Why do fossils form in sedimentary rock?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Layers bury and preserve remains
Layers bury and preserve remains ✓ — Correct! When organisms die in water or are buried quickly by sediment (mud, sand), soft parts decay but hard parts (bones, shells) remain. More sediment layers pile on top, creating pressure. Mineral-rich water seeps through, gradually replacing organic material with rock (permineralization). Millions of years later—fossil!
Volcanic heat preserves bones — Wrong. Volcanic heat destroys organic material rather than preserving it. Fossils form when organisms are buried in sediment and minerals gradually replace the original material over millions of years.
Organisms naturally turn to rock — Wrong. Organisms don't spontaneously turn to rock. Fossilization requires specific conditions: rapid burial, mineral-rich water, and millions of years for replacement.
More Earth Science questions
- In folded Appalachians, why can one rock layer become a ridge while its neighbor becomes a valley?
- Loose material moves downhill from a fresh fault scarp, rounding it. What sets the smoothing speed?
- Why can a long active fault affect more river basins than a short one?
- Why does erosion happen faster near active faults than in areas with heavy rain?
- Why can quartz sand with beryllium-10 reveal how fast a whole river basin erodes?
- Earthquake shaking lasts seconds. How can it leave rock easier for later rivers to erode?
