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Showing results for tags 'gastropod'.
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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From the album: Early Jurassic fossils of Northamptonshire, UK
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Hello, Could I get some sort of ID on these two specimens? They were both labeled as ammonites but I believe the one on the right may actually be a gastropod. The gastropod is Pennsylvanian from Southeast Oklahoma, USA, and I have no provenance on the ammonite. Thanks.
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Dear fellow forum members, I am going through old boxes, in this case with some of my rare own finds (as opposed to bought, gifted and inherited fossils) These I found at a coast of the mediterranean, where the waves gnawed at soft sandstone. On a ledge below the fossiliferous layer there where fragments and some intact shells with and without remaining matrix, and this tooth, without, but weathered and feeling heavy. The shells I could identify (Diodora, Arca) do have living species, Diodora goes back to the Miocene, not sure about the others. So the age could be miocene to "subrecent", or maybe the tooth is much younger than the shells, impossible to tell. Who can tell me whose tooth this was? Thanks J