would a jellyfish make a good fossil
I would think a Fox Fossil
The oldest known fossils of jellyfish have been found in rocks in Utah that are more than 500 million years old!!
A clam is more likely to fossilize than a jellyfish.
No one knows!!?!?!?!?!?!?! Why do you think I am here?!?!?!?!
No one knows!!?!?!?!?!?!?! Why do you think I am here?!?!?!?!
A lion would win the fight because 1.) it is bigger, 2.) It is stronger, and 3.) the lion has claws. Although the jellyfish can sting, the lion, as I said, is stronger. But, if the battle takes place in water, there is a chance that the jellyfish would win the battle because it has a home-court advantage.
A hard shell organism have more of a chance to become a fossil .
Which of the following is most likely to become preserved as a fossil? a jellyfisha clam shella leafa worm
jellyfish
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. A sea anemone and a jellyfish would not meet. If they did meet, the jellyfish would sting the sea anemone and kill it.
Sea Turtles would hunt and eat the smaller jellyfish, but not the giant jellyfish.