Earth Science Focus - Fossils

Earth Science Focus - Fossils


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My son and husband love fossils, more specifically they love science. Just this morning I had to show my son how chocolate is made and after that he began asking questions about fossils so since we are visiting my parents we will be going out walking later this afternoon, in search of fossils.

Today we are going to learn more about fossils and creating our own,

What is a fossil?

Fossils are the remains of ancient organisms as well as traces. of them. Most scientist work on the fact that a fossil must predate the recorded human history, this typically means that something must be older than 10 000 years to be considered being a fossil.

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How are fossils created?

Fossils can be formed in different ways. Most of them are formed when a plant or animal dies in a watery environment and is then buried in mud and silt. The soft tissues then quickly decompose and then leaves the hard bones or the shells. When the sediment builds up over time over the top, it then hardens into rock. Petrification then occurs. This means that the encased bones start to decay; The minerals then seep in to replace the organic material cell by cell. Sometimes the bones completely decay, which then means that it leaves a cast of the organism. The void that is left behind is then filled with minerals that makes a stone replica of the organism.

Types of fossils

There are four types of fossils

1. Mold fossils

The mold fossil is a fossilized impression made in the substrate, it creates a negative image of the organism.

2. Cast fossils

The cast fossils are created when a mold is filled in.

3. Vtrace fossils = ichnofossils

The Vtrace fossils are fossilized nests, gastroliths, burrows, footprints, etc.

4. True form fossils (fossils of the actual animal or animal part).

Video about the four types of fossils


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Fossil experiment


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You will need the following

  1. Toy dinosaurs
  2. A small cup of instant coffee
  3. 3/4 cup cold water
  4. 1 cup flour
  5. 6 tbsps of salt
  6. A baking tray
  7. Baking paper.

Instructions

  1. Mix the instant coffee, flour, salt, and water together to make a dough.
  2. Make sure that the dough is wet, but not that wet that it sticks to your fingers.
  3. You can either measure out or guess the amount of dough needed for a dinosaur footprint or body print.
  4. Line your baking tray with baking paper.
  5. Place the dough on the tray and flatten it on your palm.
  6. Now you take your dinosaur and press it softly into the dough. Just enough so that it makes an imprint in the dough.
  7. Bake your fossil at a low heat of about 150C for a few hours, might range between 2-4 hours. Just keep a close eye on it.
  8. Now remove the "fossil" from the oven and let them cool. They will harden more while they cool.

Video for kids about fossils


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Sources

  1. Source 1
  2. Source 2
  3. Source 3
  4. Source 4


Created by Giphy

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Both my son's loved fossils, dinosaurs, movement of stars, imagination is never ending once you are able to set them in the right direction. Thoroughly enjoyed reading this, wish we had the internet when they were young to learn more. They do still enjoy questioning many of the things you mentioned, sadly never from the same inquiring mind as a child's.

What an awesome experiment for kids! My oldest son was fascinated with dinosaurs.

@tanyaschutte An excellent post. My father in law is a geologist and he worked all over South Africa. The guy has some wonder stories to tell about fossils. This is a great post to get the kids interested and I like the practical example.Blessings!

Thank you @papillioncharity. Would love to hear his stories. Think (know) my husband will be fascinated

@tanyaschutte For instance when the main dam at Clarens was built, the old man and his instruments worked in the service tunnels below the dam. He showed me some streaked and heavy grey stones that might be parts of a meteorite that he found there! Blessings!


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That is one precious information.
I remember reading about Fossils in my school times :)

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