 10.6 Electromagnetic Induction--How Voltage Is Created
    • 10.7 Generators and Alternating Current
    • 10.8 The Induction of Fields--Both Electric and Magnetic
  • Chapter 11: Waves and Sound
    • 11.1 Special Wiggles--Vibrations and Waves
    • 11.2 Wave Motion--Transporting Energy
    • 11.3 Two Types of Waves--Transverse and Longitudinal
    • 11.4 Sound Travels In Waves
    • 11.A Sensing Pitch
    • 11.5 Speed of Sound
    • 11.6 Sound Can Be Reflected
    • 11.7 Sound Can Be Refracted
    • 11.B Dolphins and Acoustical Imaging
    • 11.8 Forced Vibrations and Natural Frequency
    • 11.9 Resonance and Sympathetic Vibrations
    • 11.10 Interference--The Addition and Subtraction of Waves
    • 11.11 The Doppler Effect
  • Chapter 12: Light and Color
    • 12.1 The Electromagnetic Spectrum
    • 12.2 Why Materials Are Either Transparent or Opaque
    • 12.3 Color Science
    • 12.A Mixing Colored Lights
    • 12.4 Mixing Colored Pigments
    • 12.B Why the Sky Is Blue
    • 12.C Why Sunsets Are Red
    • 12.D Why Clouds Are White
  • Chapter 13: Properties of Light
    • 13.1 Reflection of Light--Light Bouncing Off a Barrier
    • 13.2 Refraction--The Bending of Light As Its Speed Changes
    • 13.A Illusions and Mirages Are Caused by Atmospheric Refraction
    • 13.B Light Dispersion and Rainbows
    • 13.3 Diffraction--The Spreading of Light
    • 13.4 Interference of Light Waves
    • 13.5 Interference Colors by Reflection from Thin Films
    • 13.6 Wave Particle Duality--Light Travels as a Wave and Strikes as a Particle
    • 13.A Illusions and Mirages Are Caused by Atmospheric Refraction
    • 13.B Light Dispersion and Rainbows
  • Chapter 14: The Atom
    • 14.1 Discovering the Invisible Atom
    • 14.A A Breath of Air
    • 14.2 Evidence for Atoms
    • 14.B A First Look at the Periodic Table
    • 14.3 Protons and Neutrons
    • 14.4 Isotopes and Atomic Mass
    • 14.5 Electron Shells
  • Chapter 15: Nuclear Energy
    • 15.1 Radioactivity
    • 15.2 Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Rays
    • 15.3 Environmental Radiation
    • 15.A Radiation Damage to the Body
    • 15.4 Transmutation of the Elements
    • 15.5 Half-Life
    • 15.B Isotopic Dating
    • 15.6 Nuclear Fission
    • 15.7 The Mass-Energy Relationship: E = mc(2)
    • 15.8 Nuclear Fusion
  • Chapter 16: Elements of Chemistry
    • 16.1 Chemistry: The Central Science
    • 16.A Research
    • 16.2 The Submicroscopic World
    • 16.3 Change of Phase
    • 16.4 Physical and Chemical Properties
    • 16.5 Determining Physical and Chemical Changes
    • 16.6 The Periodic Table
    • 16.7 Elements and Compounds
    • 16.8 Naming Compounds
  • Chapter 17: Bonds and Molecular Attractions
    • 17.1 Electron-Dot Structures
    • 17.2 The Formation of Ions
    • 17.3 Ionic Bonds
    • 17.A The Chemistry of Minerals
    • 17.4 Metallic Bonds
    • 17.5 Covalent Bonds
    • 17.6 Polar Covalent Bonds
    • 17.7 Molecular Polarity
    • 17.8 Molecular Attractions
  • Chapter 18: How Chemical Mix
    • 18.1 Most Materials Are Mixtures
    • 18.2 The Chemist's Classification of Matter
    • 18.3 Making Solutions
    • 18.4 Concentration and the Mole
    • 18.5 Solubility
    • 18.6 Soaps and Detergents
    • 18.A Purifying the Water We Drink
  • Chapter 19: How Chemicals React
    • 19.1 Chemical Equations
    • 19.2 Reaction Rates
    • 19.A Catalysts and the Atmosphere
    • 19.3 Energy and Chemical Reactions
    • 19.4 Chemical Reactions Are Driven By Entropy
  • Chapter 20: Acids, Bases, and Redox
    • 20.1 Acid and bases
    • 20.2 Relative Strengths of Acids and Bases
    • 20.3 Acidic, Basic, and Neutral Solutions
    • 20.A Acid Rain and Basic Oceans
    • 20.4 Losing and Gaining Electrons
    • 20.5 Electrochemistry
    • 20.6 Corrosion and Combustion
  • Chapter 21: Organic Compounds
    • 21.1 Hydrocarbons
    • 21.2 Unsaturated Hydrocarbons
    • 21.3 Functional Groups
    • 21.4 Alcohols and Ethers
    • 21.5 Amine and Alkaloids
    • 21.6 Carbonyl Compounds
    • 21.7 Polymers
    • 21.A The Molecules of Life
  • Chapter 22: The Basic Unit of Life: The Cell
    • 22.1 What Is Life?
