Florida Geological Survey - Geology Topics
Fossils
A fossil is any trace of past life that lived prior to
historic times. A scientist who studies fossils is called a
paleontologist. Fossils come in many forms - seashells,
animal bones, leaf impressions, wood, even animal burrows or
footprints preserved in rock. They also come in many sizes,
ranging from less than 1/100th of a millimeter to greater
than tens of meters. Because soft flesh does not preserve
well, many fossils represent only the hard parts of the
original animal, such as the shells of molluscs or the bones
of land animals like the mastodon. Some fossils, such as
wood, bones, and teeth, are petrified, or turned to stone.
Petrification occurs when minerals replace the organic
material that originally comprised the organism. Other
fossils such as seashells are preserved with little change.
Fossils provide important information about the past life on
earth. Based on the types of plants and animals present in a
rock unit, scientists can often determine what ancient
climates were like as well. Fossils are also useful in
correlating and determining the age of rock units.
Florida is a fossil-hunter's paradise. Fossils present in the
exposed rocks in our state range from 45 million-year-old
"sand dollars" to bones and teeth from the "Ice Age"
sabertooth tiger, which lived in Florida just 10,000 years
ago. Much of Florida's bedrock, which is largely limestone,
is comprised of the shells of animals that lived in the
shallow seas once covering our state. Fossil seashells
abound in the banks of both panhandle and southern Florida
rivers.
Bones
from Ice Age mammoths and mastodons accumulate on stream
beds. Shark teeth wash up on the beaches of southwestern
Florida. Moreover, open-pit mineral mines and quarries
statewide yield abundant fossil bones, teeth and shells from
both land and marine animals. For publications on specific
groups of fossils, see the FGS List of Publications. The
following publications provide general information about
Florida's fossils.
Suggested reading:
- Rupert, F.R., 1989, A Guide Map to Geologic and
Paleontologic Sites in Florida: Florida Geological Survey
Map Series No. 125.
- Rupert, F.R., 1990, Florida's Fossil Mammals: Florida
Geological Survey Poster.
- Portell et al., 1993, Common Cenozoic echinoids from
Florida: Florida Geological Survey Poster.
- Scott, T.M. and Allmon, W.D. (eds.), 1993,
Plio-Pleistocene stratigraphy and paleontology of southern
Florida: FGS Special Publication 36, 194 p.