Marine fossils |
Charmaine (probably the first name of someone named Charmaine Mike) demonstrated some striking ignorance in "his" post. Mike, who claims to have MS (in physical therapy? is that possible?) said in his bio that he specialized in "chemistry, physics and natural science topics" at eHow. Su-u-u-ure... Well, our boy started off OK, but then, who doesn't know that,
"Fossils are the traces of an extinct animal or plant which have been preserved on [sic] materials such as rocks"?
- "The Arlington Archosaur Site, in northern Texas, is one of the important fossil sites."
- "Ediacaran fossils (approximately 630 to 540 millions years old) and Cambrian fossils (540 million years old) have led many scientists along the evolutionary path, particularly during a critical phase of the history of animal life, which is known as the Great Cambrian explosion."
- "Fossils... help in identifying the morphological changes within an animal or plant species. Thus, the historical development of a biological group (as a race or species) can be studied."
- "Histological Events: Fossils have been used by scientists to determine the dates of rock layers (or strata) that were laid down in succession hundreds of years ago."
- "In paleontology, one can often determine the type of environment that a fossil organism lived in."
- No, it's not.
- Ediacaran fossils are known only from 575-540 million years ago. Cambrian fossils range in age from (about) 540 to 485 million years... That's not to mention that fossils are known all the way to about last year.
- You can't identify "race" from a fossil. Except for humans, no creatures have "race."
- WTF does histology – the study of the microscopic structure of tissues – have to do with fossils? Almost all are preserved hard parts; i.e., no tissue. Oh, and Charmaine? Are you really stupid enough to think that rock layers were laid down "hundreds of years ago"?
- Actually, it often works the other way: similarities to living organisms suggest the environment in which a fossil animal lived.
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SI - PALEONTOLOGY
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