Fossils - British Geological Survey (2024)

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What is a fossil?

Fossils are the preserved remains of plants and animals whose bodies were buried in sediments, such as sand and mud, under ancient seas, lakes and rivers. Fossils also include any preserved trace of life that is typically more than 10000 years old.

Soft body parts decay soon after death, but the hard parts, such as bones, shells and teeth can be replaced by minerals that harden into rock. In very exceptional cases, soft parts like feathers, plant ferns or other evidence of life, such as footprints or dung, may also be preserved. Remains can include microscopically small fossils, such as single-celled foraminifera or pollen grains, as well as more familiar fossils such as ammonites and trilobites.

Fossils - British Geological Survey (1)

Fast fact

The word fossil is derived from the Latin fossilis meaning ‘unearthed’.

Preserved evidence of the body parts of ancient animals, plants and other life forms are called ‘body fossils’. ‘Trace fossils’ are the evidence left by organisms in sediment, such as footprints, burrows and plant roots.

Why do we study fossils?

Fossils give us a useful insight into the history of life on Earth. They can teach us where life and humans came from, show us how the Earth and our environment have changed through geological time, and how continents, now widely separated, were once connected.

Fossils provide important evidence for evolution and the adaptation of plants and animals to their environments. Fossil evidence provides a record of how creatures evolved and how this process can be represented by a ‘tree of life’, showing that all species are related to each other.

Fossils can also be used to date rocks. Through the process of evolution, different kinds of fossils occur in rocks of different ages, enabling geologists to use fossils to understand geological history. For geologists, fossils are one of the most important tools for age correlation. Ammonites, for example, make excellent guide fossils for stratigraphy; they can be used to determine the relative age of two or more layers of rock, or strata, that are in different places within the same country or somewhere else in the world.

Fossils can be used to recreate different worlds like worlds populated by dinosaurs or dragonflies with a two-metre wing span.

How do fossils form?

Fossils are typically found in sedimentary rocks and occasionally some fine-grained, low-grade metamorphic rocks. Sometimes the fossils have been removed, leaving moulds in the surrounding rock, or the moulds may have later been filled by other materials, forming casts of the original fossils.

Rapid burial by sediments that were previously suspended in water is required for fossilisation to occur. The burial process isolates the remains from the biological and physical processes that would otherwise break up or dissolve the body material.

Fossils are more likely to be preserved in marine environments for example, where rapid burial by sediments is possible. Less favourable environments include rocky mountaintops where carcasses decay quickly or few sediments are being deposited to bury them.

There are four main ways of describing fossil preservation:

  • petrification
  • compression
  • moulds and casts
  • preserved remains

Petrification

The most common method of fossilisation is petrification through a process called permineralisation. After a shell, bone or tooth is buried in sediment, it may be exposed to mineral-rich fluids moving through the porous rock material and becomes filled with preserving minerals such as calcium carbonate or silica. Eventually, the minerals entirely replace the organic material and the remains are literally turned into stone or ‘petrified’. (Petra was the Latin word for rock or stone.)

Compression

Some fossils form when their remains are compressed at depth. A dark imprint of the fossil is produced as a result of high-pressure forces exerted by the weight of overlying sediments and perhaps sea water.

Moulds and casts

In cases where the original shell or bone is dissolved away it may leave behind a space in the shape of the original material called a mould. At some point in the future, sediments may fill the space to form a matching cast. Soft-bodied sea creatures such as snails are commonly found as moulds and casts because their shells dissolve easily. A cast is a positive impression of the original material formed by contact with the mould. More about gastropods.

Preserved remains

The rarest form of fossilisation is the preservation of original skeletons and soft body parts. Insects that have been trapped and preserved perfectly in amber (fossilised tree resin) are examples of preserved remains.

Browse fossil records

Ammonites

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Belemnites

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Bivalves

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Brachiopods

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Corals

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Echinoids

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Fish

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Foraminifera

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Gastropods

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Graptolites

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Ostracods

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Plants

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Trilobites

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Fossils - British Geological Survey (2024)

FAQs

What are the devils fingers fossils? ›

The fossilised rostra were widely believed to have been flung down as darts from heaven during thunderstorms (thunderbolts). Some have a finger-like shape (e.g. Dactyloteuthis—from the Greek word daktylos meaning finger) and, in folklore, they have been called Devil's Fingers and St Peter's Fingers.

