Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. |
| 1. | Which of the following are examples of fossils? a. | shells or old bones | b. | any traces of dead organisms | c. | insects trapped in tree sap | d. | All of the above |
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| 2. | Animal fossils may form when a. | an animal is buried by sediment. | b. | an animal is buried on the ocean floor, in swamps, in mud, or in tar pits. | c. | an animal’s tissue is replaced by harder minerals. | d. | All of the above |
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| 3. | Darwin drew ideas for his theory from observations of organisms on a. | the Samoan Islands. | b. | Manhattan Island. | c. | the Hawaiian Islands. | d. | the Galápagos Islands. |
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| 4. | The species of finches that Darwin observed differed in the shape of their beaks. According to Darwin, all of these species probably a. | had a common ancestor. | b. | had migrated from Africa. | c. | had descended from similar birds in Africa. | d. | ate the same diet. |
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| 5. | Darwin thought that the animals of the Galápagos Islands were similar to those of the nearby coast of South America because a. | the animals’ ancestors had migrated from South America to the Galápagos Islands. | b. | the animals had all been brought to the islands by humans. | c. | the islands had slowly drifted away from the mainland. | d. | the animals in both places had evolved in nearly identical environments |
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| 6. | According to Darwin, evolution occurs a. | only through artificial selection. | b. | during half-life periods of 5,715 years. | c. | because of natural selection. | d. | so rapidly that it can be observed easily. |
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| 7. | When Darwin published his first book about evolution, he included all of the following ideas except a. | the idea that species change slowly over time. | b. | the idea that some organisms reproduce at a greater rate than others. | c. | the idea that species are permanent and unchanging. | d. | the idea that some species become better suited to their environment than others. |
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| 8. | The major idea that Darwin presented in his book The Origin of Species was that a. | species change over time and never compete with each other. | b. | animals change, but plants remain the same over time. | c. | species may change in small ways but cannot give rise to new species. | d. | species change over time by natural selection. |
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| 9. | Natural selection is the process by which a. | the age of selected fossils is calculated. | b. | organisms with traits well suited to their environment survive and reproduce more successfully than organisms less suited to the same environment. | c. | acquired traits are passed on from one generation to the next. | d. | All of the above |
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| 10. | Populations of the same species living in different places a. | do not vary. | b. | always show balancing selection. | c. | are genetically identical to each other. | d. | become increasingly different as each population becomes adapted to its own environment. |
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| 11. | Scarcity of resources and a growing population are most likely to result in a. | decreased homology. | b. | increased genetic variation. | c. | increased competition. | d. | convergent evolution. |
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| 12. | Refer to the illustration above. An analysis of DNA from these organisms would indicate that a. | they have identical DNA. | b. | they all have the same number of bones. | c. | their nucleotide sequences show many similarities. | d. | they all have the same number of chromosomes. |
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| 13. | Refer to the illustration above. The similarity of these structures is one form of evidence that the organisms a. | share a common ancestor. | b. | all grow at different rates. | c. | evolved instantaneously. | d. | live for a long time. |
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| 14. | Refer to the illustration above. The bones labeled “X” can be referred to as a. | vestigial structures. | b. | sequential structures. | c. | homologous structures. | d. | fossil structures. |
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| 15. | Which of the following is most likely a vestigial structure? a. | the human tailbone | c. | flower color | b. | the beak of a finch | d. | a fossil of a snail |
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| 16. | Homologous structures in organisms provide evidence that the organisms a. | share a common ancestor. | b. | must have lived at different times. | c. | have a skeletal structure. | d. | are now extinct. |
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| 17. | Anatomical structures that appear to be derived from a functional structure in an ancestor, but that currently do not serve an important function, are called a. | inorganic. | c. | fossilized. | b. | mutated. | d. | vestigial. |
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| 18. | The beak of a bird and the beak of a giant squid evolved independently and serve the same function. The beaks are a. | divergent structures. | c. | analogous structures. | b. | homologous structures. | d. | hybrid structures. |
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| 19. | Evidence that evolution occurs includes all of the following except a. | acquired characteristics. | b. | similarities and differences in proteins and DNA sequences between organisms. | c. | the fossil record. | d. | homologous structures among different organisms. |
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| 20. | Cytochrome c is a protein that is involved in cellular respiration in all eukaryotic organisms. Human cytochrome c contains 104 amino acids. The following table compares human cytochrome c with cytochrome c from a number of other organisms. Organism | Number of cytochrome c amino acids that differ from human cytochrome c amino acids | Chickens | 18 | Chimpanzees | 0 | Dogs | 13 | Rattlesnakes | 20 | Rhesus monkeys | 1 | Yeasts | 56 | | |
Which of the following is not a valid inference from these data? a. | Chimpanzees are more closely related to humans than yeasts are. | b. | The cytochrome c of chimpanzees differs from that of rhesus monkeys by only one amino acid. | c. | Dogs are more closely related to humans than chickens are. | d. | All of the proteins produced by chimpanzees and humans are identical. |
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| 21. | The accumulation of differences between populations that once formed a single population is called a. | coevolution. | b. | adaptation. | c. | divergent evolution. | d. | cumulative differentiation. |
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| 22. | Over millions of years, plants and their pollinators have a. | coevolved. | c. | become parasites. | b. | crossbred. | d. | become competitive. |
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| 23. | 
Refer to the illustration above. While the shark and dolphin are similar in appearance, dolphins evolved from ancestors that were very different from sharks. The current similarity between sharks and dolphins is an example of a. | coevolution. | c. | convergent evolution. | b. | biogeography. | d. | divergent evolution. |
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| 24. | What is the idea developed by Charles Lyell which states that the geologic processes that shaped Earth in the past continue to operate in the same way today? |
| 25. | The idea of inheritance of acquitted characteristics was proposed by a. | Charles Darwin. | c. | Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. | b. | George Cuvier. | d. | Charles Lyell. |
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| 26. | Which of the following describes a population? a. | dogs and cats living in Austin, Texas | b. | four species of fish living in a pond | c. | dogwood trees in Middletown, Connecticut | d. | roses and tulips in a garden |
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| 27. | The movement of alleles into or out of a population due to migration is called a. | mutation. | c. | nonrandom mating. | b. | gene flow. | d. | natural selection. |
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| 28. | What type of population is most susceptible to loss of genetic variability as a result of genetic drift? a. | large populations | b. | medium-sized populations | c. | small populations | d. | populations that fluctuate in size |
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| 29. | A change in the frequency of a particular gene in one direction in a population is called a. | directional selection. | b. | acquired variation. | c. | chromosome drift. | d. | stabilizing selection. |
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| 30. | The type of selection that may eliminate intermediate phenotypes is a. | direction selection. | b. | disruptive selection. | c. | polygenic selection. | d. | stabilizing selection. |
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| 31. | Directional selection tends to eliminate a. | both extremes in a range of phenotypes. | b. | one extreme in a range of phenotypes. | c. | intermediate phenotypes. | d. | None of the above; it causes new phenotypes to form. |
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| 32. | The large, brightly colored tail feathers of the male peacock are valuable to him because a. | they attract potential predators. | b. | they warn off potential competitors for mates. | c. | they attract potential mates. | d. | they attract people who provide them with food. |
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| 33. | The hypothesis that evolution occurs at an irregular rate through geologic time is known as a. | directional evolution. | b. | directional equilibrium. | c. | punctuated equilibrium. | d. | punctuated evolution. |
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