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Found 14 results

  1. Tidgy's Dad

    ADAM'S SILURIAN

    Hoooooooooooorrrrrrrrrrrraaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Here we are at last, into Adam's Silurian. Thanks for looking. First up is the Lower Silurian or Llandovery and I begin with a problem. I posted this one incorrectly in Adam's Ordovician as it had got it's label muddled up with an Ordovician Favosites I had that has vanished in the move here, but is being replaced by kind forum member @Herb Anyway, this, I remember now I've found the correct label, is from the greenish Browgill Formation, part of the Stockdale Group from a cutting near Skelgill (Skelghyll) in Cumbria, Northern England. It seems to be a tabulate coral, but I can't find any listed for this location, only mentions of small, rare, rugose corals. It has the star shaped corallites of a Heliolitidid, but seems to be tightly packed together like a Favositidid. A couple of species of Palaeofavosites seem to be close and are a bit star-shaped,, but anyone know any better? @TqB@piranha hmm who else? The coral bit, an external mold, is a maximum of 3.5 cm across and each corallite up to 2 mm.
  2. From the album: Desmoinesian Series

    Orbiculoidea capuliformis, Central TX Strawn Group Undivided Apr, 2023 My first inarticulate brachiopod.
  3. Misha

    Craniops ovata

    From the album: Lower Devonian fossils

    Craniops ovata Inarticulate brachiopod Lower Devonian Haragan Fm. Old Hunton Townsite Oklahoma
  4. Misha

    Inarticulate brachiopod

    From the album: Lower Devonian fossils

    Lingulid? Inarticulate brachiopod Lower Devonian Glenerie Limestone Tristates group Eastern NY
  5. Misha

    Lingula sp.

    From the album: Misha's Middle Devonian Fossils

    Lingula sp. (L.delia?) Givetian Moscow Fm. Hamilton Group. DSR Generously gifted to me by @Fossildude19
  6. Misha

    Lingula gibbosa

    From the album: Misha's Silurian

    Lingula gibbosa Middle Silurian Waldron Shale Waldron, Indiana
  7. Fossildude19

    Lingula delia

    From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils

    Lingula delia Middle Devonian Moscow Formation. Hamilton Group, Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.

    © © 2014 Tim Jones

  8. Fossildude19

    Lingula spatulata

    From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils

    Inarticulate brachiopod, Lingula spatulata. Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Earlsville, NY.

    © 2022 T. Jones

  9. Tetradium

    Schizocrania sp.

    From the album: Brachiopods of Platteville/Decorah Twin Cities Minnesota

    Rare Inarticulated brachiopod. Author claimed to only found one. Decorah Formation. Rounded with slightly raised edges. Unidentified bryozoan sp. can be seen on a single film covering part of the shell. Have parallel lines going from one end to another.
  10. Well, it has been a while since a post on the Silurian Leighton Fm. Had to make a trip due to family matters, and once I got back had a lot of work to do. I finally got into a position to start splitting and prepping more shale, and found this new little guy. I am torn between an operculum of a gastropod, and an inarticulate brachiopod. My main argument for an operculum is because of the shape - the only inarticulate brachiopods in this formation are Orbiculoidea and Pholidops. Unfortunately, I cannot find any reliable papers on the brachiopod Pholidops, it looks very similar but there is quite a bit of variation. The gastropod Australonema (possibly Cyclonema) is found in this formation, and the operculum of the genus is very similar to my specimen. On the other hand, the rarity of such Paleozoic opercula make me think that this is a brachiopod. And now for the specimen itself. It was not found in association with any gastropods, but was next to numerous Nuculites bivalves, some ostracods, and a tentaculite. The pictures below first show the two opposite halves of the specimen - unfortunately one was damaged when the shale split. Thanks for reading!
  11. Tetradium

    100_9094

    From the album: Brachiopods of Platteville/Decorah Twin Cities Minnesota

    Unlabeled inarticulate brachiopods. Common in Decorah formation and middle Platteville Formation. I had an interesting discussion with another person recently - turn out only inarticulate brachiopods tend to keep their shells - the other extreme lookalike which is non coiled limpet like Monoplacophora tend to be preserved as molds like true gastropods.
  12. Hi all, first post here. Central PA, Slab from roadside float from Mifflintown-Bloomsburg (undivided). A thin layer contains a lot of small (1/16" dia), flattish fossils that I think might be inarticulate brachiopods. I have a number of specimens from other parts of the exposed layers and these do not appear in any of the others. One old paper on this formation mentioned "inarticulate brachiopods". I'm new enough that I didn't know about the articulate and inarticulate division in this group, so I'm already learning stuff. Awesome. Googling some pics returned some images that kinda look like what I have. But not quite. What do you think? If not inarticulate braichiopod, what else could they be?
  13. Fossildude19

    Orbiculoidea truncata

    From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils

    Inarticulate brachiopod, Orbiculoidea truncata. Also on the slab is a solitary Ambocoelia umbonata, and a few ostracod hitchhikers. Middle Devonian, Smoke Creek Trilobite Bed, Windom Shale, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Blasdell NY

    © 2018 T.Jones

  14. Fossildude19

    Lingula delia

    From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils

    Lingula delia imprint. Middle Devonian, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group. Deep Springs Road, Lebanon, NY.

    © © 2014 Tim Jones.

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