The composition of the earth’s atmosphere may have
changed over time. One attempt to discover the nature of the
atmosphere long ago studies the gas trapped in bubbles inside
ancient amber. Amber is tree resin that has hardened and been
trapped in rocks. The gas in bubbles within amber should be a
sample of the atmosphere at the time the amber was formed.
Measurement on specimens of amber from the late Cretaceous era (75
to 95 million years ago) gives these percents of nitrogen:
63.4
65.0
64.4
63.3
54.8
64.5
60.8
49.1
51.0
These values are quite different from the present 78.1% of nitrogen
in the atmosphere today, but are these differences significant?
Assume (this is not yet agreed on by experts) that these
observations are an SRS from the Cretaceous atmosphere and the
distribution of gas with an approximately normal distribution.
1. Describe the population of interest and the parameter you want to draw conclusions about.
2. Graph the data and comment on skewness and outliers. Can the t procedures be used in this situation?
3. What is the critical t-value for a 95% confidence interval? What are the degrees of freedom that you used to find the t-value.
4. Construct a 95% confidence interval for the mean percent of nitrogen in ancient age.
5. interpret this confidence interval.
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