Fossils Fin HR
Fossils Fin HR
Fossils Fin HR
Fossils
Table of Contents
Ammonites (2)
#0996, 0997
Trilobites (2)
#0731, 0995
Brachiopods (3)
#0052, 0946
Tabulate coral
#658
Fossil fish
#1380
Pelecypod
#0978
Gastropod
#0042
Echinoderm
#0538
Shark tooth
#1283
Baculite
#0984, 0996, 0997
Ichthyosaurus vertebra
#1278
Eurypterid
#1117
Dinosaur footprint
#1343
Gastrolith
#1264
FOSSILS 1
Graveyard
#0658
Insect in amber
#0999
Fern leaf
#0908
Petrified wood
#1787
FOSSILS 2
FOSSILS 3
An Introduction to Fossils
To the teacher
Millions of years ago, the world looked very different
from how it does now. Trilobites and ammonites lived
in New York City. Dinosaurs roamed Connecticut and
New Jersey. In Wyoming, there were ancient seas full
of fish where now there are grassy plains and hills.
How do we know all this? Through fossils!
Fossils provide us with a record of life on Earth from
its earliest times, a topic that has fascinated generations of children (and adults) and continues to inspire
movies, books, and even toys. The authentic fossil
specimens in this Portable Collections case let your
students hold in their hands a piece of ancient history.
You can use these fossils to fuel students curiosity
and enthusiasm about ancient life, and to introduce
its scientific side as well. The activities in this teacher
guide support exploration into how fossils are made,
discovered, and classified. Wherever possible, we have
also included connections to other curriculum areas,
including the arts and language arts.
What is a fossil?
A fossil is the remains of an organism (plant or
animal) that lived long ago. There are the two types
of fossils: body fossils, where the organism itself or
some part or impression of it was preserved, and
trace fossils, that preserve evidence of the
organisms presence but not the organism itself.
Trace fossils are more common, since a single
organism will move around and leave lots of
evidence over time, whereas it has only one body.
FOSSILS 4
FOSSILS 5
FOSSILS 6
BRACHIOPODS
TABULATE CORAL
TRILOBITES
Trilobites are extinct members
of the arthropod family (which
includes spiders, insects, and
lobsters). They lived from the
beginning of the Cambrian
period through the end of the
Permian period (about 542 to
248 million years ago). These
small marine animals fed on the mud of the ocean
floor. A trilobite's body was divided into three parts
the head, thorax (middle section), and tailwhich
gave the animal its name ("tri" means "three" in
Latin). Trilobites are common and well-known fossils,
with more than 15,000 species documented in the
fossil record.
FOSSIL FISH
Sometime between 36 and 58
million years ago, this fossil fish
was buried in an ocean bed
located in what is now
Wyoming. It was preserved in
a mud shale matrix. The brown
color defining the shape of the
fish is a thin layer of carbon
left as the organic matter decayed. The backbone
and other parts of the skeleton are visible.
FOSSILS 7
PELECYPOD
SHARK TOOTH
GASTROPOD
Gastropods are mollusks, like
snails, clams, and other shelled
animals. Gastropods have a
well-developed head and a
muscular foot, and most have
a spiral-shaped shell. This fossil
gastropod dates from the
Cretaceous period. Nothing
remains of the animals soft body, but the gloss of
its shells inner layer can still be seen in some places.
The rest of the gastropod has been replaced by
other minerals.
ECHINODERM
Echinoderms are marine
animals whose bodies are
covered with hard plates or
spines. Starfish, sand dollars,
and sea urchins are echinoderms. This specimen is a sea
biscuit that lived during the
Carboniferous period. Small
hairs that covered the body are missing, and the
original shell material and its interior have been
replaced by other minerals. The tiny holes that form
the petal design on its surface were used for breathing. Sand dollars appeared in the Paleocene and, of
course, can still be found in warmer waters today.
