1. Jellyfish have no bones
2. Even if they did dinosaur have bigger bones
3. Jellyfish don't have BONES!
yes you do say fossilized bone, that is correct
yea ..............true
Total replacement of the minerals: replacement fossilization. Partial replacement of the minerals: perminalization fossilization.
Yes, a worm can be fossilized, but it is extremely rare, because it has no skeleton to be mineralized over time. So the only way you could find a fosssil of a worm is in a sandstone, because there it could have chances to be preserved.
Jellyfish have no real bones, so had no fossils in the sense of the word.
They have no bones.
because they are maid out of water so they evaporate
don't have bones dissolve
They do not have any bones. No bones means there is nothing to fossilize.
The tar pits, which yielded many fossilized dinosaur bones many years ago.
You would call it a dead dinosaur. You could refer to a fresh body as a dinosaur carcass. One that is only bones would be a dinosaur skeleton. However, you probably would never see the above. A fossilized dinosaur is called a dinosaur fossil.
Jelly fish don't have bones or teeth which are typically what fossilizes. Jellyfish are mostly water so they decompose extremely easily. Its like trying to fossilize soggy jello. They live in open oceans so its difficult for a jellyfish to become fossilized when there isn't a whole lot of soil around.
All dinosaur fossils of dinosaurs come from rocks. Most are bones, but some have been footprints, feces, skin impressions, or even mummified individuals, complete with fossilized soft tissue.
yes you do say fossilized bone, that is correct
Jellyfish do not have any bones.
The oldest living dinosaur was the Staurikosaurus. It lived about 220 million years ago!
There is no evidence against the former existence of dinosaurs. On the contrary, there are numerous fossilized bones from over a thousand dinosaur species proving that they did exist.