Thanatocoenosis (from Greek language thanatos - death and koinos - common) are all the embedded fossils at a single discovery site. This site may be referred to as a "death assemblage". Such groupings are composed of fossils of organisms which may not have been associated during life, often originating from different habitats. Examples include marine fossils having been brought together by a water current or animal bones having been deposited by a predator. A site containing thanatocoenosis elements can also lose clarity in its faunal history by more recent intruding factors such as burrowing
Thanatocoenosis (from Greek language thanatos - death and koinos - common) are all the embedded fossils at a single discovery site. This site may be referred to as a "death assemblage". Such groupings are composed of fossils of organisms which may not have been associated during life, often originating from different habitats. Examples include marine fossils having been brought together by a water current or animal bones having been deposited by a predator. A site containing thanatocoenosis elements can also lose clarity in its faunal history by more recent intruding factors such as burrowing microfauna or stratigraphic disturbances born from anthropogenic methods.
thumb|236x236px|A rock strata within the Año Nuevo State Reserve in California displaying a fossil assemblage. This term differs from a related term, biocoenosis, which refers to an assemblage in which all organisms within the community interacted and lived together in the same habitat while alive. A biocoenosis can lead to a thanatocoenosis if disrupted significantly enough to have its dead/fossilized matter scattered. A death community/thanatocoenosis is developed by multiple taphonomic processes (those being ones relating to the different ways in which organismal remains pass through strata and are decomposed and preserved) that are generally categorized into two groups: biostratinomy and diagenesis. As a whole, thanatocoenoses are divided into two categories as well: autochthonous and allochthonous.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).