BACULITE
Collected in South Dakota,
this fossil is a piece of a shell
belonging to a baculite that
lived during the Cretaceous
period. Baculites were marine
animals related to ammonites.
Most of the original material
from this shell has been
replaced by other minerals. The patterns of white,
squiggly lines are from sutures (the part of the shell
where the walls dividing it into chambers connected
with the inner surface of the shell wall).
Paleontologists use suture patterns to identify different
species of baculites.
ICHTHYOSAURUS VERTEBRA
This is an example of an
altered fossil, meaning that
the original bone matter dissolved and was replaced by
other minerals. Ichthyosaurs
(Greek for "fish lizards") were
carnivorous marine reptiles
that lived from the Triassic to
the Cretaceous period. They had streamlined, fish-like
bodies with a long snout, a large tail fin, and limbs
adapted for use as steering paddles. Although they
looked like fish, they werent; instead, ichthyosaurs
evolved from unidentified land reptiles that moved
back into the water.
FOSSILS 8
EURYPTERID
GASTROLITH
DINOSAUR FOOTPRINT
GRAVEYARD
Graveyard is the term for a
conglomeration of fossils. This
conglomeration of marine
fossils includes sponges, corals,
and crinoids, all preserved in
this one specimen.
FOSSILS 9
INSECT IN AMBER
Millions of years ago, the
insect inside this piece of
amber landed on a tree and
got stuck in its sticky resin.
Over time, that resin (or sap)
grew harder and eventually
turned into a type of fossil
known as amber. The same
chemical processes that turned the fresh resin into
fossilized amber also preserved the insect trapped
within it. Many insects, spiders, and even small
animals (like frogs or lizards) have been preserved
this way.
FERN LEAF
This fern fossil dates from the
Carboniferous period. It is a
mold of the original plant, and
was exposed when a fossil
hunter split the rock open. For
millions of years, ferns dominated the earth's greenery.
They covered the floors of
damp forests and swamps all around the globe. But
the majority of fern species that existed in the era of
this fossil fern are now extinct. For the most part,
modern ferns look the same as ferns that lived millions
of years ago. However, the fern in this specimen would
have looked more like a tree than a small plant. It
had a hard trunk and grew to a height of 13 feet!
PETRIFIED WOOD
This ancient piece of wood
has turned to stone after millions of years. The original
organic material dissolved and
was replaced by other minerals (probably a silicate, like
quartz). This process occurred
underground, when the wood
was buried under sediment. Mineral-rich water flowing through the sediment deposited minerals in the
woods cells, and as the plant decayed away, a stone
cast was left in its place.
FOSSILS 10
ACTIVITY 1
Grades 35
Related Specimens: All
Right or wrong, children tend to have already an assortment of knowledge about fossils. This class discussion is
intended to make that knowledge public and shared
among the group. It provides a starting place for the
next activity. The word puzzle introduces some basic
fossil terms, which you may define for students or ask
them to look up on their own and/or share.
Materials:
Blackboard or chart paper
A small selection of specimens from the case
Copies of Paleo Puzzle worksheet on the next page,
one per student
What To Do:
1 Lead a discussion on the topic of fossils. Start by asking
students what they know about fossils and about life
on earth millions of years ago. List their statements on
the board or chart paper, without comment or contradiction. Together the comments create a baseline of
information, imagery, and questions for the whole
class to pursue.
2 Ask the students the Discussion Questions below and
any others that you think will stimulate their thinking.
They will not have answers to everything, but even
paleontologists may not. Remind them that by asking
questions they are helping to define the scope of the
topic for the classs work.
3 Pass around one or two of the fossils from the case
(such as the eurypterid and a gastrolith) without
telling the class what they are. What makes each
object a fossil? What kind of fossil do they think it is?
Ask each student to come up with a question about
one (or both) of the fossils. List these in a second
column on the board or chart paper.
Discussion Questions:
What is a fossil?
What kinds of things can be fossils?
Is a fossil a real animal or plant?
