By Dr Anjana Khatwa

Published: Wednesday, 28 December 2022 at 12:00 am


Ancient reptile skeletons are the hallmark of any natural history museum gallery. Devoid of flesh or skin that rotted away or was eaten by scavengers, these fossil specimens continue to inspire and provoke ideas about how life existed on Earth hundreds of millions of years ago.

Whilst most of us are familiar with these types of fossils, there are also plenty of other types of fossils that help scientists to understand the prehistoric life that once lived on our planet.

This guide covers the different types of fossils and how they are preserved, where to look for fossils in the UK, and whether it’s ok to keep a fossil you find.

What are fossils – and are they different from bones?

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The most complete Stegosaurus fossil ever found, on display at the Natural History Museum in London, United Kingdom. © Mike Kemplin/In Pictures/Getty

When you see dinosaur skeletons in a museum, you’re not actually looking at their bones but their geologically based replacements. Bones are made from a composite of organic components, such as collagen and fats, and inorganic minerals such as calcium.

After an animal dies, the organic parts of the bone break down over millions of years and leave only the fragile and porous inorganic components, which maintain the shape of the original bones. Water in the sediment surrounding the animal seeps into its bones, carrying with it minerals such as calcium carbonate and iron.

These are deposited into the bones’ microscopic pores, making them more and more rocklike while the physical structure remains the same.

Q&A was answered by Professor Ben Garrod