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  1. Trickworm

    A Day in the Shale

    Got out yesterday to some exposures of shale in Southwestern Ohio. Found a couple nice trilobites; Isotelus and Flexicalymene. A couple nice Isotelus pygidium. I got heavy into some pelecypods and a couple nice brachiopods were laying in the stream, one with a nice bryozoan on top.
  2. DevonianDigger

    Spinatrypa spinosa

    From the album: Penn Dixie Site - Upper Wanakah Member

    Spinatrypa spinosa from the upper Wanakah Shale Member, Penn Dixie Site, Hamburg, NY.

    © 2016 Jay A. Wollin

  3. Kane

    Paraspirifer acuminatus

    Medium sized specimen with some damage to the pedicle valve. Generally used as an index fossil in stratigraphic analyses. It is said to have gone extinct during the upper Emsian/early Eifelian in much of what is Europe today, but endured in North America until the Givetian.
  4. sithman

    is this a Brachiopod?

    Hi all! you've been so helpful to so many in indentifying their finds, I hope you can help me. I joined the local club and a gentleman had a box of free stuff! I was given a cool trilobite tail section and this fossil which he said was a brachiopod. can anyone tell me any more about this?
  5. DevonianDigger

    Mucrospirifer sp.

    From the album: Penn Dixie Site - Upper Wanakah Member

    Mucrospirifer sp. from the upper Wanakah Shale Member, Penn Dixie Site, Hamburg, NY.

    © 2016 Jay A. Wollin

  6. DevonianDigger

    Assorted brachiopods

    From the album: Penn Dixie Site - Upper Wanakah Member

    Assortment of non-spiriferid brachiopods from the upper Wanakah Shale Member, Penn Dixie Site, Hamburg, NY.

    © © 2016 Jay A. Wollin

  7. DevonianDigger

    Microfossils and More

    Decided to take some extra hash shale I had boxed up and give it the vinegar bath treatment to see what might be hiding inside of it. I was actually really excited to see all the very tiny crinoid bits in there. I was stoked to see a rather tiny cup in there as well. (Uppermost sample in the photo.) A nice big Mediospirifer that literally plopped out of a random rock I had thrown in. Also found this tiny little Eldredgeops in there. Notice that's a thumbnail in the background!
  8. HamptonsDoc

    Brachiopods With Crinoid Stems?

    I found this fossil when I was probably around 12 years old while playing in a stream coming down from a mountain outside of Binghamton, New York. The entire specimen is around 6 inches long on the longest side. Doing some googling I think these are brachiopods with crinoid stems? There's one raised area that almost looks like a partial Trilobite (bottom left of the third picture). There's a lot of activity on this stone. What do you guys think? Not that I would ever sell this, but is it worth any money?
  9. acron611

    Is this a brachiopod?

    This is the first fossil I ever found. I found it when I was 5 years old in my rock patch. The rocks were shipped from the Delaware NJ bay and I happened to come across this. I believe it's a regular brachiopod but I'm not sure.
  10. Zachster

    Brach 11

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Coposita Brachiopod, about 1cm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  11. Zachster

    Brach 10

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Composita Brachiopod, about 1cm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  12. Zachster

    Brach 9B

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Dictyoclostus Brachiopod about 1cm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  13. Zachster

    Brach 9A

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Dictyoclostus Brachiopod about 1cm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  14. Zachster

    Brach 8

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Punctospirifer Brachiopod, about 5mm. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  15. Zachster

    Brach 7

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Rhipidomella Brachiopod, about 2cm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  16. Zachster

    Brach 6

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Punctospirifer Brachiopod about 8mm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  17. Zachster

    Brach 1

    From the album: Chainman Shale Fossils

    Hustedia Brachiopod about 2mm wide. Chainman Shale Formation, Upper Mississippian, Conger Spring Utah.

    © © 2016 Zach Case

  18. elcoincoin

    Gallienithyris galliennei - 1 - view 2

    From the album: Vaches Noires - april and march 2016

    Gallienithyris galliennei : a brachiopod from callovian clay of "les Vaches Noires" - Normandy - France
  19. elcoincoin

    Gallienithyris galliennei - 1 - view 1

    From the album: Vaches Noires - april and march 2016

    Gallienithyris galliennei : a brachiopod from callovian clay of "les Vaches Noires" - Normandy - France
  20. elcoincoin

    Gallienithyris galliennei - 3

    From the album: Vaches Noires - april and march 2016

    Gallienithyris galliennei : a brachiopod from callovian clay of "les Vaches Noires" - Normandy - France
  21. elcoincoin

    Gallienithyris galliennei - 2

    From the album: Vaches Noires - april and march 2016

    Gallienithyris galliennei : a brachiopod from callovian clay of "les Vaches Noires" - Normandy - France
  22. mar2man22

    What is this?

    Hello! i am new to the site. I found this well preserved brachiopod fossil and this tooth-shaped object next to it. Both were lying on the side of a shallow creek (i am on a hunt to find a cool trilobite). Any idea what the latter is? I live in Louisville Kentucky and i know that pretty much, the only fossils to be found are crinoids, coral and trilobites, etc. also heres a few arrowhead/spearheads i found down by oldham county
  23. I found this while surface-collecting at the railroad tracks on my birthday a few days ago. The rocks aren't local, probably Mississippian in age. It's really tiny, just under 1.5cm wide.
  24. Here's my haul from the last Dallas Paleo Society field trip to an abandoned quarry in Gore, OK. The age of the site is Pennsylvanian, Morrowan stage. The hunting was a bit difficult, due to all the recent rains encouraging TONS of plant growth throughout the site. No telling what wonderful fossils were concealed by all of the weeds. Still & all, we all found some good stuff & no one ran afoul of any snakes. First up, the big draw of the site, a blastoid. I found this one lying on the path into the quarry. I think this might be a weathered horn coral. It wouldn't be a Pennsylvanian site without some crinoid stem pieces! A 'stick' of bryozoan! Brachiopod with a little bryozoan crust! Another brachiopod with a heavier coat of bryozoan (Continued... )
  25. KFof

    Brachiopod 6

    From the album: Carboniferous Fossils from Lawrence County, Missouri

    Burlington-Keokuk Formation Osagean Series, Lower Viséan (presumed) Lawrence County near Greene County border, Missouri, USA
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