Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'Windom Shale'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
    Tags should be keywords or key phrases. e.g. otodus, megalodon, shark tooth, miocene, bone valley formation, usa, florida.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Fossil Discussion
    • Fossil ID
    • Fossil Hunting Trips
    • General Fossil Discussion
    • Partners in Paleontology - Member Contributions to Science
    • Fossil of the Month
    • Questions & Answers
    • Member Collections
    • A Trip to the Museum
    • Paleo Re-creations
    • Collecting Gear
    • Fossil Preparation
    • Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
    • Member-to-Member Fossil Trades
    • Fossil News
  • Community News
    • Member Introductions
    • Member of the Month
    • Members' News & Diversions
  • General Category
    • Rocks & Minerals
    • Geology

Categories

  • Annelids
  • Arthropods
    • Crustaceans
    • Insects
    • Trilobites
    • Other Arthropods
  • Brachiopods
  • Cnidarians (Corals, Jellyfish, Conulariids )
    • Corals
    • Jellyfish, Conulariids, etc.
  • Echinoderms
    • Crinoids & Blastoids
    • Echinoids
    • Other Echinoderms
    • Starfish and Brittlestars
  • Forams
  • Graptolites
  • Molluscs
    • Bivalves
    • Cephalopods (Ammonites, Belemnites, Nautiloids)
    • Gastropods
    • Other Molluscs
  • Sponges
  • Bryozoans
  • Other Invertebrates
  • Ichnofossils
  • Plants
  • Chordata
    • Amphibians & Reptiles
    • Birds
    • Dinosaurs
    • Fishes
    • Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Other Chordates
  • *Pseudofossils ( Inorganic objects , markings, or impressions that resemble fossils.)

Blogs

  • Anson's Blog
  • Mudding Around
  • Nicholas' Blog
  • dinosaur50's Blog
  • Traviscounty's Blog
  • Seldom's Blog
  • tracer's tidbits
  • Sacredsin's Blog
  • fossilfacetheprospector's Blog
  • jax world
  • echinoman's Blog
  • Ammonoidea
  • Traviscounty's Blog
  • brsr0131's Blog
  • brsr0131's Blog
  • Adventures with a Paddle
  • Caveat emptor
  • -------
  • Fig Rocks' Blog
  • placoderms
  • mosasaurs
  • ozzyrules244's Blog
  • Terry Dactyll's Blog
  • Sir Knightia's Blog
  • MaHa's Blog
  • shakinchevy2008's Blog
  • Stratio's Blog
  • ROOKMANDON's Blog
  • Phoenixflood's Blog
  • Brett Breakin' Rocks' Blog
  • Seattleguy's Blog
  • jkfoam's Blog
  • Erwan's Blog
  • Erwan's Blog
  • marksfossils' Blog
  • ibanda89's Blog
  • Liberty's Blog
  • Liberty's Blog
  • Lindsey's Blog
  • Back of Beyond
  • Ameenah's Blog
  • St. Johns River Shark Teeth/Florida
  • gordon's Blog
  • West4me's Blog
  • West4me's Blog
  • Pennsylvania Perspectives
  • michigantim's Blog
  • michigantim's Blog
  • lauraharp's Blog
  • lauraharp's Blog
  • micropterus101's Blog
  • micropterus101's Blog
  • GPeach129's Blog
  • Olenellus' Blog
  • nicciann's Blog
  • nicciann's Blog
  • Deep-Thinker's Blog
  • Deep-Thinker's Blog
  • bear-dog's Blog
  • javidal's Blog
  • Digging America
  • John Sun's Blog
  • John Sun's Blog
  • Ravsiden's Blog
  • Jurassic park
  • The Hunt for Fossils
  • The Fury's Grand Blog
  • julie's ??
  • Hunt'n 'odonts!
  • falcondob's Blog
  • Monkeyfuss' Blog
  • cyndy's Blog
  • pattyf's Blog
  • pattyf's Blog
  • chrisf's Blog
  • chrisf's Blog
  • nola's Blog
  • mercyrcfans88's Blog
  • Emily's PRI Adventure
  • trilobite guy's Blog
  • barnes' Blog
  • xenacanthus' Blog
  • myfossiltrips.blogspot.com
  • HeritageFossils' Blog
  • Fossilefinder's Blog
  • Fossilefinder's Blog
  • maybe a nest fossil?
  • farfarawy's Blog
  • Microfossil Mania!
  • blogs_blog_99
  • Southern Comfort
  • Emily's MotE Adventure
  • Eli's Blog
  • andreas' Blog
  • Recent Collecting Trips
  • retired blog
  • andreas' Blog test
  • fossilman7's Blog
  • Piranha Blog
  • xonenine's blog
  • xonenine's Blog
  • Fossil collecting and SAFETY
  • Detrius
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • Jocky's Blog
  • Jocky's Blog
  • Kehbe's Kwips
  • RomanK's Blog
  • Prehistoric Planet Trilogy
  • mikeymig's Blog
  • Western NY Explorer's Blog
  • Regg Cato's Blog
  • VisionXray23's Blog
  • Carcharodontosaurus' Blog
  • What is the largest dragonfly fossil? What are the top contenders?
  • Test Blog
  • jsnrice's blog
  • Lise MacFadden's Poetry Blog
  • BluffCountryFossils Adventure Blog
  • meadow's Blog
  • Makeing The Unlikley Happen
  • KansasFossilHunter's Blog
  • DarrenElliot's Blog
  • Hihimanu Hale
  • jesus' Blog
  • A Mesozoic Mosaic
  • Dinosaur comic
  • Zookeeperfossils
  • Cameronballislife31's Blog
  • My Blog
  • TomKoss' Blog
  • A guide to calcanea and astragali
  • Group Blog Test
  • Paleo Rantings of a Blockhead
  • Dead Dino is Art
  • The Amber Blog
  • Stocksdale's Blog
  • PaleoWilliam's Blog
  • TyrannosaurusRex's Facts
  • The Community Post
  • The Paleo-Tourist
  • Lyndon D Agate Johnson's Blog
  • BRobinson7's Blog
  • Eastern NC Trip Reports
  • Toofuntahh's Blog
  • Pterodactyl's Blog
  • A Beginner's Foray into Fossiling
  • Micropaleontology blog
  • Pondering on Dinosaurs
  • Fossil Preparation Blog
  • On Dinosaurs and Media
  • cheney416's fossil story
  • jpc
  • A Novice Geologist
  • Red-Headed Red-Neck Rock-Hound w/ My Trusty HellHound Cerberus
  • Red Headed
  • Paleo-Profiles
  • Walt's Blog
  • Between A Rock And A Hard Place
  • Rudist digging at "Point 25", St. Bartholomä, Styria, Austria (Campanian, Gosau-group)
  • Prognathodon saturator 101
  • Books I have enjoyed
  • Ladonia Texas Fossil Park
  • Trip Reports
  • Glendive Montana dinosaur bone Hell’s Creek
  • Test
  • Stratigraphic Succession of Chesapecten

