“…The preservation of a single fossil may involve one taphonomic process or many (Cai et al, 2012), and the processes involved in exceptional preservation may vary among tissues within a single specimen (Cai et al, 2012;McNamara et al, 2009), among specimens in a single assemblage (Guan et al, 2016;McNamara et al, 2012b;Schiffbauer et al, 2014b), or among assemblages located proximally in geologic time and space . Well-known fossils, which express evidence of multiple taphonomic processes, include the carbonaceous/ pyritized/aluminosilicified fossils of the Ediacaran Gaojiashan Member (Dengying Formation) in South China (Cai et al, 2012); the carbonaceous/aluminosilicified fossils of the Burgess Shale (Orr et al, 1998); the phosphatized/calcified fossils of Libros in Spain (McNamara et al, 2009(McNamara et al, , 2012b; the carbonaceous/phosphatized fossils of some Burgess Shale-type localities (Butterfield, 2002;Lerosey-Aubril et al, 2012); the phosphatized/pyritized/calcified fossils of the Eocene London Clay (Allison, 1988b); and the fossils of the Carboniferous Mazon Creek and Montceau-les-Mines biotas (Cotroneo et al, 2016;Perrier and Charbonnier, 2014).…”