
DOL: B.9B Fossil Record and Rates of Change
Authored by Candace Edmerson
Biology
9th Grade
NGSS covered
Used 14+ times

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5 questions
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1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Hannah is studying a population of butterflies that, over millions of years, slowly changes in color and pattern without any sudden shifts. Which term describes this slow, continuous evolutionary change over long periods?
Stasis
Gradualism
Abrupt appearance
Extinction
Tags
NGSS.HS-LS4-4
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Mia is studying fossils in a museum. She notices that some new species seem to appear suddenly in the fossil record, with little or no evidence of transitional forms between them and older species. What does this abrupt appearance in the fossil record suggest?
Species evolve at a steady rate over time
New species appear suddenly with little or no transitional fossils
A species remains unchanged for millions of years
All fossils are found in the same rock layer
Tags
NGSS.MS-LS4-1
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Benjamin is studying layers of rock and notices that the fossils of a certain species look almost the same in many layers, with only a sudden change in one layer. How does this stasis impact the fossil record?
It shows that species remain relatively unchanged for long periods
It proves that evolution happens at the same speed for all species
It suggests that fossils appear in random order
It means all species evolve gradually over time
Tags
NGSS.MS-LS4-1
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Rohan is studying fossils of frogs and notices that there are many transitional fossils showing small changes in the frogs' features over a long period of time. Which pattern of evolution is supported by his findings?
Stasis
Abrupt appearance
Gradualism
Punctuated equilibrium
Tags
NGSS.MS-LS4-1
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Maya visits a natural history museum and observes a display showing different fossils found in various rock layers. She wonders why scientists study the fossil record to understand evolution. Why is studying the fossil record important for understanding evolution?
It helps scientists identify patterns of change in species over time
It proves that all species evolve at the same rate
It shows that fossils only form under perfect conditions
It has no impact on understanding evolution
Tags
NGSS.MS-LS4-1
NGSS.MS-LS4-2
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