Micropaleontology
Micropaleontology is the study of fossils that are so small that they are best studied under a microscope. These tiny remains are called microfossils and usually represent the shells or fragments of minute plants or animals. Because of their small size, microfossils can be brought out of wells without being damaged by the mechanics of drilling or coring. For this reason microfossils are particularly valuable to the petroleum geologist who uses them to identify [rock] formations thousands of feet below the surface.
PRESERVATION OF FOSSILS
The majority of fossils are found in marine sedimentary rocks. These are rocks that were formed when salt-water sediments, such as limy muds, sands, or shell beds, were compressed and cemented together to form rocks. Only rarely do fossils occur in igneous and metamorphic rocks. The igneous rocks were once hot and molten and had no life in them, and metamorphic rocks have been so greatly changed or distorted that any fossils that were present in the original [rock] have usually been destroyed or so altered as to be of little use to the paleontologist.
But even in the sedimentary rocks only a minute fraction of prehistoric plants and animals have left any record of their existence. This is not difficult to understand in view of the rather rigorous requirements of fossilization.
REQUIREMENTS OF FOSSILIZATION
Although a large number of factors ultimately determine whether an organism will be fossilized, the three basic requirements are:
1. The organism should possess hard parts. These might be shell, bone, teeth, or the woody tissue of plants. However, under very favorable conditions of preservation it is possible for even such fragile material as an insect or a jellyfish to become fossilized.
2. The organic remains must escape immediate destruction after death. If the body parts of an organism are crushed, decayed, or badly weathered, this may result in the alteration or complete destruction of the [fossil] record of that particular organism.
3. Rapid burial in a material capable of retarding decomposition. The type of material burying the remains usually depends upon where the organism lived. The remains of marine animals are common as fossils because they fall to the sea floor after death, and here they are covered by soft muds which will be the shales and limestones of later geologic periods. The finer sediments are less likely to damage the remains, and certain fine-grained [Jurassic] limestones in Germany have faithfully preserved such delicate specimens as birds, insects, and jellyfishes.