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  1. kerrimarie805

    Trace in the Round Set

    From the album: Starting at the Beginning

    Beach finds I'd kept prior to becoming truly interested and adopting this as a hobby all surrounding a trace fossil that was one of a handful of pieces found 4 months ago that turned me into a real rock nerd! I liked how they look as a set, so I framed them and hung them on my wall.
  2. kerrimarie805

    Trace in the Round Set

    From the album: Starting at the Beginning

    Beach finds I'd kept prior to becoming truly interested and adopting this as a hobby all surrounding a trace fossil that was one of a handful of pieces found 4 months ago that turned me into a rock netd
  3. Bonzo

    Coral? Mineralization?

    Found in a small stream in south east BC Canada. About 2km west of continental divide. It's very heavy for its size. The filaments have segments on many of them and have and organic appearance. Location would suggest Devonian or Permian I'm guessing. It's hard to know with fast flowing creek finds this high in the Rocky Mountains. Any info or ideas be appreciated. Cheers.
  4. Dewbunny

    Coral?

    Ok,so I found this on the golf course yesterday. At first I thought it was a lost ball or egg but when I picked it up I was amazed. The was most likely dropped by a random egg eating animal/bird once it realized it wasn't editable. I can not say where it came from for sure because I often find things dropped by other animals,it could of been picked up literally anywhere within a 5 miles radius of my location. Any ideas? (P.S. I did have to clean it,was caked with soft limestone like material)
  5. pambosk

    coral id

    the following appears to be a coral, or sponge? It is not my own find, a friend gifted them to me, he said his fisherman grandpa, found them in the water near the island. They are heavy-ish, very hard and sound like rocks when hit them with each other and other rocks. size: when placed next to each other 10cm x 4cm(to3cm) and 2cm thick. Also appart from the obvious shell which looks modern, there is a tiny white pointy edge - snail -like shell with vertical lines all around, and a hole on its side, that could also be fossil, unless that it is supposed to be so white when baby. (photo1 and 2, left piece, top right circle, u can see the baby shells opening and hole)
  6. GeschWhat

    Interesting coral - Morocco

    Hi all, I was perusing the gem show down in Tucson today and came across these interesting little corals. The vendor couldn't identify them except to say they were from Morocco and were coral. Anyone out there know what these are? They measure about 1 1/2" - 2" across.
  7. pambosk

    sponge/coral/sea plant

    2 photos of this. is 2.5 cm tall, in the area which is 3-5million years range i found also a lot of the 3rd photo, oysters and other fossillized stuff.
  8. Dpaul7

    Fossil ID confirmation, please

    Are these Astrangia lineata? They are from Aurora, North Carolina - Miocene. Thanks for your attention!
  9. Hi, everyone. I'm starting totally green to fossils collecting. It started a couple months back. I was advised to have a regular walk as sport for my obesity. When doing the walk on the beach I found some coral fossils, then start collecting them. Some fossils I have no idea what they are. Wish to have more knowledge and information about it. Thanks in advanced for everything. Cheers Westjavabeach Cimaja Beach
  10. From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Fossil Coral - Zaphrentis spinulosum Chesterian Zone of the Bangor Limestone Formation in northern Alabama Mississippian Period (ca 325,000,000 years old) Zaphrentis is a genus (sometimes made the type of the family Zaphrentidae) of solitary cup-shaped tetracorals that are common in Paleozoic formations and have numerous septa radiating from a deep pit in one side of the cup. Zaphrentis is one of the most widely used names in Paleozoic coral paleontology. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Cnidaria Class: Anthozoa Order: Rugosa Family: Zaphrentidae Genus: Zaphrentis Species: spinulosa
  11. From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Fossil Coral - Zaphrentis spinulosum Chesterian Zone of the Bangor Limestone Formation in northern Alabama Mississippian Period (ca 325,000,000 years old) Zaphrentis is a genus (sometimes made the type of the family Zaphrentidae) of solitary cup-shaped tetracorals that are common in Paleozoic formations and have numerous septa radiating from a deep pit in one side of the cup. Zaphrentis is one of the most widely used names in Paleozoic coral paleontology. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Cnidaria Class: Anthozoa Genus: Zaphrentis Species: spinulosa
  12. Hello Everyone, I recently moved to western Kentucky and have been finding a ton of fossils here. I think a lot of what I've been finding are corals, crinoids, and brachiopods. I found a few fossils that I can't find online. I have no idea what they are. They washed out of a hillside on Kentucky lake in western Kentucky. The specific geology where I found them had a lot of strangely welded rock seams, geodes and a looked like the material may not have originated there (maybe moved through some geologic process). The rocks where I am are mostly limestone. The ones I can't Identify are the slightly spiraled ones. The other picture Is a nice coral (I think) specimen from the same location. Any Idea on what they are? Thanks!
  13. Northern Nature Trade

    Coral or Sponge?

    Hello, I received this specimen that I believe is a fossilized coral or perhaps a fossilized sponge and am looking for help in identifying the species and age for a museums collection. Any help would be appreciated!! Thanks, Holly
  14. Bess

    Seashell or Coral?

