guide fossil
Noun: A guide fossil is a fossil of an organism that is known to have existed only during a specific, relatively short period of geologic time. Because of its distinct time range, the presence of this fossil in a rock layer is used to identify and date that layer.
This term is used primarily in geology and paleontology. A guide fossil helps scientists determine the age of the rock in which it is found. For its use in dating, a good guide fossil must be easily identifiable, abundant, geographically widespread, and have a short, well-defined geologic time range.
- The ammonite is a classic guide fossil for dating Mesozoic marine rocks.
- By identifying the guide fossil in the shale, geologists could correlate the layer with the Jurassic period.
- Trilobites serve as excellent guide fossils for Paleozoic strata.
- Index fossil: This is a direct synonym for guide fossil and is the more commonly used term in modern scientific literature.
- The concept is fundamental to biostratigraphy, the branch of stratigraphy that uses fossils to date and correlate rock layers.
- Index fossil (n): Synonym for guide fossil.
- Zone fossil (n): A fossil used to define a specific biostratigraphic zone.
- Biostratigraphy (n): The science of dating rocks using fossils.
- Index fossil
- Zone fossil (in a specific technical context)
The term "guide fossil" is functionally equivalent to "index fossil." While "guide fossil" is correct and descriptive, "index fossil" is the predominant term in contemporary geological and paleontological practice.
- a fossil known to have lived in a particular geologic age that can be used to date the rock layer in which it is found