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Found 6 results

  1. From the album: Epizoans

    the campanian sediments of the region "Hannover" are rich in fossils. Seaurchins, ammonits, brachiopods..., and sponges. Some of this carry fossil epizoans like serpulids, bryozoan and roots of corals. This is a root of an octocoral, size is about 4 cm.
  2. From the album: Epizoans

    same octocoral-root, top-view
  3. Hello fossil enthusiasts, some of you know, I have a on-off-relationship with this forum, and it seems, now is on-time again. I have a general question, and maybe some of you can help me. In the countries of the southern coast of the baltic sea (and very special in the northern half of germany) we have only fery few sites with exposed fossiliferous bedrock, but quite a nice ammount of collectors. In the eastern half of Germany, situation was additinally bad for decades because of the cold war, where it was nearly impossible for east german collectors to visit sites outside of the country, even not in the eastern countries of the former USSR. Lucky us, we have an iceage some years ago, which shaved the baltic craton and scratches out the basin sediments from the hole we now call the Baltic sea. The glaciers depositet all the stuff on the other side of the scandinavian peninsula, and therefore we have opportunities, but also a hard life as collectors. Why this? Lucky thing, we can find fossils from the Precambrian up to the Quaternary (for geological reasons: except from Carboniferous/Permian material, and Devonian and Triassic stuff is very rare (what is meant by this I will explain later)). And we can made all this finds at the same time even in a few squaremeter outcrop. If someone is generally geological interested, he can find rocks from 2.7 billion years of earth history at the same place. Our shores (and gravel pits) are, as far as I know, the place where you can find the most diverse (naturally) rock assamblage worldwide (geolocial museum collections are excluded ) A lot of specimen are described of those rocks, not known from the host strata in Scandinavia or the Baltic States. Unfortunally, you have to know a lot about rocks to exclude the fossil empty types, and fossils are generally rare. ("rare" means here, you find only some on one day excursion, and maybe there is not a single one you decide to implement to your collection. "rare" in the above mentioned case means, you might find only one fossilisferous (devonian, triassic,...) rock in your collectors life. So, I try to set a point. We have here a semiprofessional association, the GfG (http://www.geschiebekunde.de/, only in german, sorry for this), with some publications online (http://www.geschiebekunde.de/publikationen/geschiebekunde-aktuell-ga/ , http://www.geschiebekunde.de/publikationen/ga-sonderhefte/ ). And we are interested: are there collectors, masochistic enough to live with only a few gut sometimes exceptional finds, harvesting the glacial deposits of North America for rocks and fossils? I know that there should be also geological diverse gravels due to the geological heterogenity of the northern part of the North American Shield... To show our diversity, I can post some of our fossils from different ages here in this topic... Best regards from overseas (or using the old miners phrase: Glück Auf! ) Johannes
  4. Hi, I am now part of the Fossil Forum since 9 Months, but now I think it´s the time to introduce myself. Forgot it at the beginning.. My name is Frank, I am a german collector and Researcher in cretaceous Topics, mainly invertebrates from northern Germany. My main Focus is not to get muuuuuuuuuuuuuuuch fossils for myself, I like to discuss, learn about...., and support other collectors in Name their fossils or where they are from. Sometimes I can help, due to now more than 40 years experience, looooooooooooots of field work all over the world and (mostly gone ) several tons of fossil I have had or seen. So, if someone Needs assistance in European fossils I will do my very best
  5. aed

    Mystery Fossil

    Greetings... Assuming this thing is in fact a fossil, I hope someone might be able to tell me what creature it is, and from what general time period. The rock comes from deep in glacial till at Groß Pampau in Schleswig Holstein, northern Germany. Thanks!
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