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155 Terms

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index fossil

fossils of organisms that only lived in one time period and were widespread & common - useful for dating rock

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Phylum Foraminifera (Forams)​​

Kingdom protozoa - cambrian to recent - protozoans - hard outer shell of calcite or sediment - most less than 1mm - make up some marine sediments

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Phylum Porifera (sponges)

late precambrian to recent, has two thin layers of cells, need constant water flow, young'uns move aruond, adults don't

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Phylum Bryozoa

ordovician to recent - "moss animals", live in calcium carbonate, sexual and asexual reproduction - MASSIVE (rly big and crazy), BRANCHING (branched), or FENESTRATE(has big soft appendages)

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Phylum Hemichordata

Cambrian to Recent, marine, worm-like, live in tubes, filter feeders, three-section bodies

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Phylum Cnidaria

Just b4 cambrian explosion to recent, injects venom into predators/prey, some move, some sessile - radially symmetric

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Phylum Arthropoda

Cambrian to recent, most aquatic and move around, some have exoskeleton, all have early larval stage with 1 eye and 3 antennae

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Phylum Brachiopoda

Cambrian to recent, hard shells, symmetric, they anchor themselves, filter feeders, widespread

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Phylum Mollusca

Cambrian to Recent, THERE ARE LOTS OF MOLLUSKS diverse, has a mantle, secrets calcium carbonate and conchiolin to make a shell, has a radula (toothed ribbon of chitin to tear food), circulatory system is open

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Phylum Chordata

has a vertebra, cambrian to recent

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Fish (chordata)

middle cambrian to recent, generally ectothermic, has gills, marine

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Amphibians (chordata)

ectothermic, tetrapods - live on water and land - kids have gills, eventually grow lungs - 3 chambered heart - eggs are soft, no shell - hatchlings have gills, don't live in dry areas

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Reptiles (chordata)

Pennsylvanian to recent, successful, no aquatic larval stage, usually ectothermic, have only lungs, thick skin, most eat meat or bugs.

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Dinosaurs (reptiles)

mostly land-dwelling, reached their prime in the late Mesozoic, some are bird-like, some are reptile-like

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Birds (chordata)

archaeopteryx is oldest known bird, sort of a reptile-bird, birds have light hollow bones and small fingers

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mammals (chordata)

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Kingdom Chromista

eukaryotic, mostly algae, they make a lot of oxygen, aquatic

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kingdom Plantae

Lower Cambrian to recent, supa successful, uses chlorophyll to get energy, uses cellulose for structure, they grow without reaching a defined endpoint, PRODUCERS

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Phylum Anthophyta

lower cretaceous to recent, kingdom plantae, consists mostly of plants with flowers

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Phylum Ginkgophyta

permian to recent, slow rate of evolution, includes pretty much only ginkgo trees - they have large, fan shaped leaves

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Phylum Lycopodiophyta

Silurian to recent, transports spores via water, lots of fossils (especially in coal deposits), leaves have only one vein and fall off tree as it grew, trunks have diamond-shaped scars as a result

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Phylum Pinophyta

Upper carboniferous to recent, "conifers", adapted to colder climates, most are evergreen, most use resin to protect themselves from bugs et. al, dark green thin flat leaves, STOMATA

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stomata

pores on the underside of leaves that can open and close depending on how much water the plant has or needs

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Phylum Pteridophyta

Middle Silurian to recent, mostly FERNS, small serrated pointed leaves

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Phylum Pteridospermatophyta

devonian to cretaceous, "seed ferns", ferns that are produces by plants with seeds

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what materials can fossils be found in?

Amber, petrified wood, sedimentary rocks

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what sedimentary rocks can fossils be found in?

chert, flint, coquina, diatomite, limestone, chalk, fossiliferous limestone, mudstone, sandstone, shale, siltstone

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chert

lots of SiO2, composed of micro-sized crystals, color varies, resists weathering so its good for fossils

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coquina

made out of shells from various invertebrates, mostly calcite, some phosphate, not that hard, looks like chewed oatmeal

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diatomite

made of fossilized cell walls and shells of diatoms, can be crumbled into whitish powder, porous

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dolomite

skewed rhomboid prism, mostly white, yellowish brown, or pink, acts as ph buffer

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limestone

made mostly of calcium carbonate, soluble in water, rounded surfaces and poorly-defined layers

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chalk

pure limestone, fine-grained, soft and white, forms in deep marine places, resistant to weathering and is porous, pretty much just like limestone overall

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Fossiliferous Limestone

limestone that has a TON of fossils, can be big fossils or small fossils - you'll know it when you see it

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mudstone

rock made of clay and mud, may be cracked

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sandstone

rock made out of mostly sand particles, often tannish, reddish, or grayish, porous, gritty and rough, has fewer intact fossils

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shale

fine-grained rock made of clay particles it's the most common sedimentary rock, comes in 'sheets' and 'layers' (look up a picture of it), preserves fossils well and may be split into layers to look for fossils, usually grey or black

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siltstone

grittier than slate or mudstone, looks like shale but it lacks precisely defines layers, has angled fissures

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Phylum Foraminifera (forams)

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Order Fusulinida (Fusulinids)

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Genus Nummulites

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Genus Astraeospongia

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Genus Hydnoceras

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Genus Archimedes

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Genus Rhombopora

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Class Graptolithina

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Genus Favosites

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Genus Halysites

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Genus Heliophyllum

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Genus Hexagonaria

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Genus Septastraea

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Class Scyphozoa (True Jellyfish)

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Order Eurypterida

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Class Insecta

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Genus Cryptolithus

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Genus Calymene

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Genus Elrathia

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Genus Isotelus

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Genus Phacops

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Genus Lingula

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Genus Atrypa

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Genus Composita

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Genus Juresania

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Genus Leptaena

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Genus Mucrospirifer

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Genus Platystrophia

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Genus Rafinesquina

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Order Rhynchonellida

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Genus Exogyra

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Genus Gryphaea

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Genus Pecten

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Genus Pholadomya

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Genus Baculites

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Genus Dactylioceras

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Genus Belemnitella

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Genus Nautilus

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Genus Orthoceras

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Subclass Ammonoidea (Ammonites)

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Genus Conus

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Genus Cypraea

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Genus Platyceras

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Genus Turritella

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Genus Worthenia

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Class Asteroidea (starfish)

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Genus Pentremites

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Class Crinoidea (stems, columns, calyxes)

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Class Echinoidea (sea urchins, sand dollars)

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Class Ophiuroidea (brittle stars)

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Genus Bothriolepis

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Genus Dunkleosteus

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Superorder Selachimorpha (Sharks)

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Genus Carcharodon

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Species C. megalodon

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Superorder Batoidea (rays)

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Superclass Osteichthyes (Bony Fish)

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Class Actinopterygii (ray-finned)

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Order Coelacanthiformes (Coelacanth)

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Genus Tiktaalik

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Genus Acanthostega

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Genus Eryops