Fossils - SharpSchool
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Transcript Fossils - SharpSchool
Fossils
Remains or traces of once living organisms
Most organisms decay and don’t become
fossils
Help approximate:
When life began
How animals and plants lived
Extinction of species
Fossils
Fossils are more likely to form if:
Quick burial occurs
Protected from predators and the elements
Organisms body has hard body parts (bones,
teeth, shells)
Types of Fossils
1. Petrified Fossils
Soft tissue inside hard bones or teeth
decay
Minerals are deposited in spaces
Examples = Petrified wood, dinosaur bones,
shells
2. Carbon Films
Fossil are buried
Sediments pile up on fossil,
causes pressure and heat
Gases and liquids are forced out leaving a
carbon silhouette of the original organism
(coal forms when ancient plants
become completely carbonized)
3. Molds
A shell or organisms falls into
soft sediment and leaves an impression
Sediment turns into rock
Air somehow gets in and the shell or
organism decays
What is left behind is the impression of
what the organism looked like
4. Cast
Sediment moves into the mold, hardens
into rock and produces a copy of the
organism
5. Preserved
Remains
Entire body, including soft parts of
organisms have been preserved in some
way
Mosquito trapped in tree resin
Frozen mammoth in Siberia
Found in tar pits of La Brea in California
6. Trace Fossils
Fossilized evidence of the
activity of organisms
Fossilized tracks
Trails and burrows
7. Index Fossils
Remains of organisms that were on Earth
for short periods of time
Give information about the ages of rock layers
they are found in (trilobites, dinosaurs)