Fossilization (palaeontology): Difference between revisions

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imported>Natasha Barbolini
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Fossilization is the process which creates a fossil. The word ‘fossil’ is derived from the Latin fossilis, something dug up.<ref name="MacRae">"<cite> MacRae, C.S. 1999. Life Etched in Stone: Fossils of South Africa. The Geological Society of South Africa, Johannesburg.</ref>
Fossilization is the process which creates a fossil. The word ‘fossil’ is derived from the Latin fossilis, something dug up.<ref name="MacRae">"<cite> MacRae, C.S. 1999. Life Etched in Stone: Fossils of South Africa. The Geological Society of South Africa, Johannesburg.</ref>
During the Middle Ages, the term ‘fossil’ was used for any sample recovered from the Earth, including rocks and minerals.<ref name="MacRae">


==References==
==References==
===Citations===
===Citations===
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<references />

Revision as of 10:16, 24 September 2007

Fossilization is the process which creates a fossil. The word ‘fossil’ is derived from the Latin fossilis, something dug up.[1] During the Middle Ages, the term ‘fossil’ was used for any sample recovered from the Earth, including rocks and minerals.<ref name="MacRae">

References

Citations

  1. " MacRae, C.S. 1999. Life Etched in Stone: Fossils of South Africa. The Geological Society of South Africa, Johannesburg.