What parts of an animal might become fossils? Why
might some parts become fossils and not others?
What could a fossil be made of?
How old does something have to be to be considered
a fossil?
How do we know how old a fossil is? How might a
scientist be able to tell?
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FOSSILS 11
Paleo
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Ammonite
Baculite
Cast
Cenozoic
Dinosaur
Eurypterid
Era
Gastrolith
Geological Time
Mold
Paleontology
Sedimentary
Trace
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ACTIVITY 2
Grades 35
Related Specimens: All
This activity gives your students a chance to look closely
at real fossils and form hypotheses about what these
organisms were and how they survived to tell us about
the past.
Materials:
Fossils from the case
Timeline poster from the case
Copies of the What Can Specimens Tell Me? chart,
one per student OR, for a whole class exercise, a
transparency of the chart and an overhead projector
Blackboard OR chart paper for recording group
observations
What To Do:
1 Depending on the age and interests of your students
and the amount of time you would like to spend, you
can do this activity using a handful of specimens or
every specimen in the case. It can be done in small
groups or as a class, looking at the specimens in turn
and filling out the chart using an overhead projector
or large chart paper.
2 For small groups, prior to the presentation of the
lesson, set the classroom up into stations (make sure
there are enough stations that you have only 34
students working at each one). Place one or more
specimens at each station.
3 Distribute the What Can Specimens Tell Me? chart
and go over it with the students. Ask them to pay
special attention to the physical properties of each of
the specimens. You may want to practice with the
class, using one of the specimens to model the
activity, if you have not already done the Introductory
Activity.
SCIENCE
EXTENSION:
GEOLOGIC TIME
Discussion Questions:
How could a living organism (such as a plant or an
animal) turn into a rock? What might make that
happen?
How are some of the fossils alike or different?
Which fossils give a more complete image of the
organism? Why might that be?
Which fossils are the actual organism and which ones
are a print or impression of it?
Which fossils are the oldest? How might a paleontologist tell?
Why are gastroliths and sharks teeth considered
fossils?
Using the timeline poster provided, have students re-sort the fossils according
to geologic era and period. Which fossils are the earliest? (There will be a
number for which no clear date is possible. You can point out that
paleontologists face this dilemma, too. How do they figure out the dates?)
FOSSILS 13
What can
specimens
tell me?
What color and texture is
the background of the
fossil? Is the rock
layered?
Use your senses to observe each specimen carefully, using a hand lens if necessary. What can
you tell about the fossil just by looking at the specimen in detail? Use this chart to record
what you discover.
What can
specimens
tell me?
What color and texture is
the background of the
fossil? Is the rock
layered?
Use your senses to observe each specimen carefully, using a hand lens if necessary. What can
you tell about the fossil just by looking at the specimen in detail? Use this chart to record
what you discover.
PREDATORS
REPTILES
AND 15
PREY 15
What can
specimens
tell me?
What color and texture is
the background of the
fossil? Is the rock
layered?
Use your senses to observe each specimen carefully, using a hand lens if necessary. What can
you tell about the fossil just by looking at the specimen in detail? Use this chart to record
what you discover.
REPTILES 16
What can
specimens
tell me?
What color and texture is
the background of the
fossil? Is the rock
layered?
Use your senses to observe each specimen carefully, using a hand lens if necessary. What can
you tell about the fossil just by looking at the specimen in detail? Use this chart to record
what you discover.
REPTILES 17
ACTIVITY 3
All Grades
Related Specimens: Brachiopod, tabulate coral,
pelecypod, baculite, eurypterid
This is a fun and simple way to demonstrate how some
body fossils are made!
Materials:
What To Do:
Have students roll the clay into a ball and press it flat
on a cardboard square. Then have them press one
hand into the clay hard enough to make a print. Have
them hold their prints up to show and talk about how
animals and plants millions of years ago printed mud
and soft rocks in the same way and left their traces
for us to find.
Have students make a leaf print art by rubbing a
crayon over a piece of paper that has leaves
underneath it.
