Preservation Bias and the Fossil Record
Preservation and sampling biases systematically distort the fossil record, so quantifying and correcting them is central to reading the history of life.
Definition
Preservation bias is the systematic distortion of the fossil record caused by uneven preservation, exposure, and sampling, which can make apparent patterns of diversity and ecology differ from biological reality.
Scope
This topic covers the sources of bias in the fossil record, including preservational, environmental, geographic, and sampling biases, time averaging, the rock-record bias, and the statistical methods used to estimate true past diversity from incomplete data.
Core questions
- What are the main sources of bias in the fossil record?
- How does the amount of available rock affect apparent diversity?
- What is time averaging and how does it affect assemblages?
- How can true past diversity be estimated from biased data?
Key concepts
- Preservational and sampling bias
- Rock-record bias
- Time averaging
- Sampling standardization
Key theories
- Rock-record and sampling bias
- Apparent diversity through time can partly track the amount and accessibility of fossil-bearing rock rather than true biological diversity, requiring statistical correction.
- Quantitative paleobiology
- Diversity curves and sampling-standardized analyses, pioneered with large databases, aim to recover real biological signals from a biased record.
Clinical relevance
Recognizing and correcting preservation bias is essential to robust conclusions about diversity, extinction, and evolutionary rates, ensuring that paleobiological inferences reflect biology rather than artifacts of the record.
History
David Raup's work in the 1970s drew explicit attention to how rock availability and sampling could shape apparent diversity. Subsequent decades developed rigorous statistical and database approaches, including sampling standardization, to address these biases.
Debates
- How much of diversity history is real
- The degree to which Phanerozoic diversity patterns reflect genuine biology versus sampling and rock-record artifacts remains a central debate in paleobiology.
Key figures
- David M. Raup
- Susan M. Kidwell
- Steven M. Holland
Related topics
Seminal works
- raup1972
- kidwell2002
Frequently asked questions
- Is the fossil record complete?
- No. Only a small and biased fraction of past life is preserved and discovered, so paleontologists must account for these gaps when interpreting patterns.
- What is time averaging?
- Time averaging is the mixing of remains of organisms that lived at different times into a single fossil assemblage, blurring fine-scale temporal resolution.