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Showing results for tags 'gastropod'.
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From the album: Lower Carboniferous fossils of Ireland
© BJM
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- crinoid
- east coast ireland
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From the album: Fossil Collection: DC Area and Beyond
Lunatia heros Matoaka Beach Cabins, MD Choptank and St. Mary's Formations Miocene -
From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- 1
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- bellerophon
- bellerophon graphicus
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- 1
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- gastropod
- soleniscus
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- 1
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- euphemites
- euphemites blaneyanus
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- euconospira
- euconospira turbiniforms
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- gastropod
- meekospira
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- 1
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- carboniferous
- gastropod
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- carboniferous
- gastropod
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(and 1 more)
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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- 1
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- carboniferous
- gastropod
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(and 1 more)
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- 6 replies
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- 4
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- carboniferous
- east coast ireland
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(and 3 more)
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I was cleaning up these ammonites from the Grayson formation and something popped out of one and another thing came out of matrix. My cataracts are making hard to see small details even in pictures so want to confirm what I think I see, a regular echinoid and maybe a gastropod? Thanks for helping my eyes
- 3 replies
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- 2
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- cretateous
- echinoid
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From the album: Lower Carboniferous fossils of Ireland
Malahide formation east coast ireland-
- carboniferous
- gastropod
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Hello everyone, and hope you're all going well. I recently purchased this gastropod fossil and would like it identified for my display cabinet. Does anyone know exactly what it is? Unfortunately, I have no location data; it was labelled as Borthiembryon but it clearly isn't that genus. I would like as specific an identification as possible, but I understand if a species level ID is impossible. Also I bought this gastropod a while ago. I posted it for ID on the forum a while ago but never got a response, and I'd especially like this specimen's ID. The seller told me it was Jurassic in age, but gave no further detail. If no-one knows the IDs of these fossils, then I will contact the supplier of them which gave them to the store I bought them from. I apologise for the low quality of the images; my phone's camera is not great. Thank you all for any help with ID'ing these specimens.
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From the album: Hell Creek / Lance Formations
A mm-sized gastropod recovered from a channel deposit.-
- gastropod
- hell creek
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From the album: New York Devonian Micro Matrix
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Gastropod Hystrivasum locklini Venice Florida
JamieLynn posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Florida Fossil Finds: Peace River, Venice, and Key West
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Gastropod Melongena subcoronata Venice Florida
JamieLynn posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Florida Fossil Finds: Peace River, Venice, and Key West
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From the album: Florida Fossil Finds: Peace River, Venice, and Key West
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From the album: Florida Fossil Finds: Peace River, Venice, and Key West
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A Few More Potential Fakes
Lucid_Bot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Trepospira illinoisensis, Lake Bridgeport Shale
Mikrogeophagus posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Missourian Series
Trepospira illinoisensis, North TX Lake Bridgeport Shale Jan, 2023-
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- canyon group
- gastropod
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From the album: Aurora North Carolina Micro Matrix Fossils
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Hi All, I took a trip (I live just outside of Philly) down to Calvert Cliffs on the MD side to spend a couple days hunting. I was able to visit the VA side of the Calvert Formation back on Labor day, and was excited to see the MD cliffs. First day I spent all of my time at Matoaka Beach hunting solo. Tried to access another section of beach later that day, however it required hiking through some thick vegetation, and I was losing light, so I gave up. Second day I met up with the Delaware Valley Paleontology Society to visit a few sites with CHAPTours. Wound up visiting 3 different beaches, and finished off back at Matoaka (I didn't know we'd be going here otherwise I'd have picked a different beach the first day). Overall, I had pretty good outings both days. Surprisingly I didn't find a single shark tooth, but lots of amazingly preserved bivalves and gastropods. Some photos from the beach/cliffs from both days. From the top of the cliffs: Bivalve fossils were everywhere. Group shot with a sampling of finds.
- 23 replies
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- 5
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- bivalve
- calvert cliffs
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(and 4 more)
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