Module 7 Flashcards
1a. Define: Fossil
The preserved remains of a once-living organism
1b. Define: Petrifaction
The conversion of organic material into rock
1c. Define: Resin
A think, slowly flowing liquid produced by plants that can harden into a solid
1d. Define: Extinct
A term applied to a species that was once living but now is not
- When a plant or animal dies, what is the most likely thing that will happen to its remains?
they will decompose
- Which forms first: a fossil mold or a fossil cast?
A fossil mold forms first.
- Describe the process of a cast forming, indicating when the mold has formed and when the cast has formed.
The remains of a plant or animal are encased in sediment, and the sediment eventually hardens into rock. As the remains of the plant or animal disintegrate, a hole is left in the rock, in the shape of the original remains. That is the mold. The mold might fill up with sediment or magma later and, when the filling hardens, it forms a cast.
- What is required in order for petrifaction to occur?
water that has a lot of minerals in it
- Why does petrifaction usually produce fossils with more information than fossil casts?
because fossil fasts retain only the shape and outer details of the fossil; when a fossil is petrified, its components are replaced with minerals; this means the entire fossil is preserved, which gives us more information than just the shape and outer details of the fossil
- Can you learn much about the thickness of an organism from carbonized remains?
no
- What type of organism is most likely to leave carbonized remains?
plants
- What is so nice about fossils that have been encased in amber or ice?
Thus, tissue and other soft plants tend to be preserved
- What are the four general features of the fossil record?
I. Fossils are usually found in sedimentary rock. Since most sedimentary rock is laid down by water, it follows that most fossils were laid down by water.
II. The vast majority of the fossil record is made up of hard-shelled creatures like clams. Most of the remaining fossils are of either water-dwelling creatures or insects. Only a tiny, tiny fraction of the fossils we find are of plants, reptiles, birds, and mammals.
III. Many of the fossils we find are of organisms that are still alive today. Many of the fossils we find are of organisms that are now extinct.
IV. The fossils found in one layer of stratified rock can be considerable different from the fossils found in another layer of stratified rock.
- What kinds of creatures make up the vast majority of the fossil record?
Clams and other hard-shelled animals
- Approximately how many species of plants and animals have gone extinct in the last 400 years: a hundred, a thousand, ten thousand, or a hundred thousand?
a thousand