Brian Cox: How did complex life begin? | Biology - Wonders of the Universe
Biology
Year 7 - Year 11
B
BBC Teach
Biology Resource Description
Suitable for teaching 11-16s. Suitable for teaching 11-16s. Professor Brian Cox visits the Burgess Shale fossil field in the Canadian Rockies, to see evidence of an explosion in life on Earth during the Cambrian period 540 million years ago.
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Brian Cox explores the origins of life on earth with a visit to the Burgess Shale, a very important fossil field in Yoho National Park in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. The fossils here record an explosion of life around 540 million years ago during the Cambrian period, known as the ‘Cambrian explosion’. He explains a speculative theory that the evolution of creatures with eyes, such as trilobites, triggered the evolution of more complex forms of life.
This clip is from the BBC series Wonders of Life, in which Professor Brian Cox explores biology and evolution, discovering how a few fundamental laws gave birth to the most complex, diverse and unique force in the universe – life.
For more clips from Evolution, Variation, Natural Selection: http://bit.ly/BBCTeachEvolution
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For Class Clips users, the original reference for the clip was p011t2zj.
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Teaching Biology or Science?
Challenge students to come up with a plus, minus and interesting point about the theory that "the emergence of the eye actually triggered the Cambrian explosion”. Responses can be discussed in pairs or small groups.
This clip will be relevant for teaching Biology at KS3 and KS4/GCSE in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and SQA National 3/4/5 in Scotland.
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