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

  1. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Paleoneilo emerginata (bivalves) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road quarry Lebanon, NY. collected 5/3-5/4/15
  2. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Mesoleptostrophia textilis Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road quarry Lebanon, NY. collected 5/3-5/4/15
  3. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Bivalve shells (both valves intact) (left) Grammysoidea arculata (right) Grammysia bisculata Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Deep Springs Road quarry Lebanon, NY. Collected 5/3 and 5/4/15
  4. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Echinocaris punctate (phyllocarida carapace) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY. Found last fall right by where I parked the car while my companion was packing up his finds.
  5. Jeffrey P

    Eldredgeops from Madison County., NY

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Eldredgeops milleri (folded trilobite) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  6. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Spyroceras sp. (nautiloid) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  7. Jeffrey P

    Straight-shelled nautiloid

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Spyroceras sp. (straight-shelled nautiloid) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Smokes Creek Blasdell, NY.
  8. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Nuculoidea deceptriformis (bivalve) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  9. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Dipleura dekayi (trilobite cephalon) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  10. I was planning to attend the Museum of the Earth's outing to Jamesville Quarry and knew that gas would be the primary expense for the three and a half hour trip each way. So, I decided to make the most of it and head up there two days early, camp, and visit some very productive Middle Devonian sites my girlfriend, Valerie and I explored last May. 11:30 Thursday morning I arrived at Deep Springs Road quarry near Lebanon in Madison County. It is an excellent exposure of the Windom Shale and was my favorite site on my last visit to the area. A wide variety of well preserved fossil invertebrates are profuse in the relatively soft shale where they can usually be extracted without too much difficulty. Many preserved in calcite, can be removed entirely from the rock. Within the first fifteen minutes I uncovered a small Greenops trilobite cephalon. Several minutes later, I found a complete Phacops rana enrolled. The very top of its cephalon shattered when I removed it from the rock, but otherwise it was perfect. Here's a picture: Almost as exciting was the wide assortment of excellent bivalve fossils I found. This is a Grammysia: Brachiopods were also abundant. This is Athyris spiriferoids: Also found other partial trilobites, crinoid stems, gastropods, and a tiny goniatite. I was going to spend a few hours there and then head over to a nearby exposure of the upper Ludlowville Formation, but I ended up spended the whole day at Deep Springs Road. Friday morning I drove twenty minutes to Pompey Center and a famous roadcut along Route 20 where the Skaneateles Formation is well exposed. Within minutes I found a nice large Cornulites, a bivalve: There were other bivalves as well. This is Modiomorpha: One of my goals was to find a large Spyroceras, a straight-shelled nautiloid. Last May we collected a number of fragments. Friday I was hoping for a more complete one. Wasn't to happen. This is one of the fragments I collected: Also found a number of fragments of Michelinoceras, another straight-shelled nautiloid. The surprise of the morning was a two and a quarter inch goniatite found lying free on top of the roadcut: It was nearly an hour drive east to the tiny hamlet of North Brookfield through stunning farm country. Nearby is a sandstone quarry exposing the Skaneateles Formation which is famous for its abundance of Dipleura dekayi, a huge burrowing trilobite. Valerie and I only spent a short while there last May. Still I was able to find three Dipleura cephalons, a pygidium, also an enormous bivalve, brachiopods, and cephalopods. The first rock I split open on Friday revealed a small, but complete Dipleura cephalon, better than any of the ones I found on my last trip. A few minutes later, I split another sandstone slab and I immediately focused on a bivalve in the center, but then my eyes drifted down to something unusual in the corner. There was the thorax and pygidium of a young Dipleura. When I turned the slab on its side I saw the cephalon still attached to the body, pointing downwards. Even though it was young, it is at least three times the