Question Sheet: South America’s sticky tar pits

SCIENCE

Before reading:

  1. What is asphalt and how does it form?
  2. What is a fossil?
  3. Do you know what has been pulled out of Los Angeles’ La Brea tar pits?
  4. How do you think those animals got in there?

During reading:

  1. Why are scientists interested in what has been trapped by the South American
    tar pits?
  2. What are menes and how do they form?
  3. How old are some of the most ancient critters trapped in the South American
    asphalt deposits?
  4. Some tar pits lie near Panama. Why does their geographic location
    particularly interest scientists? (Hint: Picture the placement of the Panama
    Canal.)
  5. Describe the types of environments that had existed prior to the development
    of a tar pit at some of these South American sites.
  6. By how many years do these pits extend the fossil record in South
    America?
  7. How do the fossils in these pits differ from the fossils people usually find
    on land, such as of a dinosaur?

After Reading:

  1. Why do scientists care about what animals roamed Earth thousands or even
    millions of years ago?
  2. Explain why you would like to observe scientists extracting fossils from one
    of these tar pits — or why you wouldn’t. Pick an answer that doesn’t involve:
    “Because it’s yucky!”
  3. What might the fossils suggest about evolution and where particular families
    of species come from?

SOCIAL STUDIES

  1. Like dinosaur fossils, many of the remnants being pulled out of tar pits
    point to the existence of animals that no longer roam our planet. Many resemble
    existing types of animals. What argument for evolution, if any, can you make by
    contrasting the animals trapped in tarry asphalt versus species alive today?
  2. Would the asphalt in tar pits make a good fuel? Why or why not?
  3. Study the countries where South American tar pits occur. What about them
    might help explain why these fossil storage sites went unexplored for so long?
  4. Asphalt, the tarry material in these pits, is also used in road building.
    Venezuela has many natural asphalt deposits. Indeed, the United States imports
    much of its asphalt from there. But Venezuela’s government has recently
    threatened to cut off supplies of asphalt to the United States. If that
    happened, what effects do you think this could have on your
    community?

LANGUAGE ARTS

  1. Write a small poem about what gets trapped by or pulled out of tar pits.
  2. Write three paragraphs explaining what you’d do if you stumbled across one
    of these tar pits while walking through a woods, and what you think might be in
    it.