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Fossil

Key Stage 2

Meaning

The fossil of an animal's skeleton.

A fossil is a piece of a dead creature that has turned into rock over millions of years.

Singular Noun: Fossil
Plural Noun: Fossils
Adjective: Fossilised

About Fossils

A fossil begins as a creature that dies and falls into mud or sand.
Over millions of years the mud or sand turns into a rock with the creature trapped inside.
The creature is replaced by minerals leaving a rock that is the same shape as the creature.
In animals it is usually only the bone that becomes a fossil.

Evidence of Evolution

Fossils show us many creatures that do not exist anymore.
TyrannosaurusFossil.png
GiantSlothFossil.png
The Tyrannosaurus Rex is a dinosaur that became extinct 66 million years ago. The Giant Sloth lived in North America and became extinct 10,000 years ago at the end of the last Ice Age.
DimetrodonFossil.png
MoaFossil.png
The Dimetrodon became extinct long before the dinosaurs even existed. The Moa has only been extinct for about 500 years.
Fossils appear slightly different as you dig into older rocks. When you dig far enough the oldest fossils look very different to the modern creatures.
HorseFossil4.png
HorseFossil3.png
Modern horse fossils are only found in rocks younger than 2 million years old.
They are around 6 feet tall, have hooves and a large nose.
This fossil comes from 7 million year old rocks.
It is shorter and has a smaller nose than modern horses.
You do not find modern horse fossils in rocks this age.
HorseFossil2.png
HorseFossil1.png
This fossil comes from 12 million year old rocks.
It has a small hoof but toes next to the hooves. It is also much shorter than modern horses.
This fossil comes from 34 million year old rocks.
This ancestor of modern horses had toes without a hoof and was the size of a dog.

Key Stage 3

Meaning

Fossils are the remains of a dead organisms that became trapped in sedimentary rock and turned into rock themselves over millions of years.

About Fossils

Fossils are only found in sedimentary rocks but not in igneous rocks.
It is very rare to find a complete fossil of a large animal. Most fossils of animals actually have the bones from lost of different members of the same species.

Key Stage 4

Meaning

Fossils are the remains of a dead organisms that became trapped in sedimentary rock and turned into rock themselves over millions of years.

About Fossils

Most animal fossils come from the bones, teeth and shells of animals which have been trapped under layers of sedimentary rock. While there the biological material has been gradually replaced by minerals turning it into rock over millions of years.
Some fossils are made when organisms become trapped in an anoxic environment where they cannot decay such as within amber, tar pits or under layers of ice.

Fossils as Evidence

Fossils are one of the lines of scientific evidence for evolution.
Since sedimentary rocks build up in layers over time fossils found in deeper layers are from further in the past. This can be used to date the fossils telling us when the organism died.
Fossils provide a number of transitional forms showing how some speciess which are not extinct gradually evolved over time to form the species that are alive today.
The fossil record is not complete as fossilisation is a rare process, so very few organisms become fossils after death. However, there are enough records to show clear evidence of evolution.

References

AQA

Fossil, page 280-3, GCSE Biology; Student Book, Collins, AQA
Fossils, page 101, GCSE Biology; The Revision Guide, CGP, AQA
Fossils, pages 219-20, GCSE Biology, Hodder, AQA
Fossils, pages 243, 244, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy; Biology, CGP, AQA
Fossils, pages 301, 302, GCSE Biology, CGP, AQA
Fossils, pages 59, GCSE Combined Science Trilogy 2, Hodder, AQA

Edexcel

Fossils, pages 126, 130, 131, 134, GCSE Biology, CGP, Edexcel
Fossils, pages 32, 33, GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel
Fossils, pages 45, 47, GCSE Biology; The Revision Guide, CGP, Edexcel

OCR

Fossils, page 55, Gateway GCSE Combined Science; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR
Fossils, page 74, Gateway GCSE Biology; The Revision Guide, CGP, OCR