INDEX FOSSILS AND LIVING FOSSILS DR. MUHAMMAD TARIQ DEPARTMENT OF ZOOLOGY GOVT. COLLEGE OF SCIENCE, WAHDAT ROAD, LAHORE
INDEX FOSSILS A fossil that identifies & shows the relative age of the rocks in which it is found.
INDEX FOSSILS … contd … Index fossils come from species that were widespread But existed for a relatively brief period of time .
INDEX FOSSILS… contd … The fossil record shows clearly that over time, life on Earth has changed.
INDEX FOSSILS Fossils in relatively young rocks tend to resemble animals & plants that are living today . (Index Fossil : A fossil known to have lived in a particular geologic age that can be used the rock layer in which it is found ( Dictionary Lumia ).
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … In older rocks, fossils are less similar to modern organisms. As scientists collected fossils from different rock layers & formations ,
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … The fossil record shows clearly that over time, life on Earth has changed. Fossils in relatively young rocks tend to resemble animals & plants that are living today.
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … They discovered that they could often recognize the rock layer by the assemblage of fossils it contained.
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … Some fossils proved particularly useful in matching up rock layers from different regions.
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … These fossils, called index fossils, are widespread but only existed for a relatively brief period of time.
INDEX FOSSILS… Contd … When a particular index fossil is found, the relative age of the bed is immediately known.
LIVING FOSSILS Fossils which range from ancient time up to the present day without any change in primitive characters are referred to as Living Fossils.
LIVING FOSSILS… contd … In contrast to index fossils, living fossils are organisms that have existed for a tremendously long period of time without changing very much at all.
LIVING FOSSILS… contd … E.g. , The Lingulata brachiopods have existed from the Cambrian period to the present, A time span of over 500 MYs!
LIVING FOSSILS Modern specimens of Lingulata are almost indistinguishable from their fossil counterparts ( Fig.8 ).
Fig.8 : Fossil Lingula (left) & Modern Lingula (right).