Discussion Questions:
Have students imagine themselves as paleontologists looking for fossils, and tell or
LITERACY
EXTENSION: write the story of how they came across the fossil they just made in the activity
above. What kind of land were they exploring? What adventures did they have
getting to where they were digging? How deep did they dig? What tools did they
use? What happened afterwards?
FOSSILS 18
ACTIVITY 4
Footprint Forensics
Grades 35
Related Specimen: Dinosaur footprint
By studying footprint patterns revealed in stages, students
examine the evidence and make hypotheses about the
story the footprints tell.
Materials:
Copies of each of the Footprint Patterns, one per
student (see page following this activity) OR an overhead transparency of each of the Footprint Patterns
What To Do:
1 To prepare for this activity, make copies of the
Footprint Pattern and cut the panels apart. You will
hand out these panels to your students one at a time.
Alternatively, you can copy each section onto a separate transparency for use with an overheard projector.
2 Ask the class what they know about reading evidence
to reconstruct an event. Have they seen movies or TV
programs where detectives or scientists find traces of
incriminating evidence? Or where skilled hunters have
interpreted footprints to track a person or an animal?
3 Explain that paleontologists use evidence to make
deductions about what happened millions of years
ago, and that they are going to do the same thing.
Emphasize that they will get the evidence in stages
and at each stage they will be forming a hypothesis
about what happened.
4 Hand out or project panel 1 of the Footprint Pattern.
Ask students to examine the panel closely. Can they
tell anything about the size or nature of the animals
that made the footprints? How many were there?
Were all the tracks made at the same time? How might
the students figure that out if they were paleontologist
working in the field? What might have happened?
Encourage students to point out what evidence supports their idea. Help them distinguish between what
they see and what they infer. For example, they might
state that the animals were walking around, that they
met each other (or didnt), that they were large or
small, etc.
Discussion Questions:
In what directions did the animals move?
Did they change their speed and direction? How can
you tell?
Were there trees or bushes that might have kept the
animals from seeing each other?
Do we know if they were there at the same time?
How might you know what the climate was like?
What conditions were necessary for the preservation
of the footprints?
FOSSILS 19
ACTIVITY 4
SCIENCE AND Take students outdoors on a damp day. Have them find animal tracks in a
nearby park and try to interpret them.
LITERACY
EXTENSIONS: Put large sheets of brown paper on the floor of the classroom. Have one or two
students sponge water on the soles of their shoes and then step on the paper,
leaving footprints. (You can use flour instead of water.) Then have them act out
a scenewalking along in opposite directions and stopping to greet each other,
for example, or just passing by. Have them think of other ways to interpret the
footprints. Extend the activity by having some students leave the room while
others act out a footprint story that the others interpret (out loud or in writing)
on their return to the room.
With pencil and paper, have students design their own footprint patterns. They
can use tracks of animals, birds, humans, marine creatures, and even leaf prints.
Have students share their footprint patterns with the class, or divide students
into teams and have them interpret each others stories out loud or in writing.
FOSSILS 20
Footprint
Pattern
Panel 1
Panel 2
Panel 3
ACTIVITY 5
Grades 35
Related Specimens: All
The purpose of this activity is to engage students in thinking about how the various layers of the Earth in which
fossils are found help us map geologic time.
Materials:
Geologic Time poster, from the case
3x5 cards or similar-sized paper and pencils
Tape measure
What To Do:
1 Introduce the activity by showing students the
Geologic Time poster, if you have not already done so.
Review the concept of eras and periods of geologic
time. Point out how eras and periods are shown on
the poster in uneven layers. The layout of the layers on
the poster is analogous to the layers within the Earth.
The earliest eras and periods are at the bottom.
2 Have the students re-imagine the classroom as representing different areas of the Earths landscape. If the
ceiling represents the present-day level of the earths
surface, then the heights of the rooms features
desks, chairs, tables, bookshelves, the floorall represent different layers beneath the surface of the Earth.
