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  1. MikeR

    Laeviscyon demistriatum

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Laeviscyon demistriatum (Petuch, 1982) Stratigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 10 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Inflated final whorl with subsutural sulcus. Mostly smooth with faint spirals
  2. MikeR

    Pyruella schmidti

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Pyruella schmidti Petuch, 1994 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 10 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Large distinctive widely spaced spirals. Noticeable subsutural sulcus.
  3. MikeR

    Pyruella fredericoae

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Pyruella fredericoae Petuch, 1994 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 10 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Similar to P. sarasotaensis but with a sloping final whorl.
  4. MikeR

    Pyruella sarasotaensis

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Pyruella sarasotaensis Petuch, 1982 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: Quality Aggregates Quarry, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Shape edged final whorl with a deep subsuture sulculs.
  5. MikeR

    Pyruella rugosicostata

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Pyruella rugosicostata Petuch, 1982 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC Quarry, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: A rare species from the lower beds of the Pinecrest. Low spire with a sharp edged lower whorl.
  6. MikeR

    Ptychosalpinx multirugata

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Buccinidae Ptychosalpinx multirugata (Conrad, 1832) Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: Kissimmee River, Highlands County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Common in the Yorktown Formation of Virginia and North Carolina, but rarer in Florida. Mostly found in the Tamiami deposits in the Kissimmee River exposures.
  7. GayleMG

    Shark tooth? North Carolina

    I found this tooth (same tooth, two sides) in some phosphate mine slag from the Aurora Fossil Museum. Can you tell what species this is? I don't see anything quite like it on the charts I've consulted. The other pic is from the same slag and is some kind of ray, I believe.
  8. oilshale

    Quercus praeerucifolia Strauss, 1956

    Literature: E. Knobloch: Der pliozäne Laubwald von Willershausen am Harz (Mitteleuropa). Documenta naturae 120, 302 S., 34 Abb., 2 Tab., 46 Taf.
  9. MikeR

    Echinofulgur helenae

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Echinofulguridae Echinofulgur helenae (Olsson, 1967) Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC Pit Bed 4, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: More variable that E. echinatum, E. helenae is the common Echinofulgur in the lower beds of the Pinecrest. Ranges from tall straight individuals similar to E. echinatum to short stubby forms reminiscent of Tropochasca petiti. A row of spines on the siphonal canal distinguishes it from E. echinatum.
  10. MikeR

    Echinofulgur echinatum

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Echinofulguridae Echinofulgur echinatum (Dall, 1890) Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC Pit Bed 4, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: This species is much more common in the Florida Pleistocene than the Pliocene. It lacks the row of spines on the siphonal canal which is indicative of E. helenae.
  11. MikeR

    Tropochasca petiti

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Melongenidae Tropochasca petiti Olsson, 1967 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 10 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Resembles a Echinofulgur but with a more compact body, shorter spire and twisted siphonal canal suggesting Melongenidae. An extinct genera with no modern analog to compare with.
  12. MikeR

    Melongena consors

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Melongenidae Melongena consors (G.B. Sowerby II, 1850) Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 10 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Large and highly variable which has led to taxonomic splitting. Inflated body whorl with variable rows of spines. Ranges from the Lower Miocene/Pliocene Caribbean and the Upper Pliocene Florida deposits.
  13. MikeR

    Melongena consors

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Melongenidae Melongena consors (G.B. Sowerby II, 1850) Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: SMR Phase 8 Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Shown is a smaller individual with three rows of shoulder spines to compare with the large adult specimen MR 9473-1017.
  14. MikeR

    Melongena subcorona

    From the album: Gastropods of the Tamiami Formation

    Order Neogastropoda Family Melongenidae Melongena subcorona Heilprin, 1886 Statigraphy: Pinecrest Sand Member of the Tamiami Formation Location: APAC Pit, Sarasota County, Florida USA. Status: Extinct Notes: Similar to the recent Melongena corona. M. corona has shoulder spines that point upward, while M. subcoronata point outward.
  15. Literature: E. Knobloch: Der pliozäne Laubwald von Willershausen am Harz (Mitteleuropa). Documenta naturae 120, 302 S., 34 Abb., 2 Tab., 46 Taf.
  16. Dimitris

    ID request Kythera island

    Hello everyone. I was collecting in an abandoned sand quarry in the Greek island of Kythera. The formation is Tortonian - Zanglean made of various hardness/density sandstone. The upper layer looks like river deposits as it has more round pebbles and its thickness is less than a metre. The main formation exceeds 8m. North of this place (800m) and south of it (1000-1200m) there are confirmed Miocene deposits, terrestrial and river origin. I am clueless with this. 2€ coin = 1inch I thought of mammal tooth but I have no idea of such things. My other thought, it is just a rock..
  17. oilshale

    Ulmus cf. carpinoides Goeppert, 1855

    Ulmus cf. carpinoides Goeppert with leaf galls. The leaf galls are similar to those of the recent elm gall mite (Aculus ulmicola). Literature: E. Knobloch: Der pliozäne Laubwald von Willershausen am Harz (Mitteleuropa). Documenta naturae 120, 302 S., 34 Abb., 2 Tab., 46 Taf. Titchener F. R.(1999); Leaf feeding traces from the Upper Pliocene fossil Lagerstätte of Willershausen, Lower Saxony, Germany. Acta Palaeobot. 1999, Suppl. 2, 403-409. http://digiphyll.smns-bw.org/sample-apps/x/2019-04_en/html/downloads/Ulmus-carpinoides.pdf
  18. FossilsandScience

    Bone?

    Hey everyone! This was found in Southern California in Plio-Pleistocene and Pliocene loosely consolidated gravel and was wondering if it was bone? The area it was found in produces a bunch of petrified wood and possibly some Coprolite. What do you think? Thanks in advance!
  19. I_gotta_rock

    Arc Shell

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    Tiny Dallarca elnia next to the head of a sewing pin from the Pliocene/Pleistocene micro matrix of the Nutrien Aurora/Lee Creek Phosphate Mine in Auora, North Carolina These got much, MUCH bigger!
  20. I_gotta_rock

    Arene tricarinata

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    Tiny marine gastropod from the Pliocene/Pleistocene micro matrix of the Nutrien Aurora/Lee Creek Phosphate Mine in Auora, North Carolina
  21. I_gotta_rock

    Bryozoan

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    Discoporella ? Pliocene/Pleistocene from Aurora Fossil Museum micro matrix Aurora, North Carolina Thanks to @Al Dente for the ID
  22. I_gotta_rock

    So Many Minis!

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    This assemblage came from one cup (about 340 ml) of micro matrix from Aurora Fossil Museum. Oddly, they are generally much larger than most of what I found in the rest of the matrix. They are all from either the Pliocene or Pleistocene. See album description.
  23. I_gotta_rock

    Shark Teeth Sizes

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    The large and the small of it: two shark teeth from Aurora's "Emergency Kit" next to a sewing pin. Pliocene/Pleistocene from Aurora Fossil Museum micro matrix Aurora, North Carolina
  24. I_gotta_rock

    Porgy Fish Tooth

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    Family Sparidae Pliocene/Pleistocene from Aurora Fossil Museum micro matrix Aurora, North Carolina
  25. I_gotta_rock

    Pinfish Tooth

    From the album: Aurora/Lee Creek Mine Micro Matrix

    Lagodon rhomboides about 3 mm long Pliocene/Pleistocene from Aurora Fossil Museum micro matrix Aurora, North Carolina
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