u go to the oreburg museum and talk to the man at the counter give him a fossil go outside then go back inside talk to him again and he will give u your new Pokemon
here are the Pokemon
skull fossil = cranidos
root fossil = lileep
claw fossil = anorith
old amber = aerodactyl
dome fossil = kabuto
shield fossil i think that's the name = sheildon platinum only
helix fossil = omanyte
odd keystone = spiritomb ( greet 32 people underground )u have to put the odd keystone in the rock tower next to the river south of solecion town
well that's it hope this helps c:
Yes, fossils are found in deserts.
how many fossils are in the royal tyrell museum
new layer of the fossils
If you mean an intrusion via magma/lava, then fossils would not exist due to the fact that most fossils are found in SEDIMENTARY rock, not IGNEOUS (magma/lava rocks).
Use Google and do your Biology homework elsewhere. There are marine fossils high in the Andes Mountains because of layer shifting (which relates to the Law of Superposition), which means that over time, the layers push the fossils upwards. So it all ties into Layer Shifting and how the fossils work.
Your question is confusing; fossils are found in the ground, specifically in sedimentary formations.
fossils are found under ground
Fossils are under ground at random points in the day or night.
The fossils that are in the ground are covered with dirt and they are for study, but the fossils that are in the museum have been clean and they are for sightseeing
dig under ground
You dig for fossils where there is a brown X on the ground.
go under ground and find fossils
Fossils are typically found buried deep in the ground, ranging from a few feet to hundreds of feet below the surface. The depth at which fossils are found can vary depending on factors such as the age of the fossil and the geological processes that have occurred in that area.
in the ground near an under populated area
They pull there heads out of there butts,clean the poopy off there head and dig in the ground to find the dang fossils.
it provides how old the fossils are. it tells the paleontologists about how long ago those fossils were set in the ground.
Digging