在 英语 中使用 Fossilised 的示例及其翻译为 中文
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We knew it was special because you could clearly see the fossilised teeth.
A fossilised fruit dating back 52 million years has been discovered in South America.
LIfe on Mars claim: Do these images show a fossilised skull on the Red Planet?
Fossilised mussels and palm leaves show that some 20 million years earlier Lucerne was a subtropical beach.
He's like this,” said Rachel, lighting on a fossilised fish in a basin, and displaying it.
In 1954 fossilised Homo erectus bones were discovered by C. Arambourg at Ternefine that are 700,000 years old.
Poinar has made a career working with amber, finding fossilised flies, bees, bats, and ancient flowers.
The largest numbers of fossilised remains are those of larval cases, which are made of durable materials that preserve well.
When Jude got up again,he examined what appeared to be two large, fossilised teeth jutting out from the terrain.
The new theory, based on studying fossilised plants and ornithological data, helps explain how birds came to dominate the planet.
The area has become renowned for fossils and who knows,you may be the next to discover a fossilised dinosaur skeleton!
Almost 150 years later, Begun thinks two fossilised chunks from an upper and lower jaw may support a European origin of hominins.
As author Bill Bryson notes in his book A Short History of Nearly Everything,only an estimated one bone in a billion gets fossilised.
Since then, a few fossilised remains have been found, but these are mostly microscopic blobs, reluctant to give up their secrets.
Early explorers thought that they would stumbled upon the ruins of a lost city,while others believed they were fossilised tree trunks.
They examined fossilised pollens of 100 European plant species found in 546 sites, and 87 North American pollens from 527 places.
The limb joints were partly cartilaginous andtherefore not fossilised, allowing only limited conclusions about the range of movement.
Since then, a few fossilised remains have been found, but these are mostly microscopic blobs, reluctant to give up their secrets.
They are one of the best understood prehistoric animals known toscience because their remains are often not fossilised but frozen and preserved.
The reason you can still see the fossilised tree trunks is that they were flooded by volcanic debris four times over about 20,000 years.
The fossilised specimens exhibited similar feather arrangements, pigmentation(yes, the amber fossils even revealed colour!), and microstructure.
When Daisy Morris was four years old, she found fossilised bones of a previously undiscovered species of the flying reptile beast pterosaur.
The fossilised trees you can see here were alive around 180 million years ago, when New Zealand was part of the Gondwanaland super continent.
The technique could possibly be applied to many other fossilised footprint sites around the world, potentially including those of dinosaurs.
That's because fossilised bones, currently the main source of ancient DNA, are scarce even at sites where circumstantial evidence points to a prehistoric human presence.
Insect nibbles on fossilised plant leaves show ecosystems in what's now Patagonia recovered twice as fast as those on the North American landmass.
In fossilised forms, these can be found in standard words, such as puerta→ portillo, burro→ borrico, Venecia→ Venezuela, paño→ pañuelo, calle→ calleja→ callejuela etc.