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  1. Denis Arcand

    Brachiopod ID please

    There are so many brachiopods that look alike, it's hard to identify them. Is this Dalmanella sp ? I found it in the Nicolet River formation (Late Ordovician) each one is 1/2 inch
  2. Spotted this today at an antique market. Wondering if there is any chance it is real.
  3. My eagle-eyed mother found this in Saskatchewan Canada over 40 years ago...No idea if it was a shell, plant or a cocoon...if something new or very ancient, but all searches thus far have not helped me identify it.
  4. Any ideas on my finds during my rockhouding experience last week in Canada?
  5. Denis Arcand

    Cephalopod ?

    I found these Ordovician fossils in the Nicolet River formation, could it be cephalopod related?
  6. Rocks are handy for a campfire. A common use for stones in a campfire is to create a protective ring around the flame. This ring serves two purposes: Creates a barrier between the fire and the rest of the forest, keeping the rest of the woods safe. Creates a wind barrier that can help light the fire, especially in wet and windy conditions Whatever the reason, someone made a campfire at my fossil dig site, it's a small secluded beach along a river. A nice place to make a campfire. By the way, I noticed that a rock they used to make the protective ring around the flame, had very distinct and visible small white fossils on it. A small chuck of rock found in the ash contained even whiter fossils. I deduced that the bleaching of fossils is created by the heat of the fire. I started experimenting, I put a rock containing fossils in the oven and set the heat to maximum (don't laugh, this is a very serious experiment) after heating the fossil for a solid hour, nothing happened. For my second try, I used my barbecue (don't laugh), I think I can have a higher temperature with it, I cook the same fossil for an hour and I get the same result: nothing. I needed more heat, so for my third try I put the fossil not on the grill but directly on the burners, and hooray I got white crinoids and Sowerbyella that really stand out from the matrix. Does anyone know what is the chemical process that creates this amazing effect? I wonder if this is a good method to give a second life to dull, unappealing and scientifically unworthy fossils. The heating process helps to bring the fossils out of the matrix, making it visibly more interesting. What do you think? A dull and unattractive fossil I used for my test After high temperature heating
  7. Ceraurus

    Kawinia sp.

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Kawinia sp., Middle Ordovician, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  8. Ceraurus

    Caplyptaulax calicephalus

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Caplyptaulax calicephalus, upper Ordovician, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  9. Ceraurus

    Errataencrinuroides sp

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Errataencrinuroides sp, Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  10. Ceraurus

    Large Flexicalymene

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Flexicalymene cf cronesi, upper Ordovician, Northumberland County, Ontario, Canada
  11. Ceraurus

    Hibertia (Paraharpes) valcourenis

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Hibertia (Paraharpes) valcourenis, Middle Ordovician (Chazy), Montreal, Quebec, Canada
  12. Ceraurus

    Isotelus ottawaensis

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Isotelus ottawaensis, upper Ordovician (Cobourg Fm), Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada
  13. Ceraurus

    Isotelus gigas

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Isotelus gigas, upper Ordovician, Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada
  14. From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Ceraurus trilobite with healed injury, Notice the less-than-than perfect genal spine repair. Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Hastings County, Ontario
  15. Ceraurus

    Ventral Isotelus cf iowensis

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    You'll probably see this as an optical illusion. 7" Isotelus iowensis ventral showing hypostome. Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  16. Ceraurus

    Ceraurus bispinosa

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Ceraurus bispinosa, Ordovician (Blackriverian), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  17. Ceraurus

    Leviceraurus sp.

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Leviceraurus sp. Upper Ordovician, Prince Edward County, Ontario, Canada
  18. Ceraurus

    Isotelus cf iowensis

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Isotelus cf iowensis, Ordovician (Kirffieldian), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  19. Ceraurus

    Enrolled Ceraurus webbi

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Ceraurus webbi, Ordovician (Blackriverian), Hastings County, Ontario, Canada
  20. Ceraurus

    Triarthrus rougensis

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Triarthrus rougensis, Ordovician (Utican), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  21. Ceraurus

    Ceraurus matrenseris

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Ceraurus mantrenseris, Upper Ordovician, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
  22. Ceraurus

    Bumastoides sp.

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Bumastoides sp., Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Victoria County, Ontario, Canada
  23. Ceraurus

    Xylabion

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Victoria County, Ontario, Canada
  24. Ceraurus

    Eobronteus lunatus

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Eobronteus lunatus, Upper Ordovician, Glengarry-Prescott-Russell County, Ontario, Canada
  25. Ceraurus

    Gabriceraurus dentatus

    From the album: Mark Bourrie trilobites

    Gabriceraurus dentatus, Ordovician (Kirkfieldian), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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