Category
page 1Biostratinomy
decomposition
thumb|Decomposition of strawberries, reverse time lapse
alt=African buffalo skull decomposing in the Serengeti National Park, Tanzania|thumb|African buffalo skull decomposing in the [[Serengeti National Park, Tanzania]]
thumb|A rotten apple after it fell from a tree
thumb|Decomposing fallen nurse log in a forest
Biostratinomy
thumb|300px |Conceptual relationships of biostratinomic processes (yellow) with paleoecology and necrology (green) and fossildiagenesis (orange).
Biostratinomy is the study of the processes that take place after an organism dies but before its final burial. It is considered to be a subsection of the science of taphonomy, along with necrology (the study of the death of an organism) and diagenesis (the changes that take place after final burial). These processes are largely destructive, and include physical, chemical and biological effects:
Physical effects non-exhaustively include transport, b
Death pose
characteristic posture of dinosaur and bird fossils