Questions tagged [palaeontology]

Palaeontology is the study of organisms that lived in prehistoric times.

Palaeontology, also known as paleontology, palaeobiology or paleobiology, is the study of organisms that lived in prehistoric times. Palaeontology deals with fossil-records.

Palaeontology broadly classified as palaeozoology (discussion on prehistoric animals) (sometimes the term palaeontology is used synonymously with palaeozoology)and palaeobotany (discussion on pre-historic plants).

But in case of ancient remains, their border is very fade because many specimens' taxonomic-nature could not be properly known (They grouped as incertae sedis). Another big branch of palaeontology, is micropalaeontology, study of microfossils (including small-sized organisms (like bacteria, cyanobacteria, fungal hyphae, foraminifera, coccoliths, diatoms ) as well as microscopic remains of large organisms , say piece of barks, wood, pollens (palaeoplynology), animal skeletal-parts of invertebrates and vertebrates), etc.

The term Palaeoecology is applied for discussion about encien environment, climate, different inter-relationships of organisms, etc.

Palaeontology is a very-much inter-disciplinary subject that is related with most-branches of biology, as well as Geology (Earth-science), Geography, Astronomy, Cosmology, as well as the discussion on origin of life is related to Synthetic-biology and Exobiology.

Palaeontology is the half of Evolution and Evolutionary biology, since fossil-records are only direct-evidence of ancient life.

Palaeontology also have applied importance, like finding Coal and Petroleum, rock-layer correlation, etc.

Portion of palaeontology discussing about origin of human, merges with Archaeology. Bioarchaeology discusses with later-condition of life-forms (other than human), especially those associated with archaeological-sites.

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How could this fossil's soft tissue be preserved so well?

I found this article for non biologists like myself. It describes, how astounding fossils were found in China. They belong to a crustacean like animal that lived more than 500 Ma ago. The exciting thing about them is, that the nervous system -soft…
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Did any dinosaur molt?

Like snakes or lizards, did any dinosaur molt ? if yes, have we any proof of it ?
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Are all dinosaur bones radioactive?

I watching some TV program some time ago and a guy in it mentioned that when-ever museums display real dinosaur bones (as opposed to a replica) the bones are painted over with a lead paint, because they are radioactive. The sentence was not…
user12939
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What were the mammal ancestors like 65 million years ago?

What we know about our mammal ancestors that were alive (and survived) at the extinction event 65 million years ago?
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Descendants of dinosaurs

It is commonly accepted that birds are descendants of dinosaurs. It is nice that not all dinosaurs died out. Are there other animals, descendants of dinosaurs, that survived ? (Maybe not till our time, but survived the time when most dinosaurs…
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What species of Cerapoda lived during the Jurassic?

So far, I've found eleven species of Cerapoda that lived during the Jurassic period. Are there any other known species that I've missed? The eleven that I've found out about…
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Ethics in Paleontology

Ethics in Paleontology Fossils help researchers understand the evolution of many lineages of plants and animals. But, who actually owns fossils? What if an important fossil (say a transitional fossil like Tiktaalik or Basilosaurus) were found by an…
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How does tree resin capture arthropods?

In regards to a published paper of a spider about to make a meal out of a parasitic wasp (http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/08912963.2011.640399#.U1kSV14gVBU), it reminded me of a issue I've often contemplating for some time: Isn't tree…
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What is the current thinking on the typicality (or otherwise) of fossils as representatives of their species?

Since fossil records represent a tiny percentage of species populations, how do paleontologists determine how typical those specimens are? Is there any research or analysis to determine how the distribution of fossil specimens within a species…
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How did palaeontologists discover the age of the Tyrannosaurus rex named Sue?

I'm trying to understand how they discovered or speculated the age of Sue the Tyrannosaurus rex to be about 28–29 years old. How do they know exactly the age of Sue? Could it be wrong? Could it be possible that she is older then they thought — maybe…
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Why are the largest land/air animals today smaller than in the Mesozoic?

The largest dinosaurs and pterosaurs seem to have been much larger than the largest animal terrestrial/avian species since. Was the Mesozoic somehow more hospitable to large animal species than today's world? Have subsequent evolutionary innovations…
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What did the ancestors of textile moths eat?

These days I had to wrestle a lot with textile moths. From the Internet I got the impression that these moths don’t feed on naturally available furs in the wild, but have specialised on man made textiles(?). From the Wikipedia entry on textiles I…
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Are the fossil sites in Hadar geographically separated?

The Hadar fossil record is made up of, from oldest to youngest, the Basal Member, Sidi Hakoma Member, Denen Dora Member, and Kada Hadar Member. Are these regions geographically distinct, or, are they layers on top of another on the same…
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Identifying Fossil

Few days ago I found this stone with fossil near 6 centimeters. Can anyone identifying it. Location: Europe,Bulgaria, Elena
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What's this fossil?

I've no experience on the field. The picture below is a gift given to me and I've completely forgotten what was the name of it. I think it was something like "umanite" but I don't know. It was found on Mt. Vermio in Macedonia in northren Greece.
user53456
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