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Showing results for tags 'eastern north carolina'.
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First quick trip to Greens Mill Run in Greenville, NC. Definitely have to go back soon, lots of belemnites on first row, a cool new fossil for me. Second row was most common find, goblin shark teeth, and then finally two little crow shark teeth. Hard to see but at the bottom there's a very rolled shark vert. Good stuff.
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- belemnite
- eastern north carolina
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From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7
Hemipatagus carolinensis sea urchin Eastern North Carolina Oligocene (33.9 - 23 million years ago) The echinoid genus Hemipatagus is a poorly understood fossil spatangoid taxon that is now usually treated as a subjective synonym of the extant genus Maretia, but was originally subject to considerable dispute within the scientific community. Restudy of the species attributed to Hemipatagus and a range of presumably related spatangoids including Lovenia and Maretia has been carried out to solve the problem of its relationships. Cladistic analysis shows that Hemipatagus is not close to Maretia, but is closely related to Lovenia and should be placed in the Loveniidae, which is here confirmed as a monophyletic group. Characters of the adapical tuberculation suggest that in Hemipatagus an internal fasciole is present in early ontogeny, but lost in the adults. A clade comprising the genera Eurypatagus, Paramaretia and Platybrissus, and here named Eurypataginae, appears in all resulting trees as sister group to Maretia. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Echinodermata Class: Echinoidea Order: Spatangoida Family: Loveniidae Genus: †Hemipatagus Species: †carolinensis -
From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7
Hemipatagus carolinensis sea urchin Eastern North Carolina Oligocene (33.9 - 23 million years ago) The echinoid genus Hemipatagus is a poorly understood fossil spatangoid taxon that is now usually treated as a subjective synonym of the extant genus Maretia, but was originally subject to considerable dispute within the scientific community. Restudy of the species attributed to Hemipatagus and a range of presumably related spatangoids including Lovenia and Maretia has been carried out to solve the problem of its relationships. Cladistic analysis shows that Hemipatagus is not close to Maretia, but is closely related to Lovenia and should be placed in the Loveniidae, which is here confirmed as a monophyletic group. Characters of the adapical tuberculation suggest that in Hemipatagus an internal fasciole is present in early ontogeny, but lost in the adults. A clade comprising the genera Eurypatagus, Paramaretia and Platybrissus, and here named Eurypataginae, appears in all resulting trees as sister group to Maretia. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Echinodermata Class: Echinoidea Order: Spatangoida Family: Loveniidae Genus: †Hemipatagus Species: †carolinensis -
Hello! Here is a larger bi-valve - Is it Glycymeris sp.? As for the sand dollar - Any ideas? These are from the Aurora, North Carolina area. For the sand dollar - I would LOVE a GENUS - but will settle for Family!!!!! I would ALSO love a recommendation for a guide to this area.... I have the Lee Creek Mine articles.... I got a LOT of shark & ray teeth; THOSE i can do! MANY THANKS!
- 4 replies
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- bivalve
- eastern north carolina
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