Only under unusually specific conditions would a soft-bodied creature such as a jellyfish be capable of making a fossil. If deposited in an extremely fine suspension of mud, and presuming that there were no scavenging organisms present.
Such fossils are known, and you'll find some data in wikipedia under Ediacaran.
No because they dont have any bones in them
Yes, you can.
no nothing to fossilize
A clam is more likely to fossilize than a jellyfish.
No a worm is more complex than a jellyfish
A worm, an insect, a jellyfish.
slug worm jellyfish
The jellyfish and the worm are both invertebrates, which means they are animals without backbones.
An "invertebrate" is an animal without a backbone, such as a jellyfish or worm.
worm carcase or worm remains
a dinosaur footprint is a trace fossil
jellyfish and i think starfish. most insects.
it is 100000 years old
An invertebrate can be anything from a worm to a jellyfish(no bones or skeletor structure)
Worm casts are trace fossils.