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  1. cameronsfossilcollection

    Elrathia kingii

    From the album: Wheeler Formation

    Cheekless red Elrathia molt on a beautiful piece of rock.
  2. cameronsfossilcollection

    Hyolith - Haplophrinites?

    From the album: Wheeler Formation

    Typical preservation without either of the helens nor the operculum.
  3. cameronsfossilcollection

    Reverse of Nephrolenellus

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Perfect! Even has small axial spine holes!
  4. cameronsfossilcollection

    Juvenile Olenellus gilberti

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    This is the main body fossil, the other juvenile I shared is the reverse.
  5. cameronsfossilcollection

    Orytocephalites + unknown ptychopariid Cranidium

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Two uncommon bugs, if only it weren’t just the cranidium! The orytocephalites cranidium is truly miniscule, it's located towards the bottom of the screen in the center - underneath the larger ptychopariid molt piece.
  6. cameronsfossilcollection

    Ventral Nephrolenellus geniculatus

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Nice orange bug on the same plate as the chief + terminatus.
  7. cameronsfossilcollection

    Pint-sized Olenellus gilberti

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Look at that axial spine! The relief could be better, but this bug is complete!
  8. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus chiefensis

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Beautifully prepped by Jon!
  9. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus chiefensis w/ O. terminatus Cephalon

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Big chief with uncommon species!
  10. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus fowleri

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Complete opsitothorax! My first find out west.
  11. cameronsfossilcollection

    Juvenile Olenellus gilberti

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    ~3mm
  12. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus gilberti

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Nice lil bug!
  13. cameronsfossilcollection

    Nephrolenellus geniculatus reverse

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Look at that curled opistothorax!
  14. cameronsfossilcollection

    Nephrolenellus geniculatus

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    A crazy inflated Neph! The reverse has a wild opsitothorax, while this one has it only partially preserved.
  15. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus multi plate

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    Big plate of Olenellus preserved in calcite halos.
  16. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus gilberti

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    A perfect gilberti, preserved as a cast of the arthropod without its mineralized exoskeleton.
  17. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus gilberti reverse

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    The reverse of the perfect gilberti cast. This side has the fragile shell preserved on a thin layer of calcite.
  18. cameronsfossilcollection

    Olenellus fowleri

    From the album: Pioche Formation

    A nice orange fowleri, split this one out of my discard pile!
  19. I've recently been looking over the geologic formations in Illinois and I found one that's a bit interesting - it's a Cambrian period outcrop but it seems to be a bit small, only found in parts of Ogle and Lee County, Illinois. http://ebeltz.net/firstfam/1stfam.html https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1202269 https://ilstratwiki.web.illinois.edu/index.php/Cambrian_System I haven't heard of a lot of fossils coming from this area so I'm wondering if anyone's been fossil hunting in that region of Illinois before and how common are Cambrian Fossils from Illinois's Ogle and Lee Counties?
  20. 525-Million-Year-Old Fossil Solves Debate Over Brain Evolution University of Arizona, November 25, 2022 https://scitechdaily.com/science-textbooks-wrong-525-million-year-old-fossil-defies-common-explanation-for-brain-evolution/ https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/11/221125132137.htm https://www.technologynetworks.com/neuroscience/news/525-million-year-old-fossil-solves-debate-over-brain-evolution-367879 The paywalled paper is: Nicholas J. Strausfeld, Xianguang Hou, Marcel E. Sayre, and Frank Hirth, 2022, The lower Cambrian lobopodian Cardiodictyon resolves the origin of euarthropod brains. Science, 378 (6622), pp. 905-909. 905 DOI: 10.1126/science.abn6264 https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abn6264 Yours, Paul H.
  21. Hello, I thought this was just a crinoid plate when I found it in a creek in Southern Ontario, Canada. Georgian Bay formation. But when I cleaned it up, I noticed these bits radiating out from the central column of these examples. I thought maybe Dickinsonia but I read they were not in Canada. Does anyone recognize these? The big ones shown are about 3cm each. Feels like sandstone. These are the best images I could get with the phone, apologies. thanks in advance!
  22. Prairiestone

    Is This a Cambrian Monoplacophoran?

    Hi I came across this while hunting for trilobites at a commercial Cambrian shale quarry in Utah near Delta and was wondering if it was a monoplacophoran or something else or just an odd rock formation. The shape is concave and about 2 inches in diameter. Any help would be much appreciated. Thank you!
  23. Fossils date to when Manheim Township was an ocean floor By Joan Kern, LNP, Lancaster Online, October 26, 2022 Pates, S. and Daley, A.C., 2019. The Kinzers Formation (Pennsylvania, USA): the most diverse assemblage of Cambrian Stage 4 radiodonts. Geological Magazine, 156(7), pp.1233-1246. Skinner, E.S., 2005. Taphonomy and depositional circumstances of exceptionally preserved fossils from the Kinzers Formation (Cambrian), southeastern Pennsylvania. Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology, 220(1-2), pp.167-192. Yours, Paul H.
  24. Found in the side of a building and in the surrounding landscaping. From the Cambrian seashore sandstone of Blackberry Hill Wisconsin. The place is known for its fossils of mass jellyfish strandings and its trace fossils of some of the first arthropods, mollusks, and other animals on land. What are these? Thanks!
  25. Augusto Joaquín Suarez

    identification please

    Good evening to everyone who comes to see my post, I thank you in advance for the time you take to read the question you presented, which would be the first of several specimens that I have not been able to identify. About two years ago I started hunting for fossils almost by luck as I was looking for minerals until I found the first turritellas, on one of these trips I find a rock of considerable size and weight with a curved linear pattern similar to "worms" although I honestly don't really know what it is, I have found trace fossils but never horizontal, and less than that thick, I have found specimens of what could be crinoids (or belenmites because of their shape) and a lot of unidentified things due to the large conglomerate in which they are found, what I have been able to identify are trilobite tails and spikes (perhaps), all this separately, never a complete specimen in a type of black rock with a slight percentage of pyrite, a stone very different from the "worm" specimen, which is more of the sedimentary type - quartzite when sectioning this stone to see if other specimens were found in any other layer of this stone I have only counted 2 or 3 oysters of about a centimeter. I found the rock in a river where apparently there is an exposed rocky stratum and in the seasons of crescents they go down with the torrential river. I have found other stones with total conglomerate of oysters others assorted with trilobite tails and oysters and shiny clams, and the aforementioned type of black rock beautifully preserved i have never found a complete trilobite specimen (if this helps in identification) the rocks come down from one area called "eastern mountain range" in Jujuy, Argentina, where several things related to trilobites and a species were discovered (connoisseurs will recognize Jujuyaspis keideli Kobayashi (1936). For the rest, I cannot provide more information since I do not know the real location where this rock came from. I attach the images of the specimen. The rock measures more than 40 centimeters and weighs something around 2 or 3 kilograms. All the best. Thank you!
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