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<title>How good is the fossil record</title>
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<lastBuildDate>Tue, 9 Jun 2026 14:39:29 GMT</lastBuildDate>
<pubDate>Fri, 24 Aug 2012 01:12:06 GMT</pubDate>
<copyright>Copyright &#xA9; 2012 American Scientific Affiliation</copyright>
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<title>How good is the fossil record</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<p>I am responding to this post rather late, but here are some general comments for those interested.&nbsp; More on this can be found in my essay on the Cambrian "explosion" on the BioLogos Forum website.</p><br>There is an entire field of scientific research referred to as "taphonomy" -- literally, "the study of death."&nbsp;&nbsp; Taphonomic research includes investigating those processes active from the time of death of an organism until its final burial by sediment.&nbsp; These processes include decomposition, scavenging, mechanical destruction, transportation, and chemical dissolution and alteration.&nbsp; The ways in which the remains of organisms are subsequently mechanically and chemically altered after burial are also examined -- including the various processes of fossilization.&nbsp; Burial and "fossilization" of an organism's remains in no way guarantees its ultimate preservation as a fossil.&nbsp; Processes such as dissolution and recrystallization can remove all record of fossils from the rock.&nbsp; What we collect as fossils are thus the "lucky" organisms that have avoided the wide spectrum of destructive pre- and post-depositional processes arrayed against them.<br><br>Soft-bodied organisms, and organisms with non-mineralized skeletons have very little chance of preservation under most environmental conditions.&nbsp; The discovery of new soft-bodied fossil localities is always met with great enthusiasm.&nbsp; Such localities are erratically and widely spaced geographically and in geologic time. <br><br>Even those organisms with preservable hard parts are unlikely to be preserved under "normal" conditions.&nbsp; Studies of the fate of clam shells in shallow coastal waters reveal that shells are rapidly destroyed by scavenging, boring, chemical dissolution and breakage.&nbsp; Occasional burial during major storm events is one process that favors the incorporation of shells into the sedimentary record, and their ultimate preservation as fossils.&nbsp; Getting terrestrial vertebrate material into the fossil record is even more difficult.&nbsp; The terrestrial environment is a very destructive one: with decomposition and scavenging together with physical and chemical destruction by weathering.<br><br>The potential for fossil preservation varies dramatically from environment to environment.&nbsp; Preservation is enhanced under conditions that limit destructive physical and biological processes.&nbsp; Thus marine and fresh water environments with low oxygen levels, high salinities, or relatively high rates of sediment deposition favor preservation.&nbsp; Similarly, in some environments biochemical conditions can favor the early mineralization of skeletons and even soft tissues by a variety of compounds (eg. carbonate, silica, pyrite, and phosphate).&nbsp; The likelihood of preservation is thus highly variable.&nbsp; As a result, the fossil record is biased toward sampling the biota of certain types of environments, and against sampling the biota of others. &nbsp;<br><br>In addition to these preservational biases, the erosion, deformation and metamorphism of originally fossiliferous sedimentary rock have eliminated significant portions of the fossil record over geologic time.&nbsp; Furthermore, much of the fossil-bearing sedimentary record is hidden in the subsurface, or located in poorly accessible or little studied geographic areas.&nbsp; For these reasons, of those once living species actually preserved in the fossil record, only a small portion have been discovered and described by science.&nbsp; However, there is also the promise of continued new and important discovery. &nbsp;<br><br>Keith Miller<br>]]></description>
<pubDate>Fri, 24 Aug 2012 02:12:06 GMT</pubDate>
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