Dinosaurs ruled the Earth for over 160 million years. Trillions of animals lived, hunted, and died—so why do we only find a tiny fraction of their remains?
In this special concept episode of Diggin’ Up Dinos, we’re digging into fossilization: the rare, often unforgiving process that decides what survives deep time and what is lost forever.
From rapid burial and low-oxygen environments to erosion, tectonic forces, and pure bad luck, we explore why fossils are so uncommon—and why complete dinosaur skeletons are almost nonexistent. Along the way, we break down how paleontologists preserve fossils, why museum skeletons are often composites, and how entire species can be defined by a single specimen called a holotype.
We’ll also look at famous fossil sites around the world, how plants fossilize differently than animals, and why dinosaurs like Spinosaurus seem to “change” as new discoveries are made.
This episode isn’t about one dinosaur—it’s about the process that shapes everything we know about prehistoric life.
Because fossils don’t represent the past as it was…
they represent the past that survived.