a fossil in which minerals replaces all or part of an organism
A hard and rock-like fossil is called a petrified fossil. Petrified fossils are formed when organic material is slowly replaced by minerals, turning the material into stone while preserving the original structure of the organism.
petrified fossils
Probably a trace fossil; evidences of an organisms existence, without the body. Trace fossils include footprints, feces, burrow marks, and chemical signatures.
Yes.
A fossil formed in this way is called a petrified fossil. It occurs when minerals gradually replace the organic material in an organism's remains, creating a stone replica of the organism. This process is known as petrification.
The prefix for "petrified fossil" is "petri-".
Petrified fossil is an organism that has been converted into stone. Silica, iron and copper minerals can be commonly found in petrified fossils.
The Texas state fossil is the petrified pomtree.
Arizona's state fossil is petrified wood
Petrification
Petrified wood used to be part of a tree, when it fell off a rock started fossilizing over it and it became a fossil. -Gwen
Petrified wood used to be part of a tree, when it fell off a rock started fossilizing over it and it became a fossil. -Gwen
A hard and rock-like fossil is called a petrified fossil. Petrified fossils are formed when organic material is slowly replaced by minerals, turning the material into stone while preserving the original structure of the organism.
Stone bone
petrified palm wood
An antholite is a fossil plant, such as a petrified flower.
stone bone