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How does a fossil of an animal form in amber?

If something got stuck in and enclosed by the liquid sap then it's fossilized.


How does a body fossilof an animal form in amber?

Smart kitty: sorry, your answer is wrong. only insects form in amber and animals and reptiles are formed in fossils.


Describe the process by which most fossils form?

1. An ancient animal dies and sinks to the bottom of a river 2. Layers of sediments cover the animal's body 3.Over millions of years, the sediment harden to become rock. The animal is preserved as a fossil. 4. The rock erodes. The fossil is exposed on the surface of a rock.


Which type of fossil form when tree resin becomes hardened?

amber


What is found in amber?

Amber is the solidified sap of a tree, and it sometimes catches insects while it is still in its sap form, including mosquitoes, which may have the blood of an extinct animal. In the Pokemon sense, it has a mosquito in and can be used to revive the fossil Pokemon aerodactyl in the Lab on Cinnabar Island.


What has to happen for a fossil to form?

for the animal or plant to decay


What is a true fossil?

A True form fossil is a fossil of the whole/entire body of the organism.


What can a scientist learn form finding a fossil?

Maby what kind of animal it was of if is still alive or not!!!


Which of the major types of fossil does not form in sediments?

Petrified fossils are organisms preserved I'm other substances such as amber, tar, ice, or other substances


What is the source of the minerals that form permineralized remains?

a fossil that was in ice oil or amber remain in one piece and is the same atfer yaers and years


How can imprints form a fossil?

It takes several millions of years for a fossil to be created. First an animal may step in mud whichs dries over time and becomes hard. After it has that mold the conditions have to be right for it to form. If they are then it will form.


How many different ways can fossils form?

When most people think of fossils they think of dinosaur skeletons and large bones, but there are many different types of fossils to be found. Palaeontologists, people who study fossils, divide them into two major types - body fossils and trace fossils. Body fossils show us what a plant or animal looked like. The first type, body fossils, are the fossilised remains of an animal or plant, like bones, shells and leaves. These can be mould and cast fossils, like most of the fossilised dinosaur skeletons and big bones we see, replacement fossils, like petrified wood, or whole body fossils - mammoths caught in ice, or insects trapped in amber. Petrified wood, frozen mammoths, and insects in amber are all body fossils. The second type of fossil records the activity of an animal. Known as trace fossils, these include footprints, trackways, and coprolites (fossil poo!). Footprints and coprolite are trace fossils - they show us how an animal lived.