Bio 124 Exam #1 - Evolution, Cell Theory, Molecular Structure/Bonding, Carbon, Organic Molecules

  1. Define Naturalism & when it was a prominent method
    The practice of observing & documenting findings; prominent until 1860
  2. Define Cell Theory (& year)
    • 1. All living things come from cells
    • 2. All cells come from pre-existing cells
    • Coined in 1860
  3. Who is Robert Hook? (& relevant year)
    • First to identify cells within a cork using 30x magnification.
    • 1640's
  4. Who is Anton von Leeuwenhoek? (& relevant year)
    • 1. Identified other things that were composed of cells
    • 2. Created a 300x microscope
    • 1645
  5. Who is Louis Pasteur? (& relevant year)
    • He sterilized pondwater in two differently-shaped flasks;
    • In 1860, this experiment refuted spontaneous generation - supporting the second part of Cell Theory
  6. Who is Virchow? (& relevant year)
    • Published entire cell theory in 1860.
    • This meant all living things had a common ancestor.
  7. Define Evolution.
    Genetic change in a population over time.
  8. Who is Darwin? Describe his contributions, & relevant years.
    • Darwin (with Alfred Wallace) introduced Natural Selection as a component of Evolution & common ancestry.
    • Went on a 5 year naturalist voyage:
    • - Observed armadillo evolution thru fossils
    • - Explored volcanoes & habitats (finches)
  9. Define Natural Selection.
    Process of evolution - subset of a population possesses a genetic trait that makes them more likely to survive and have offspring.
  10. What did Gregor Mendel do in 1860?
    He began using mathematical models to make predictions to compare with his observed biological data.
  11. How old is the Earth; how long has it sustained life?
    • 4.6 Billion years old
    • 3.4 Billion years of life
  12. Define Taxonomy.
    • The science of organizing living things.
    • Created by Carl Linnaeus
  13. Who was Carl Linnaeus?
    • Swedish physician/botanist:
    • - Created taxonomy
    • - Used morphology for classification
    • - Created 2 Kingdom System
    • - Created 7 Level Hierarchy of organization
    • - Created scientific naming system
  14. Define Morphology.
    Classification of living things by physical features. (used by Carl Linneaus)
  15. What does the 2 Kingdom System consist of?
    • - Plants
    • - Animals
    • (Created by Carl Linnaeus)
  16. Define the 7 Level Hierarchy of organization.
    • 1. Kingdom
    • 2. Phylum
    • 3. Class
    • 4. Order
    • 5. Family
    • 6. Genus
    • 7. Species

    "King Phillip Came Over For Good Spaghetti"

    (Carl Linnaeus)
  17. What makes up a Scientific Name?
    Genus + Species

    (Carl Linnaeus)
  18. Who was Whittecker? (& relevant dates)
    • Used Morphology to explore RNA sequencing.
    • Created the 6-kingdom system:
    • (Prokaryotes/No Nucleus)
    • 1. Bacteria
    • 2. Archae
    • (Eukaryotes/With Nucleus)
    • 3. Fungus
    • 4. Protists
    • 5. Plants
    • 6. Animals
  19. Define Prokaryote.
    An organism with no nucleus.
  20. Define Eukaryote.
    An organism with a nucleus.
  21. How did Carl Woese classify organisms? (& relevant year)
    Used RNA sequencing to classify organisms in the 1970's.

    • Species 1 AAUUUUGGGCGCGC (original)
    • Species 2 AAUUAAGGGGGCGC (3 differences)
    • Species 3 AUUUUAGGGGGGGG (5 differences)

    Timeline for change: 1...2.....3
  22. What kind of system did Carl Woese create?
    3-Kingdom System - "domain is broader than kingdom"

    • 1. Bacteria
    • 2. Archae
    • 3. Eukarya

    Protists - Fungi - Plants - Animals
  23. What's the phrase for "not moving?"
    Non-motile.
  24. How do you calculate Field of View for different magnifications?
    (total mag at low)(FOVd at low)=(total mag at med)(FOVd at med) 

    Solve for last value.
  25. How do you solve for the Area of a circle?
    A=(Pi)r^2.
  26. What is Matter?
    • Anything that takes up space and has mass.
    • Matter is made up of 92 naturally occurring elements.
  27. What is an Atom?
    The smallest particle that still retains the quality of an element (e.g. 1 atom of oxygen)
  28. What makes up an atom?
    • Atoms are made of 3 subatomic particles:
    • 1. Protons
    • 2. Neutrons
    • 3. Electrons
  29. Describe a Proton.
    • - Positive charge (+1)
    • - Has mass (1 amu)
    • - Located in atomic nucleus
  30. Describe a Neutron.
    • - No charge
    • - Has mass (1 amu)
    • - Located in atomic nucleus
  31. Describe an Electron.
    • - Has negative charge (-1)
    • - Does not have mass
    • - Orbits atomic nucleus
  32. What is the atomic structure rule?
    # protons = # neutrons = # electrons
  33. Label This.


