{"thcode":2,"term":{"code":192,"name":"conodonts","parent":606,"scope":"Microscopic teeth of primitive, boneless, eel-like animals, similar to modern hagfish, that lived in many of the world's oceans from the Cambrian through Triassic Periods of geologic time (550 to 210 million years ago)."},"uf":[],"bt":[{"code":606,"name":"invertebrates","parent":45,"scope":"Animals having no backbone or spinal column, such as insects, mollusks, crustaceans, worms, and similar organisms."},{"code":45,"name":"animals","parent":843,"scope":"Multi-celled organisms of the kingdom Animalia with eukaryotic cells (cells with distinct nuclei containing genetic material and bounded by thin membranes) that are heterotrophic (obtaining energy from organic substances produced by other organisms)."},{"code":843,"name":"organisms","parent":1174,"scope":"Living individuals that grow, reproduce, and die."},{"code":1174,"name":"topics","parent":1,"scope":"Themes, subjects, and concerns for which USGS information resources are relevant."},{"code":1,"name":"Categories","parent":null,"scope":"Thematic terms for categorizing information resources.  This thesaurus is intended to support finding and understanding scientific information."}],"nt":[],"rt":[{"code":604,"name":"invertebrate paleontology","parent":861,"scope":"Branch of paleontology which deals with fossil animals without backbones."},{"code":738,"name":"micropaleontology","parent":861,"scope":"Branch of paleontology dealing with fossils too small to be seen without a microscope."}]}
