No, because not all animals lived in the right environments to be able to get covered up quickly by sediment, have water turn the bones into rock, and for the sediment to get uncovered.
1.9 Billion, more depending on the amount of pasta consumed.
No. Fossils are chemicals like stone that have replaced organisms after they die.
living things can move from one place to another whereas none living things can move
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.
we would all become extinct
All functioning cells are living things.
Yes, a fossil is the preserved remains or impressions of a once-living organism. Fossils can be of animals, plants, or other organisms, and they provide valuable information about life forms from the past.
All living things are made of cells. All living things require and use energy. All living things grow, develop, reproduce and repair themselves. All living things produce waste All living things respond and adapt to their environment. All living things have a life span.
All foods that once was , or might become living things has DNA in it.
Considering that plants are also living things we all need oxygen, so all living things breath.
All living things are made of cells, all living things ether need or produce oxygen, all living things reproduce, all living things make and use energy, and all living things adapt to their enviorment.
No, a paleontologist studies physical science. Life science is the study of all living things. Physical science is the study of all non-living matter. A paleontologist gathers knowledge about the history of the earth and using fossils.