There is potential for butter to fossilize. It depends on the temperature, the pressure at which it is exposed and whether or not there is a tissue wrapped in it.
So in conclusion, the bread costs $5 in the store, I weigh over 100 pounds and yes, there is a possibility of butter fossilization.
A mammoth is more likely to fossilize than a caterpillar because a caterpillar has no hard tissue. Bones and cartilage are much more likely to fossilize.
To scare. Or to fossilize.
Bones typically fossilize the most. There are some examples of fossilized feathers and hair, but it's rare.
No, there are certain materials that can't be Fossilized
1000 years
A clam.
Materials that are unlikely to fossilize include soft tissues like muscles and organs, as they decay quickly. Similarly, materials that easily decompose, such as feathers and hairs, are less likely to become fossils. Substances that dissolve easily in water, like salts and some minerals, are also less likely to fossilize.
snail
Clam shells are quite durable.
Jellies have no bones. When they die, they just dissolve.
YOU CAN DO 1 of 2 THINGS: 1. Leave it as a fossil forever. 2. Fossilize it at the Devon Corporation in Rustboro City. If you fossilize it, you get the Pokemon Anorith. You can evolve Anorith at level 40 to get Armaldo.
Most invertebrates do not fossilize because of the lack of bones or exoskeleton. Soft tissue rarely fossilizes. B for PLATO users