Page 27 - Atlas of Creation Volume 1
P. 27
Harun Yahya
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1. Reef: Calcareous sea animals that form the reef.
2. Radiolarian: a type of microscopic plankton with skeletons
of silica.
3. Two-shelled mollusk, shelled with calcium carbonate. In
fossils, such hard organs may be preserved unchanged.
4. Graptolite: Fossils with organic skeletons that generally left
traces on black shale. These creatures lived in groups.
5. Shark teeth: Bones and teeth consist largely of
phosphorus, for which reason they are more
resistant, compared with many soft-tissue organs.
6. Trace fossils: Fossils that are formed by traces
seen on sediments.
7. Ammonite: A specimen whose shell had been
replaced by iron pyrites and fossilized.
8. A petrified tree: In time, the tree's wooden cells
are replaced by silica and fossilized.
9. Amber: Small organisms are preserved in resin.
10. Carbonized leaves: Plants transformed into
carbon fibers.
This fossil fish, 50 million years old, is evidence that
fish have always remained as fish.
Adnan Oktar 25