As a class, figure out what era or period each surface
should represent. In the classroom landscape, what
level represents the Paleozoic era? What level represents the Cenozoic era? [Note: These layers do not
have to be uniform throughout the classroomthe
layers within the earth are not all the same thickness
everywhere. A desk in one corner may represent the
Paleozoic, while a desk across the room may represent
the Cenozoic.]
Discussion Questions:
Do all specimens from the same period have to be at
the same height off the floor? What forces of nature
could cause them to be at different levels?
If you were a paleontologist, where would you look
for fossils, given that most of them are formed
underground?
Among the fossils in the case, are there more marine
organisms or more land organisms? Do you think
this is typical for all fossils? Why?
On the Geological Time poster, how does the proportion of marine and land animals change as time
goes on? When do plants appear?
FOSSILS 22
ACTIVITY 6
FOSSILS 23
Vocabulary Words
body fossil:
matrix:
burrow:
organism:
molten:
cast:
paleontologist:
coprolites:
mold:
in paleontology, a mold is the hollow shape left in
sedimentary rock by a decayed organism.
period:
petrifaction:
era:
a large unit of geologic time, each comprising millions of years and a number of sub-divisions called
periods. Some eras include the Pre-Cambrian,
Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic.
replacement fossil:
fossil:
sedimentary rock:
extinction:
the remains or traces of organisms, including microscopic organisms, that lived at least 10,000 years ago.
fossilization:
the process by which a living organism, plant or animal, becomes a fossil.
gastrolith:
a smooth, rounded stone found with dinosaur
remains; long a mystery, such stones are now thought
to have been a digestive aid for dinosaurs who swallowed them to help grind up food in their stomachs.
geologic time
trace fossil:
includes things like footprints, burrows, and fossilized
dung, that trace the movements or activity of an
organism. A single animal can make thousands and
thousands of traces in its lifetime, but it will only
leave behind one body when it dies. Because of
this, trace fossils are much more common than
body fossils.
track:
trail:
geologist:
a scientist who studies the entire history of the earth,
not just fossils.
index fossil:
a fossilized creature that lived only in one specific
time period can be used as an indicator (index) of
the date of the rock in which it is found.
FOSSILS 24
Activity
1 2 3 4 5 6
Subject
Letter
Students will
Arts
Music
Arts
Visual Arts
English
Language
Arts
Listening &
Reading
ELA
Listening &
Reading
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
ELA
Speaking &
Writing
Math,
Science, &
Technology
Scientific
Inquiry
Ask "why" questions in attempts to seek greater understanding concerning objects and events they have
observed and heard about
MST
Scientific
Inquiry
MST
Scientific
Inquiry
Develop relationships among observations to construct descriptions of objects and events and to form
their own tentative explanations of what they have
observed
MST
Scientific
Inquiry
FOSSILS 25
Activity
1 2 3 4 5 6
Subject
Letter
Students will
MST
Scientific
Inquiry
MST
Scientific
Inquiry
Physical
Setting
Physical
Setting
MST
MST
Physical
Setting
MST
Models
MST
Models
MST
Strategies
FOSSILS 26
Museum Victoria:
Information about dinosaurs.
www.museum.vic.gov.au/dinosaurs
Acknowledgments
Beth Alberty
Chrisy Ledakis
Tim Hayduk
Nobue Hirabayashi
Whitney Thompson
Special Thanks
Daniel Dixon
The Teachers of the New York City Department of Education
Funding
The revision of this
Portable Collections Program caset guide is made possible
by a Learning Opportunities Grant from
the Institute for Museum and Library Services.
2006
Brooklyn Childrens Museum
145 Brooklyn Avenue
Brooklyn, New York 11213
718-735-4400 ext. 170
www.brooklynkids.org
For information about renting this or other Portable Collections Program cases,
please contact the Scheduling Assistant at 718-735-4400 ext. 118.