Fossils
Fossils are the preserved remains or traces of organisms that lived millions of years ago, usually found in rocks.
They provide important evidence for how life on Earth has changed over time.
How are fossils formed
1. Fossils from preserved remains
Some fossils form when decay does not fully happen.
This can occur when:
There is no oxygen
The temperature is too low
There are no decomposers (like bacteria)
Example: insects trapped in amber
2. Fossils formed by mineral replacement
When an organism dies, the soft parts decay. Hard parts like bones or shells remain. Over time, minerals replace the original material. This creates a rock-like copy of the organism.
3. Trace fossils
These are not parts of the organism itself, but evidence of their activity:
Footprints
Burrows
Root traces
Why is the fossil record incomplete?
The fossil record does not show all organisms that ever lived.
Reasons:
Many early organisms were soft-bodied so they decayed completely.
Geological processes (heat, pressure, erosion) destroy fossils.
Fossilisation is rare and needs specific conditions.
This means scientists are not completely certain how life began.
What can fossils tell us?
Fossils help scientists:
Understand how organisms have changed over time
Identify extinct species
Study evolution
They show that:
Some organisms have changed a lot
Some have changed very little
Interpreting data
You should be able to:
Read graphs showing fossil discoveries over time
Interpret evolutionary trees
Analyse patterns in fossil records
How scientific ideas developed
Early scientists had limited fossil evidence
As more fossils were discovered, ideas about evolution improved
New technology (e.g. dating methods) made conclusions more accurate
Simple data interpretation graph
Practice Questions
1.
Factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis
Measuring & calculating rates of photosynthesis
Inverse square law and photosynthesis
Economics of enhancing the conditions in greenhouses
Investigating the effect of light intensity on the rate of photosynthesis
Data analysis and nervous system
The effect of a factor on human reaction time
Controlling blood glucose concentration
Regulating water and nitrogen levels in the body.
Hormones and human reproduction
Using hormones to treat infertility
Control and coordination in plants using hormones
Investigating the effect of light or gravity on the growth of newly germinated seedlings