    • 22.A The Big Molecules That Make Up Living Things
    • 22.2 What Is a Cell?
    • 22.3 The Two Types of Cells: Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic
    • 22.B The Microscope
    • 22.4 Tour of a Eukaryotic Cell
    • 22.5 The Organelles of Eukaryotic Cells
    • 22.6 The Cell Membrane
  • Chapter 23: How Cells Work
    • 23.1 How Things Get In and Out of Cells
    • 23.2 How Do Cells Reproduce?
    • 23.3 Enzymes and the Chemical Reactions in Cells
    • 23.A ATP Fuels Chemical Reactions in Cells
    • 23.4 Photosynthesis
    • 23.5 How Cells Get Energy
  • Chapter 24: DNA and Genes
    • 24.1 What Is a Gene?
    • 24.2 Chromosomes: Packages of Genetic Information
    • 24.A The Structure of DNA
    • 24.3 How DNA Is Copied
    • 24.4 RNA
    • 24.5 How Proteins Are Built
    • 24.6 Meiosis and Genetic Diversity
  • Chapter 25: How Traits Are Inherited
    • 25.1 Mendel's Peas
    • 25.2 Mendel's First Law
    • 25.3 Mendel's Second Law
    • 25.4 More Wrinkles: Beyond Mendelian Genetics
    • 25.5 The Human genome
    • 25.6 Genetic Mutations
    • 25.7 Cancer: A Genetic Disease
    • 25.A Environmental Causes of Cancer
  • Chapter 26: The Evolution of Life
    • 26.1 The Origin of Life
    • 26.A Did Life On Earth Come From Mars?
    • 26.2 How Living Things Change Over Time
    • 26.3 The Key to Evolution: Natural Selection and How It Works
    • 26.4 Adaptation
    • 26.B Staying Warm and Keeping Cool: How Animals use Physics in Thermoregulation
    • 26.5 Genetics and Evolution
    • 26.6 How a New Species Forms
    • 26.7 Evidence of Evolution
    • 26.8 How Humans Evolved
  • Chapter 27: Diversity of Life
    • 27.1 Classifying Living Things
    • 27.2 Evolution and Classification
    • 27.3 The Three Domains of Life
    • 27.4 Bacteria
    • 27.5 Archaea
    • 27.6 Protists
    • 27.7 Plants
    • 27.8 Fungi
    • 27.9 Animals
    • 27.A Coral Bleaching
    • 27.B How Birds Fly
    • 27.10 Viruses and Prions
  • Chapter 28: Control and Development
    • 28.1 How the Human Body Is Organized
    • 28.2 The Brain
    • 28.3 The Nervous System
    • 28.4 How Neurons Work
    • 28.A How Fast Can Action Potentials Travel?
    • 28.B Endorphins
    • 28.5 The Senses
    • 28.6 Hormones
    • 28.7 Reproduction and Development
    • 28.8 The Skeleton and Muscles
  • Chapter 29: Care and Maintenance
    • 29.1 Integration of Body Systems
    • 29.2 The Circulatory System
    • 29.A Hemoglobin
    • 29.3 Respiration
    • 29.4 Digestion
    • 29.5 Nutrition, Exercise, and Health
    • 29.B Low-Carb Versus Low-Calorie Diets
    • 29.6 Excretion and Water Balance
    • 29.7 Keeping the Body Safe: Defense Systems
  • Chapter 30: Ecosystems and Environment
    • 30.1 Organisms and Their Environments
    • 30.2 Species Interactions in Ecological Communities
    • 30.3 Energy Flow in Ecosystems
    • 30.A Energy Leaks When Organisms Eat
    • 30.4 Kinds of Ecosystems
    • 30.B Materials Cycling in Ecosystems
    • 30.5 Change In an Ecosystem
    • 30.6 Population Studies
    • 30.7 Human Population Growth
  • Chapter 31: Plate Tectonics
    • 31.1 Earth Science Is an Integrated Science
    • 31.2 Earth's Composition
    • 31.A Density and Earth's Layers
    • 31.3 Earth's Structure
    • 31.4 Continental Drift--An Idea Before Its Time
    • 31.5 Seafloor Spreading
    • 31.B Magnetic Stripes Are Evidence of Seafloor Spreading
    • 31.6 The Theory of Plate Tectonics
    • 31.C What Forces Drive the Plates?