size of the adult Phacops I found the previous day: Later I found a number of pygidiums and some bivalves, including one very large Leioptera. Saturday morning, the Museum of the Earth group was planning to congregate at 11:00 so that gave almost an hour an half to return to Pompey Center. I decided to focus on the lower portion of the roadcut which is shale where last May Valerie found a perfect Paleozygopleura, a lovely corkscrew-shaped gastropod. I was hoping to find one myself. After a while of digging in the crumbly shale, I found a small complete Greenops trilobite. Unfortunately the fragile body was stuck in the imprint and much of it crumbled when i removed it. However the imprint is perfect: Later, I found my own Paleozygopleura, though not as good as the one Valerie found: I joined the Museum of the Earth group at Jamesville Quarry. That excursion is very well documented by Marley's Ghost so I need not repeat anything. I did find a number of teeth of Onychodus sigmoides a rhipidistian fish as well as other small unidentified fish parts. In the Nedrow member of the Onondaga Limestone I found excellent examples of Favosites, a tabulate coral. I brought a number of pieces back. They really show the structure well: Well, that's about it. It's been hectic the past few days organizing, sorting, and cleaning my specimens as well as getting back on track with all the personal and professonal matters I neglected while I was away three days. All in all it feels good to be back home.
  11. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Spinocyrtia granulosa (brachiopods) Middle Devonian Hamilton group (left) Upper Ludlowville Formation Soule Road Quarry Pierceville, NY (right) Windom Shale Moscow Formation Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  12. From the album: Middle Devonian

    Michelinoceras sp. (straight-shelled nautiloid) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  13. Jeffrey P

    Greenops Trilobite

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Greenops sp. (trilobite) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  14. Jeffrey P

    Eldredgeops milleri, Trilobite

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Eldredgeops milleri (trilobite) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Abbot Road Blasdell, NY
  15. Jeffrey P

    Heliophyllum, Rugose corals

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Heliophyllum halli (rugose corals) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Penn Dixie Quarry Blasdell, NY
  16. Jeffrey P

    Stereolasma, Rugose corals

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Stereolasma rectum (rugose corals) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Penn Dixie Quarry Blasdell, NY
  17. Jeffrey P

    Mediospirifer, Brachiopod

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Mediospirifer audaculus (brachiopod) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Penn Dixie Quarry Blasdell, NY
  18. Jeffrey P

    Eldredgeops, Trilobites

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Eldredgeeops milleri (trilobites) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Penn Dixie Quarry Blasdell, NY Collected 5/2013.
  19. Jeffrey P

    Eldredgeops milleri, Trilobite

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Eldredgeops milleri (trilobites) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Penn Dixie Quarry Blasdell, NY
  20. Jeffrey P

    Eldredgeops milleri, Trilobite

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Eldredgeops milleri (trilobite) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Abbot Road Blasdell, NY
  21. Jeffrey P

    Spyroceras, Nautiloid

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Spyroceras (straight-shelled nautiloid) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  22. Jeffrey P

    Paleoneilo emerginata, Bivalve

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Paleoneilo emerginata (bivalve) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY I know this one looks a bit different from the other Paleoneilo emerginata posted in my gallery, but I was assured they were different growth stages of the same species.
  23. Jeffrey P

    Grammysia bisculata, Bivalve

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Grammysia bisculata (bivalve) Middle Devonian (Right, Center) Upper Ludlowville Formation Geer Road Quarry (Left) Windom Shale Moscow Formation Deep Springs Road Quarry Hamilton Group Lebanon, NY
  24. Jeffrey P

    Carydium, Bivalve

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Carydium varicosum (bivalve) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
  25. Jeffrey P

    Paleoneilo, Bivalve

    From the album: Middle Devonian

    Paleoneilo filosa (bivalve) Middle Devonian Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Lebanon, NY
×
×
  • Create New...