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Found 23 results

  1. Looking for species ID on this Neithea bivalve. Found this in Travis County in Williamson Creek gravel bed (Qt).
  2. Ludwigia

    Neithea coquandi (Peron 1877)

    Shell preservation.
  3. Dpaul7

    Neithea or Pecten Fossil a.jpg

    From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Neithea (Pecten) Fossil SITE LOCATION: Coryell County, Texas TIME PERIOD: Lower Cretacious (100-145 million years ago) Data: Neithea is an extinct genus of bivalve mollusks that lived from the Early Jurassic to the early Paleocene, with a worldwide distribution. Neithia sp. are inequivalve. That means that the two valves are not the same shape, the right valve being strongly concave and the left valve being flattened or concave. Sculpture consist of alternating strong and weaker radiating ribs. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Mollusca Class: Bivalvia Order: Pectinoida Famil
  4. Dpaul7

    Neithea or Pecten Fossil a.jpg

    From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Neithea (Pecten) Fossil SITE LOCATION: Coryell County, Texas TIME PERIOD: Lower Cretacious (100-145 million years ago) Data: Neithea is an extinct genus of bivalve mollusks that lived from the Early Jurassic to the early Paleocene, with a worldwide distribution. Neithia sp. are inequivalve. That means that the two valves are not the same shape, the right valve being strongly concave and the left valve being flattened or concave. Sculpture consist of alternating strong and weaker radiating ribs. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Mollusca Class: Bivalvia Order: Pectinoida Famil
  5. Please help me with the below.. I found this pectenoid fossil and many more in the rumbles of an old mine in Attika area af Greece. Usually the terestrial fossils near the beach are of Pliocene or Pleistocene age. But this fossil comes from the digged earth of a mine and looks totally different than the Pliocene shells. It has Black color and the shape is also different.. It reminds me of Neithea species?? But Neithea were Jurassic era fossils... Could it be??? Size 3cm X 3cm.. Thank you very much in advance...!
  6. John and I headed out for a couple hours to our Washita Group site this afternoon. The water was still deep in some spots, but we were able to get around to a few new locations. We found three or four of the expected ammonites (Oxytropidoceras acutocarinatum), plus a couple things I have yet to id. By far MY find of the day was an echinoid spine that I spied (even though it was partially covered by leaves) in a Denton Clay exposure. This exposure also gave us a few irregular echinoids, and several Neithea sp., including the one shown below, which has exceptional preservation. I do have to s
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