Living fossils
A term used for any living species which closely resembles a species known from fossils, i.e., as if the fossil had "come to life". This may sometimes be a species known only from fossils until living representatives were discovered (the most famous example of this is the coelacanth fish (Latimeria chalumnae)). Other "living fossils" are the nut clams (Ennucula superba), Lingula anatina, an inarticulate brachiopod, and the horseshoe crab (Limulus polyphemus).
Additional information see Fossils and the geological timescale
The study of fossils is called paleontology.
See also: fossil fuels, acritarchs, transitional_fossils
Fossil is also the