fossilness
Fossilness is a term used to describe the degree to which a specimen resembles a fossil or has undergone fossilization. In paleontological contexts, it denotes the preservation quality of organic material, including processes such as mineral replacement, permineralization, carbonization, and the retention of diagnostic morphology. The word can also be used more loosely to convey an antique or archaic appearance in non-biological objects, or as a metaphor for something perceived as long-lasting.
Origin and usage: The term is formed from fossil and the suffix -ness and is not widely
How fossilness is assessed: High fossilness implies that key features remain intact enough for confident identification
Determinants: Fossilness is governed by burial conditions, sediment chemistry, oxygen levels, pressure and temperature, and long-term
Examples and note: Well-preserved plant impressions in fine shales, calcite-replaced bones, and silicified wood are cited
See also: fossil preservation, taphonomy, permineralization, carbonization, diagenesis.