Bird tracks in snow isn't any kind of fossil. It isn't a fossil at all.
Bird tracks in snow are not fossils, because snow melts and gets covered up by more snow, and so the bird that made them is probably still alive. (If it died shortly after and the tracks were still there, then they might be considered a trace fossil. ;))
well a grouse is a type of bird so snow grouse is a snow bird the look the pheasants but they are white
Tennessee doesn't have a state dinosaur, but its state fossil is Pterotrigonia thoracica, a type of bivalve. If you count birds as a subgroup of dinosaurs, then the state bird is a state dinosaur, and Tennessee's state bird is the bobwhite quail.
Ornithologists are scientists who study birds. They observe bird behavior, study bird anatomy and physiology, track migration patterns, and research bird conservation to learn more about these fascinating creatures.
a full body fossil
Kansas has no state fossil or state dinosaur. However, birds are a type of dinosaur, and Kansas's state bird is the Western Meadowlark.
Transitional fossils are important because they are visual evidence of one type of animal evolving into another type of animal. A transitional fossil always contains features of one type and features of another. For example, Archaeopteryx is a transitional fossil that is a cross between a dinosaur and a bird. It has a bony tail, teeth, and claws like a dinosaur, but it has feathers and is able to fly like a bird. It is an important link in the evolution from dinosaurs to birds.
Yes, petroleum is a type of fossil fuel.
Type- shoreline bird
Its a freaking trace fossil
either: cast fossil petrified fossil imprint fossil trace fossil
it's a fossil that's all it is. it's a fossil that's all it is.