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Showing results for tags 'coral'.
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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From the album: Oklahoma Paleozoic Fossil Finds
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It's apparent there's some coral in one corner atleast but the impression is what confuses me. There almost seems to be a discoloration following the fin like marking. I'd be very appreciative for someone's opinion It was found at the beach, on the edge of the water. Sandy Beach, Shediac, New Brunswick
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From the album: Texas Cretaceous Fossils: Coral, Forams, Bryozoans and More
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- coral
- cretaceous
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From the album: Texas Cretaceous Fossils: Coral, Forams, Bryozoans and More
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- coral
- cretaceous
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(and 3 more)
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From the album: Texas Cretaceous Fossils: Coral, Forams, Bryozoans and More
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- coral
- cretaceous
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(and 3 more)
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- 7
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- agatized coral
- coral
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Sorry for so many posts back to back but I found this coral inland in a power line that's being dug up for power poles. Not wooden poles but huge metal poles. They use fill rock to stabilize the poles after they put them in the ground. All the fill rock is small white chalky rock with chalky shells. Idk if it's from the fill rock pile or something they dug up from the ground. Thanks for any help...
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- agatized coral
- coral
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Hello!! Any insight on this would be appreciated! My daughter found it today diving in the ocean. We are in south Florida. It’s roughly 4inchesx3inches and 303g (0.668lbs) thanks!
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Hi, I found this trace fossil the other day and I'm having trouble identifying it. I saw something similar that was a coral with hexagons but I'm just not sure. Could you please give me a little help. Sorry the pictures are just from my phone, Thanks so much.
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Hi All Found an interesting fossil in bracklesham bay in the UK, Sussex. We were looking for shark teeth but found this instead. I thought it may be coral or an urchin. I would also like to ask if its worth splitting it open with my hammer and chisel? Apologies i don't have a ruler. Included a pen for scale. Many thanks
- 2 replies
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- 1
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- bracklesham bay
- coral
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These are from large rocks I found in Erie co NY. I would love second opinions on my ID and any tips for pyrite. 2. Some kind of coral or bryozoan 3. Crinoid column 4 A and 4 B. Greenops? 4c. some shell matter, something unknown and a crinoid 11. A large rugosa coral?
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Fossil coral found near the village of Palogne in the Belgian Ardennes.
Noobductive posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hello! This fossil was found by my older brother and father in the 2010’s on a riverbank near the Wallonian village of Palogne. I matched this locality with a map of known deposits in the region; there are both lower Devonian and dinantian-Carboniferous layers in this general area. Still, there are so many different deposits in the bigger region and since this was on a riverbank it could’ve been washed up from anywhere. Both sides and all edges are covered in either imprints, or the fossil itself (I am not familiar with it so I can’t tell). One side has more and smaller circles, the opposite side has less and bigger ones, and they are stretched/warped along the sides of this rock. It has been sitting on a shelf for years and years until I got into fossil collecting and my father gave it to me. I’d love to figure out what this is!- 4 replies
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- belgium
- carboniferous?
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Found on a spoil pile in the Mazonia wildlife management area in northern Illinois. I'm leaning toward it being a chaetetid sponge, but I would like other opinions.
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Good afternoon, I'm a noob here but over the past 3-4 years I have wandering our swamp and have found a few interesting specimen. One of which I believe to be a larger animal head as well as two interesting, well preserved pieces of coral, as well as (weight and measurements indicate) a meteorite. These are all from the swamp so determining age/layer is difficult. We are in a valley I believe it to be an old lake or river bed. Please see the attached images and share thoughts.
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From the album: Ordovician Fossils
Amsassia algae? Taxonomy Phylum: ? Class: ? Subclass: ? Order: ? Family: ? Genus: ? Species: ? Author: ? Geology Eon: Phanerozoic Era: Paleozoic Period: Ordovician Epoch: Late Stratigraphy Series: Upper Ordovician Stage: Katian Series: Cincinnatian Stage: Richmondian Sequence: C5 Unit: ? Provenance Collector: mtz Date: 07/07/023 Location: SW Ohio -
From the album: Ordovician Fossils
Amsassia algae? Taxonomy Phylum: ? Class: ? Subclass: ? Order: ? Family: ? Genus: ? Species: ? Author: ? Geology Eon: Phanerozoic Era: Paleozoic Period: Ordovician Epoch: Late Stratigraphy Series: Upper Ordovician Stage: Katian Series: Cincinnatian Stage: Richmondian Sequence: C5 Unit: ? Provenance Collector: mtz Date: 07/07/023 Location: SW Ohio -
Found this specimen along with 2 small pieces of coral while swimming in a lake in Southern NJ. (Also found another piece that I'm trying to have identified here.) 1cm in both directions and about half a cm thick. Appreciate any insight!
- 2 replies
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- coral
- new jersey
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