FIGURE 3.1. The process of fossilization destroys 99 percent of the bones and shells of most organisms, so less than
1 percent of all the species that have ever lived are preserved as fossils—and then have the great luck to have been
spotted in the last 200 years when a paleontologist happens to be out collecting.
Footprints are left
in the mud The dinosaur
collapses and dies
Flesh rots away;
bones remain
Time
The water level rises;
sediment buries the bones
and footprints
A thick sequence of
sediments accumulates
over the bones; gradually
the bones fossilize
This bed contains the
dinosaur bones
Erosion exposes the
layer of strata containing
the bones and footprints