What are 3 good index fossils? ›

There are some types of index fossils which include Ammonites, Brachiopods, Graptolites, Nanofossils and Trilobites. Ammonites: The fossil of ancient marine animals is said to be known as an ammonite index fossil. During the Mesozoic era, they were common (245 to 65 million years ago ).

How accurate is the fossil record? ›

The fossil record certainly has gaps, mostly because the conditions required to create fossils have been rare ever since life began on Earth. A very small percentage of animals that have lived and died ever became fossils. Thus, many pieces of the puzzle are missing; some will never be found.

Are Devils fingers rare? ›

Devil's Fingers (Clathrus archeri) is a rare fungus that was first found in the New Forest in around the year 2000. At that time, the only other place that it could be found in Great Britain was one small place in Cornwall, so many mycologists came to the New Forest to see it.

Why is it called Devil's Finger? ›

Description. Nestled along the mesmerizing coast of Sinquerim beach in North Goa, lies a natural wonder known as the "Devil's Finger." This captivating sea-arch is adorned with striking red arms that resemble fingers reaching out of a pristine white egg-shaped body.

What giant fossil was found in England? ›

April 17 (Reuters) - A fossil jawbone found by a British girl and her father on a beach in Somerset, England belongs to a gigantic marine reptile dating to 202 million years ago that appears to have been among the largest animals ever on Earth.

What fossil was found on the beach in England? ›

Paleontologists consider the pliosaur was once the apex predator of the ocean. WATCH: A fossil-enthusiast happened upon the well-preserved prehistoric snout while walking along a beach in Kimmeridge Bay near Dorset, UK. "What make this [skull fossil] unique is it's complete.

What is the most famous fossil ever? ›

The T. rex named Sue is perhaps the most famous dinosaur fossils in the world. Sue is on display in the Griffin Halls of Evolving Planet at the Field Museum, Chicago, Illinois.

What is a mold fossil? ›

Sometimes when an animal dies and its body decays, it can leave an imprint in the sediment. If this imprint fills in with minerals from sediment and groundwater, it can harden to form a fossil. This fossil is called a cast fossil. The fossilized imprint is called a mold fossil.

Which fossil is the oldest? ›

The oldest known fossils, in fact, are cyanobacteria from Archaean rocks of western Australia, dated 3.5 billion years old. This may be somewhat surprising, since the oldest rocks are only a little older: 3.8 billion years old!

What are not good index fossils? ›

Because they are often rare, primate fossils are not usually good index fossils. Organisms like pigs and rodents are more typically used because they are more common, widely distributed, and evolve relatively rapidly.

What is the proof that evolution does not exist? ›

Evolution could be falsified by many conceivable lines of evidence, such as: the fossil record showing no change over time, confirmation that mutations are prevented from accumulating in a population, or. observations of organisms being created supernaturally or spontaneously.

Are humans in the fossil record? ›

Although the human family originated many millions of years ago, we know a great deal about our remarkable past. The rich human fossil record dates back more than six million years, and scientists are finding exciting new specimens all the time.

How do we know what happened millions of years ago? ›

The testimony of the rocks is unambiguous: an enormous body of observational evidence points to the reality of deep time. Annual ice and rock layerings reveal a million years of Earth history. Geologic rates of mountain building, erosion and plate tectonics demand hundreds of millions of years.

What are the devil's toenails fossil? ›

Gryphaea arcuata

These gnarled oyster shells get their nickname 'Devil's toenails' because they once used to be the actual toenails of the devil himself. I think. Could be wrong. Anyway, their real name is Gryphaea arcuata; they are about 200 million years old and come from Gloucestershire in England.

What are Devils toenails fossils? ›

Gryphaea, one of the genera known as devil's toenails, is a genus of extinct oysters, marine bivalve mollusks in the family Gryphaeidae. These fossils range from the Triassic period to the middle Paleogene period, but are mostly restricted to the Triassic and Jurassic.

Where is Devil's Fingers found? ›

The species is believed to be endemic to southern Africa, New Zealand and Australia, but has been spreading to other continents and is often invasive. Clathrus archeri now has a global distribution and has been naturalised in Europe and North America.

Where is the devil's finger fungus found? ›

Often found amongst leaf litter under trees or in parks and gardens.

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