    • 31.7 Plate Boundaries
    • 31.D Life In the Trenches
  • Chapter 32: Rocks and Minerals
    • 32.1 What Is a Mineral?
    • 32.2 Mineral Properties
    • 32.3 Types of Minerals
    • 32.A The Silicate Tetrahedron
    • 32.4 How Do Minerals Form?
    • 32.5 What Is Rock?
    • 32.6 Igneous Rock
    • 32.7 Sedimentary Rock
    • 32.B Coal
    • 32.8 Metamorphic Rock
    • 32.9 The Rock Cycle
  • Chapter 33: Earth's Surface: Land and Water
    • 33.1 Survey of the Earth
    • 33.2 Folding and Faulting
    • 33.3 Mountain Building
    • 33.4 Plains and Plateaus
    • 33.5 Earth's Waters
    • 33.6 The Ocean
    • 33.A The Composition of Ocean Water
    • 33.7 Fresh Water
    • 33.B Water Pollution
  • Chapter 34: Surface Processes
    • 34.1 Weathering, Erosion, and Deposition--Agents of Change
    • 34.A Weathering
    • 34.2 Running Water
    • 34.3 Glaciers
    • 34.4 Mass Movement
    • 34.5 Groundwater
    • 34.6 Waves
    • 34.7 Wind
  • Chapter 35: Weather
    • 35.1 Atmosphere
    • 35.A Atmospheric Pressure
    • 35.2 The Structure of the Atmosphere
    • 35.B Heating the Atmosphere
    • 35.3 Temperature Depends of Latitude
    • 35.4 Why Are There Seasons?
    • 35.5 Flow of the Atmosphere--Wind
    • 35.C Wind Chill
    • 35.6 Some Winds Are Local--Others Are Global
    • 35.D The Coriolis Effect
    • 35.7 Ocean Currents Distribute Heat
    • 35.8 Water In the Atmosphere
    • 35.9 Changing Weather--Air Masses, Fronts, and Cyclones
  • Chapter 36: Earth's History
    • 36.1 A Model of Earth's History
    • 36.2 Telling Relative Time
    • 36.A Dating a Rock--Telling AbsoluteTime
    • 36.3 The Geologic Time Scale
    • 36.B Precambrian Time
    • 36.C The Paleozoic Era
    • 36.D The Permian Extinction
    • 36.E The Mesozoic Era
    • 36.F The Cretaceous Extinction
    • 36.G The Cenozoic Era
  • Chapter 37: Environmental Geology
    • 37.1 Earthquakes
    • 37.2 Tsunami
    • 37.3 Volcanoes
    • 37.4 Hurricanes
    • 37.5 Earth's Past ad Present Climate
    • 37.A Natural Causes of Climate Change
    • 37.B Future Climate--A Warmer Earth?
  • Chapter 38: The Solar System
    • 38.1 Earth's Moon
    • 38.2 Eclipses—The Shadows of Earth and the Moon
    • 38.3 Tour of the Solar System
    • 38.A How Did the Solar System Form?
    • 38.4 The Sun
    • 38.5 The Inner Planets
    • 38.6 The Outer Planets
    • 38.B What Makes a Planet Suitable for Life?
    • 38.7 Asteroids, Comets, and Meteoroids
  • Chapter 39: The Universe
    • 39.1 Seeing Stars
    • 39.2 The Light-year
    • 39.3 The Birth of Stars
    • 39.4 The Evolution and Death of Stars
    • 39.5 The Bigger They Are, the Harder They Fall—Supernovae
    • 39.6 Black Holes
    • 39.7 Galaxies
    • 39.A SETI
    • 39.8 The Big Bang

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