Taphonomy Study Guide
Study Guide
📖 Core Concepts
Taphonomy – study of all post‑mortem processes affecting objects from death to recovery (burial, decay, fossilization, etc.).
Biostratinomy – events between death and burial (disarticulation, transport, scavenging).
Diagenesis – physical & chemical changes after burial (mineralization, compaction).
Five main stages – disarticulation → dispersal → accumulation → fossilization → mechanical alteration.
Biases – systematic distortions in the fossil record caused by differential preservation, habitat, transport, time‑averaging, and human collection.
Forensic branches – biotaphonomy (decomposition of the body) and geotaphonomy (effects of burial environment).
---
📌 Must Remember
Hard parts (bone, shell, pollen) → far higher fossilization potential than soft tissues.
Rapid burial + low O₂ = key conditions for soft‑tissue preservation (e.g., calcium carbonate mineralization).
Scavenger predation is the dominant pre‑burial disintegration driver, not water energy.
Time‑averaging mixes organisms of different ages → reduces temporal resolution.
Megabiases arise from long‑term shifts (evolutionary innovations, climate, tectonics).
DNA & proteins rarely survive > 0.5 Ma; kerogen derives from highly cross‑linked polymers (lignin, sporopollenin, cutan).
---
🔄 Key Processes
Death → Enzyme release → early microbial decay.
Disarticulation – joints separate; scavengers may remove parts.
Transport & Dispersal – water flow, trampling, or predation moves remains.
Accumulation – remains concentrate in depositional “traps” (deltas, lake bottoms).
Fossilization – mineral percolation, carbonate precipitation, diagenetic replacement.
Mechanical alteration – compaction, shear, or distortion after burial.
---
🔍 Key Comparisons
Biostratinomy vs. Diagenesis – pre‑burial processes vs. post‑burial chemical/physical changes.
Biotaphonomy vs. Geotaphonomy – body‑centered decay vs. burial‑environment effects.
Hard‑part bias vs. Soft‑tissue bias – easy preservation of skeletons vs. rare exceptional preservation requiring special conditions.
---
⚠️ Common Misunderstandings
“All fossils form slowly.” → Many fossilizations are rapid (minutes‑hours) if burial is swift and mineral‑rich waters are present.
“DNA always survives in bone.” → DNA degrades within hundreds of thousands of years; most fossil bones lack recoverable DNA.
“Water always speeds decay.” → Fluvial environments often slow decay due to cooler temps and reduced scavenger access.
---
🧠 Mental Models / Intuition
“The burial timer” – imagine a stopwatch that starts at death; the sooner the “stop” (rapid burial), the higher the chance of preserving delicate tissues.
“Bias filter” – think of the fossil record as water passing through a sieve: hard parts slip through easily, soft parts are trapped only under special conditions.
---
🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases
Allochthonous deposits – fossils transported far from origin can misrepresent local ecosystems.
Effaced Ediacaran fossils – fine details lost despite preservation, indicating variable early diagenetic conditions.
Human collection bias – over‑representation of “showy” taxa due to researcher preferences.
---
📍 When to Use Which
Assessing site formation → Use biostratinomic indicators (articulation, transport marks) for pre‑burial processes; use diagenetic mineralogy for post‑burial alteration.
Forensic vs. Archaeological interpretation → Apply biotaphonomy for body‑level decay clues; apply geotaphonomy for burial‑environment clues (soil chemistry, burial depth).
Reconstructing paleoecology → Combine taphonomic bias corrections (hard‑part, habitat, time‑averaging) with assemblage composition.
---
👀 Patterns to Recognize
Articulated small bones + rapid sediment cover → indicates quick burial, minimal transport.
Scavenger bite marks + disarticulated elements → strong biostratinomic predation signal.
Calcite overgrowth on soft tissues → mineralization in oxic‑basic conditions, potential soft‑tissue preservation.
Uniform grain‑size sorting of fossils → mechanical alteration or transport sorting.
---
🗂️ Exam Traps
“Scavenging only occurs on land.” – false; riverine scavengers also drive disintegration.
“All taphonomic bias is biological.” – neglects physical (transport, sedimentation) and human collection biases.
“DNA can be extracted from any fossil bone.” – only from relatively recent (< 0.5 Ma) specimens under exceptional preservation.
“Time‑averaging always improves fossil completeness.” – actually obscures contemporaneity and can blend multiple assemblages.
---
or
Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:
Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or