FUSE July 2014 | Page 8

Fascinating Fossils! Palaeontology is the scientific study of prehistoric life. It includes the study of fossils to determine organisms’ evolution and interactions with each other and their environments. Fossils are the remains or impression of a prehistoric plant or animal embedded in rock and preserved in petrified form. Petrified means that the organic matter has been changed into a stony substance – the fossilised parts are chemically altered. The word ‘fossil’ comes from the Latin word fossilis, which means ‘dug up’. In order for remains to become fossilised, it requires specific conditions, which often includes quick and permanent burial, protecting the remains from disturbance from the environment or other animals; a lack of oxygen, limiting decaying and rotting of the remains; and the absence of heat or compression, which might otherwise destroy it. There have been fossils found all over the world, and there are different types of fossils. The type of fossil depends on how it was created: Natural Mould This is when the plant or animal rots and decays away, leaving an imprint in the rock. Because of this, often fossils are preserved within sediments (matter which settles to the bottom of liquids such as sand, silt and mud) as these conditions occur more frequently there, and because the majority of the Earth’s surface is covered in water (over 70%!) Fossils can tell us all sorts of information about the animal – how big it was, how it died and even what it ate! Trace fossils These can be footprints, coprolites (animal poo) or nests. 8 | FUSE The animal dies, and it is washed downstream, where it rests on layers of soft mud and is rapidly buried. Over time, the skeleton is buried further and further by more sediment. The weight of all the new sediment squashes the underlying sediment, pressing the grains together, pushing the water out and slowly turning the soft sediment into hard rock (this is called lithification). Petrified Petrifaction or petrification is the process by which organic material is converted into stone through the replacement of the original material and the filling of the original pore spaces with minerals. Total Preservation This is when the whole animal or plant is completely preserved, such as in amber. The process of fossilisation Once buried, the soft tissue and flesh are broken down by bacteria, leaving just the skeleton behind. Semi-Preservation This occurs when the soft tissues of the organism decay and only the hard parts of the animal or plant are preserved unchanged. Natural Cast When the mould is formed, as in the natural mould process, but the imprint is filled by natural substances, such as flint. saur any findings of dino ogists There have been m . When palaeontol all over the world fossils e fossils into te, they classify th find a new fossil si different types: the on – This is when it z Articulated skelet z ected together as fossil is still all conn dinosaur ive. was when it was al nes have eton – When the bo zz Associated skel d, but are still from apart and separate broken the same animal. bone that has been bone – This is one zz Isolated of the skeleton. rated from the rest sepa of bone that are ese are the scraps zz Float – Th much use. small, and rarely of Minerals contained in the sediment replace the minerals in the skeleton and fill any gaps as parts of the skeleton dissolve (this is called permineralisation). Many millions of years may pass, but then extreme weather can erode the rock, revealing the fossilised skeleton. A person who studies dinosa urs is called a Palaeontologist (pay-lee-on -tol-o-jist) The first dinosaur in space wa s the fossil of the Maiasaura, which was taken on a space shuttle mission in 1985 . The first humans on earth are thought to have evolved around 65 million years after dinosaurs became extinct. 9 | FUSE