noun
- Plural of foraminifer; microscopic marine organisms with shells containing small holes or chambers, commonly found in ocean sediments and used in paleontology and geology.
Usage: scientific term; plural form; also called forams (informal)
Examples
- Foraminifers are abundant in deep-sea sediments and provide valuable information about past ocean conditions.
- Paleontologists study foraminifers to understand the climate history of Earth.
- The shells of foraminifers accumulate on the ocean floor over millions of years.
- Foraminifers are single-celled organisms that belong to the phylum Protozoa.
- Oil companies use foraminifers as index fossils to date rock layers and locate petroleum deposits.
- Different species of foraminifers lived during different geological periods.