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Showing results for tags 'Albian'.
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From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Etyus martini : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Cretacoranina broderipii : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Cretacoranina broderipii : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Cretacoranina broderipii : an albian crab from the clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet crustacean claw from the albian clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet crustacean claw from the albian clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet crustacean claw from the albian clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet crustacean claw from the albian clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet crustacean claw from the albian clay of Troyes -
From the album: Troyes - nov 2015 - albian
Indet fish vertebra from the albian clay of Troyes-
- cretaceous
- France
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I processed some matrix today and found this small claw so I am interested to see what others think it is. The claw was found in the marine matrix from the Toolebuc formation that is a marine deposit that dates to the albian period in the cretaceous, about 100 million years ago of Australia it is found around Richmond in central Queensland. The scale in the photos is in half millimetres. the tip of the claw is broken of and what remains is about 5.5 mm long and about 1.2 mm wide. As the specimen is a claw I have eliminated the usual suspects of fish and marine reptiles so I am leaning more to
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- Australian
- Marine
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From the album: Abian of Troyes - nov 2014
Fossil crab : Etyus Martini from Troyes - albian (100 MYO) -
Looking through some micro bits I came across this little oddity. Any ideas ?? It is from the cretaceous of central Queensland in Australia from a marine deposit The scale is in half millimetres. Thanks in advance for looking. Mike
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From the album: Goniopygus echinoids
New image of my rare Goniopygus budaensis with associated spines found in the Georgetown formation of the Washita Group in south Central Texas.© John Jackson
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- Texas fossil
- echinoid spines
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From the album: Goniopygus echinoids
New image of my rare Goniopygus budaensis with associated spines found in the Georgetown formation of the Washita Group in south Central Texas.© John Jackson
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- Texas fossil
- echinoid spines
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From the album: Texas Tylocidaris
New image of my undescribed Tylocidaris sp. echinoid from the Georgetown Formation of Central Texas© John Jackson
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- Georgetown Formation
- tylocidaris
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From the album: Texas Tylocidaris
New image of my undescribed Tylocidaris sp. echinoid from the Georgetown Formation of Central Texas© John Jackson
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- Georgetown Formation
- tylocidaris
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Tylocidaris sp. - undescribed - interambulacral view
JohnJ posted a gallery image in Members Gallery
From the album: Texas Tylocidaris
New image of my undescribed Tylocidaris sp. echinoid from the Georgetown Formation of Central Texas© John Jackson
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- tylocidaris
- Georgetown Formation
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From the album: Texas Tylocidaris
New image of my undescribed Tylocidaris sp. echinoid from the Georgetown Formation of Central Texas© John Jackson
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- tylocidaris
- Albian
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I found this tooth in the matrix I was cleaning up this morning but not being an expert on shark teeth I am unable to identify this one the closest match I can find is cretolamna appendiculata from the books I have but this appears to have the start of an extra cusp on one side of the tooth. The name comes from an article by N Kemp on Fossil Chondrichthyans The specimen is from the toolebuc formation ( cretaceous albian )from Richmond western Queensland Australia and is 100 million years old give or take. Thank in advance Mike
- 15 replies
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- cretaceous
- australian
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