Really, anything can be fosslized. It really all depends on where it died. if it died in a lake and the lake dried and a layed of ground eroded over it than it would become fossleized by the nutrients found in that layer of ground. Like I said, depens on where it died, all that the location needs to be is a place where nutrient rich soil can preserve the bones. It just may seem like only certain organisms can be fosslized because they are all found those areas with preserving soil.
No. Fossils are chemicals like stone that have replaced organisms after they die.
99% of all organism who lived once are now extinct, so a list would be more than extensive! Dinosaurs are the big fossils. Mammal fossils are big too. Human and proto-human fossils may be the biggest things in fossils ever.
Fossils belong to the kingdom Animalia, which includes all animals both living and extinct. Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived in the past.
Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived in the geologic past. Trace fossils are made by marks left by organisms while still alive, such as tracks, burrows, and dung.Decomposition, weathering, and scavenging all contribute to what makes fossils so rare.Almost all fossils are found in sedimentary rock; almost none are found in metamorphic or igneous rock.Fossils are our only direct key to the past, informing us about migratory patterns, weather and environmental conditions, species' interaction, and animal behavior.Scientists use index fossils to place events on the geologic time scale. The organisms that become index fossils are chosen because they had relatively short geologic life spans, wide geographic ranges, and are easily identified.
All the sixth graders studied fossils.
No. Fossils are chemicals like stone that have replaced organisms after they die.
1.9 Billion, more depending on the amount of pasta consumed.
unicellular prokaryoytes
unicellular prokaryotes
Fossils exist of nearly all formerly living organisms, with some exceptions, from single celled bacteria to the largest dinosaur. Marine organisms comprise the bulk of fossils that are easily available today.
99% of all organism who lived once are now extinct, so a list would be more than extensive! Dinosaurs are the big fossils. Mammal fossils are big too. Human and proto-human fossils may be the biggest things in fossils ever.
Most organisms never became fossils
Fossils belong to the kingdom Animalia, which includes all animals both living and extinct. Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived in the past.
Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived in the geologic past. Trace fossils are made by marks left by organisms while still alive, such as tracks, burrows, and dung.Decomposition, weathering, and scavenging all contribute to what makes fossils so rare.Almost all fossils are found in sedimentary rock; almost none are found in metamorphic or igneous rock.Fossils are our only direct key to the past, informing us about migratory patterns, weather and environmental conditions, species' interaction, and animal behavior.Scientists use index fossils to place events on the geologic time scale. The organisms that become index fossils are chosen because they had relatively short geologic life spans, wide geographic ranges, and are easily identified.
All the sixth graders studied fossils.
honestly know body actually knows when the organisms evolved! people need to do research and stop telling all these lies
Yes, fossils of today's plants and animals are being preserved. Fossils can form under the right conditions, such as in sedimentary rock or tar pits, and represent a snapshot of ancient life that can help scientists understand past ecosystems and evolutionary processes. However, the process of fossilization is rare and not all organisms become preserved as fossils.