Crossword-Solution: PALAEOZOIC 10 letters, 1 clue 🏆 scrabble score: 23

We have 1 clue for the answer “PALAEOZOIC”

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AUSTRALIAN belt 4 answers
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Hint 1 meaning
The likeness of a living being sculptured or modeled in some solid substance, as marble, bronze, or wax; an image; as, a statue of Hercules, or of a lion.
Hint 2 anagram
TTUESA
Hint 3 another clue
Liberty
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Sentences with PALAEOZOIC (5)

The essential identity of all the Mammals in point of anatomical structure and embryonic development--in spite of their astonishing differences in external appearance and habits of life--is so palpably significant that modern zoologists are agreed in the hypothesis that they have all sprung from a common root, and that this root may be sought in the earlier Palaeozoic Amphibia.
Darwin and Modern Science A.C. Seward and Others 1999
While greatly reduced now, these animals were incredibly abundant throughout the Palaeozoic era, great masses of limestone being often composed almost exclusively of their shells, and their variety is in keeping with their individual abundance.
Darwin and Modern Science A.C. Seward and Others 1999
Many of the Palaeozoic genera had these supports coiled like a pair of spiral springs, and it has been shown that these genera were derived from types in which the supports were simply shelly loops.
Darwin and Modern Science A.C. Seward and Others 1999
The seed offers another striking example; the Palaeozoic seeds (if we leave the seed-like organs of certain Lycopods out of consideration) were always, so far as we know, highly complex structures, with an elaborate vascular system, a pollen-chamber, and often a much-differentiated testa.
Darwin and Modern Science A.C. Seward and Others 1999
The stamens of the Bennettiteae are arranged precisely as in an angiospermous flower, but in form and structure they are like the fertile fronds of a Fern, in fact the compound pollen-sacs, or synangia as they are technically called, almost exactly agree with the spore-sacs of a particular family of Ferns--the Marattiaceae, a limited group, now mainly tropical, which was probably more prominent in the later Palaeozoic times than at present.
Darwin and Modern Science A.C. Seward and Others 1999