    My brother found this fossil in Pond Run in Hamilton, Nj. The rock in this area is mostly Triassic and Cretacious, with a small area of rock from the Cambrian. On both sides it has many ridges, and on the front you can see that most of the ridges start in the same area. Front Back I hope that you can identify this. Thank you in advance.
  15. Sorry about posting to many photos and continued post Picked up a couple of suggestive shaped rock forms found in the Kimmeridge clay, which if I can sufficiently remove some of the finest pyrite cubic crystals I’ve ever seen. May contain some bone material underneath. But for the time being I’ve noticed these fossils protruding through some of the pyrite matrix and loose in washed matrix. Continued: I have done some homework searching for coral / echinoid spines from the Kimmeridge clay but have not found any reference to such a fossil so far. As I think they have that tell-tale appearance about them. All suggestions and help would be most welcome. Scale bar is in millimetre sections.
  16. Rossi

    Fossil coral or sponge?

    I was doing some fall work in the garden and I dug a hole deeper than usual to start a compost pile and this was in the ground. It ppears to be coral or something. Can anyone see an outline or give any advice? I didn’t try to clean it as it seemed to be fragile. Thanks!
  17. Erika J Roy

    Possible Coral fossil

    When I was gardening this past summer I lucked out and found a fossil. For years (this garden is over twenty years in the making) I have been pulling shale out of it. This was my first fossil. With the help of some good books on fossils, and this group I have come close to identifying this fossil. It is possibly a coral. I am interested to know what time period this fossil may have come from. I do know that my area of the east end of Toronto used to be an inland sea. I'm curious to know what it might be, and excited for what next year might have in store for me.
  18. westjavabeach

    Fossil ID help westjava

    Last week i found this rock at the same area where I found some coral fossils in Pantai Cimaja, Sukabumi. Different from the common Indonesian fossil coral and just have no idea of what this might be. Any information is much appreciated.
  19. Had a great day out with Candace and Nick @thelivingdead531 @Barerootbonsai Friday 20th. Here are a few of my finds, I’ll post the hash plates when I’ve photographed them. We all got a great variety of finds, here are some of mine. I’m sure Nick and Candace will add to this thread.
  20. Fossil coral reefs show sea level rose in bursts during last warming Reefs near Texas endured punctuated bursts of sea-level rise before drowning, Jade Boyd, Rice university, October 19, 2017 http://news.rice.edu/2017/10/19/fossil-coral-reefs-show-sea-level-rose-in-bursts-during-last-warming-2/ https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/10/171019100954.htm Pankaj Khanna, André W. Droxler, Jeffrey A. Nittrouer, John W. Tunnell Jr, Thomas C. Shirley. Coralgal reef morphology records punctuated sea-level rise during the last deglaciation. Nature Communications, 2017; 8 (1) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00966-x https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-00966-x Yours, Paul H.
  21. Jac

    ID for coral

    Hi, I was given this coral as a present and after much googling I can't identify it. All I know is it comes from Stara Planina Mountain in Serbia. any help would be greatly appreciated
  22. Northern Nature Trade

    Help with ID

    Hi, Here is another specimen I have received that I need help identifying the species and age of for a museums collection. Any help would be greatly appreciated! The person who brought it to me had no idea of what it was and could not recall where they had found it. Thanks, Holly
  23. StoneCrazy

    Coral or Sponge?

    Hello! I collected this rounded stone in Southern Ohio, actually to paint on originally, and became enamored with what appears to be a fossil algae on top so kept in in my collection. Recently I inspected it through a loupe and noticed the sponge like pores for the first time. I tried to show in the photos that there is a transition or directional grain to the pores that I've seen in whale bones and sponges that washed ashore when I lived in the Pacific Northwest. It's sized at about six inches at the widest, and is a sandstone rather than the expected limestone. What do you think? Is it a sponge or a type of coral?
  24. WATERLINE

    Lake Champlain Mudstone Find

    Greetings....On a recent visit to Lake Champlain I came across the attached items near the shore of Crown Point. These were eroded out of the bedrock and laying in the sand. On view they look like worm trace or maybe coral..? Any ideas please comment by return...and thanks.
  25. Brittle Star

    Samphire Hoe, Sussex, England

    Samphire Hoe, Sussex is not far from Dover and was created by dumping stuff from the digging of the Channel Tunnel. It is a wonderful nature reserve, has a small shop/café, access to the beach and chalk fossils are easy to find on the surface of the fallen blocks. Mobile phone service is a bit weird as my phone connected and said Welcome to France, but Dutch tourists there had English connection. Good job there is a pay phone. Here are just a few of the bits I took a photo of. Not completely prepped yet but you get the idea of what can be found. Some are micro fossils from the dust as chalk easy to break down or scoop up from the bottom of the cliff. 1 - common foram 2 - Ramulina foram 3 - Tiny tooth next to Tritaxia foram ( let me know if I have got my ID wrong) 4 - Fish scale 5 - Bivalve with encrusting bryozoa 6 & 7 -Onchotrochus serpentinus Corallite overhead view and of one end confirming not a serpula 7 to 9 - What I think is shed isopod skin, NHM could not ID it but then they sent it to the fish department.
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