    • 12: Atomic Mass (# protons + # neutrons)
    • 6: Atomic Number (# protons)
    • C: Symbol
  34. Give the electron placement rules.
    • 1. First orbital/shell can only hold 2 electrons.
    • 2. 2nd & 3rd orbitals/shells can hold up to 8 electrons.
    • 3. All 4 poles of the orbital must be filled with an electron before pairing.
  35. What are valent electrons?
    Electrons in the outer shell.
  36. What is a molecule?
    When 2 or more atoms bond together.
  37. What are the 3 main types of chemical bonds?
    • 1. Covalent
    • 2. Ionic
    • 3. Hydrogen
  38. Describe a covalent bond.
    • - Strongest chemical bond
    • - Valence electrons are shared

    Non-polar covalent bond: Valence electrons are shared equally

    Polar covalent bond: Valence electrons are shared unequally, causing a charge difference between poles.
  39. What are the 3 exceptions to the atomic structure rule?
    • 1. Hydrogen: Has no neutron. p/=/n. (+1, 1e-)
    • 2. Ion: Protons /=/ electrons.
    • - + charged Ion (lost electron) (cation)
    • - - charged Ion (gained electron) (anion)
    • 3. Isotope: Protons /=/ neutrons.
  40. What makes something Radioactive?
    When an atom/molecule has more protons than neutrons - gives off neutrons and high energy waves.
  41. Describe an Ionic Bond.
    • - Medium strength
    • - Ionic bonds form by gaining or losing an electron.
    • Cation: When an atom loses an electron. (pos)
    • Anion: When an atom gains an electron. (neg)

    Cations are attracted to Anions due to the opposite charge.
  42. Describe a Hydrogen Bond.
    • - A weak attraction between a slightly positive hydrogen and a negative atom/molecule.
    • - Weakest bond
    • e.g.: The bond between H2O molecules; bond bases in a DNA molecule.
  43. What is chemical evolution?
    • Theory that states under the conditions of primitive earth, small inorganic molecules came together to form larger, more complex organic molecules (proteins, lipids, carbs) - was the first step in the development of life.
    • This occurred in water.
  44. List the 4 unusual qualities of H2O which support chemical evolution occurring in liquid H2O.
    • 1. H2O is less dense as a solid (ice) than a liquid: Ice floats and prevents solid build-up of ice, allowing chemical rxns to occur in liquid H2O.
    • 2. H2O is a universal solvent: More things dissolve in H2O than anything else. (partly due to positive and negative charges of H2O molecules)
    • 3. H2O is a heat sink: It creates a stable, thermal environment to preserve newly created molecules. The # of hydrogen molecules in H2O takes much more force to break with temperature.
    • 4. H2O can act as an acid or a base: Water can break down into Hydrogen ions or Hydroxy ions (H+ & OH-); this increases the types of chemical reactions that can occur.
  45. What 4 elements make up what 4 organic molecules?
    • Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen and Nitrogen
    • Proteins, Lipids, Carbohydrates, Nucleic Acids
  46. Who is Stanley Miller, what did he do? (& relevant dates)
    • Created the spark discharge apparatus to mimic the conditions of primitive earth and replicate chemical evolution.
    • After implementing electrodes to mimic lightning, resulted in amino acid, fatty acid tails, monosaccharides - building blocks of organic molecules. (except nucleic acids)
  47. Who is Joseph Pinto, what did he do? (& when)
    Used computer modeling to ask questions about chemical evolution - results were very similar to those of the spark discharge apparatus. (1980's)
  48. What is a solution?
    Solvent (liquid) + solute (solid).
  49. What is Avagadro's Number?
    • 6.02 x 10^23.
    • Represents number of molecules, atoms, etc per mole.
  50. How do you get 1 mole of a solution?
    Measure out the molecular weight of a molecule (in grams) and dissolve it with an H2O solvent up to 1L.

    • Example: NaCl.
    • - Na atomic mass: 22g.
    • - Cl atomic mass: 34.
    • 22g + 34g = 56g NaCl.
    • Put this in a container, and add water up to 1L. This is 1 mole of NaCl solution.
Author
kerapingree
ID
328280
Card Set
Bio 124 Exam #1 - Evolution, Cell Theory, Molecular Structure/Bonding, Carbon, Organic Molecules
Description
Content for Biology 124 Exam #1.
Updated