The Economist -
24 Jan 2019 17:46

FOR PALAEONTOLOGISTS, fossils are buried treasure, and, like treasure of the more conventional sort, such finds are not all of equal value. Fossilised bones, while useful, are reasonably common. Preserved impressions in fine sediment of soft parts like skin and organs are rarer and concomitantly more helpful when it comes to understanding what ancient life was like. But the palaeontological equivalent of finding royal jewels is the discovery of soft tissues that have themselves become preserved....
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