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A nice Dictyonema flabelliforme dendroid graptolite from Oslo Fields in Norway. It's Tremadoc, Lower Ordovician in age and is thus maybe around 480 mya. Another angle :
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From the album: My trilobites
This is a Dalmanites limulurus From the Rochester shale Middleport NY. I bought this one from a friend it is probably my best trilobite.- 1 comment
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I found a couple of fossils this summer in Rochester Minnesota at Quarry Hill nature center. I'm wondering if anyone regonises some of them. They are all Ordovician in age. 1. Unknown 2. Trilobite? 3. Trilobite? 4. Trilobite for sure. Anyone know the genus or family 5. Trilobite? 6. Shell or something else?
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Mastodon tooth found in Michigan creek by 6-year-old boy
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Mastodon tooth found by 6-year-old on a hike. He’s donating it to the University of Michigan Michigan Live, September 30, 2021 Rare mastodon tooth found in Michigan creek by 6-year-old boy By Megan Woods, WDIV, October 4, 2021 4:06AM Six-year-old boy discovers rare 12,000-year-old Mastodon tooth in Michigan creek Firstpost News, October 06, 2021 6-year-old boy finds historic mastodon tooth in Rochester Hills creek Tooth will be donated to University of Michigan’s Museum of Paleontology for research Yours, Paul H.- 2 replies
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I had to make a trip to the "big" city of Rochester, Mn today. As I drove by a new building site that exposed some Decorah Shale, I had to make a stop. The Decorah Shale is an impervious layer that keeps pollution from seeping into deeper rock layers and contaminating our ground water. Obviously, building permits are being obtained without adherence to the zoning which prevents interuption of this great geologic feature! I will drink my own water but collect fossils from these ill conceived sites. While visiting such a site, I discovered this tiny gastropod that I can not identify.
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Hey how's it going, long time lurker and recent member. Used to spend time here when I was younger and now that I'm graduated and back home in upstate NY, I'm on the hunt for bugs (and everything else). I've always been interested in paleontology, and just recently finished up a bachelors in evolutionary biology, with a focus on genetics. While my specific interests lie in ancient DNA and genetics, I've taken a few classes and been lucky enough to have had some experience in the field (in Kenya), and learned enough geology and paleontology to get me by. So far I have been hunting the exposures around Rochester/Buffalo/Geneseo and the Finger Lakes, but hoping to spend time elsewhere in the state as well. Looking forward to seeing what others find and how they do it! Here are a couple of finds from the last few weeks... I recently finished up my blast cabinet and prepping setup, now just waiting on a more reliable (non-Harbor Freight) air eraser and hopefully I will be able to clean up what I've found and post some of the best!
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Rhynchonellids are hard to identify by exterior morphology as they often need to have their internal structures visible to be sure of an id. However if you know the faunal lists from a specific area, you can reduce the candidates considerably. The specimen here has 22 costae with 4 on the fold and thus, at this size must be one of two species, Rostricellula minnesotensis or Rhynchotrema wisconsinensis. The only completely safe way to differentiate between the two is the presence or absence of a cardinal process in the brachial valve but this is not possible here. However, Rostricellula usually, though not always, devoid of shell ornamentation, such as ridges or the presence of growth lines, and Rhynchotrema wisconsinensis usually, though not always, shows these, though they can also be seemingly absent through wear. But, R. wisconsinensis never shows a length to width ratio of 1.00, only from 0.80 to 0.95 and this specimen has a ratio of 1.00 which does occur in Rostricellula. Furthermore, the fold of Rostricellula is wider and less sharply developed Finally, good specimens of Rostricellula are far more common than R wisconsinense at the locality as the species most commonly found here is Rhynchotrema ainsiei which is describe elsewhere and not to be confused with the other two due to it's larger number of costae Thus, I am fairly confident with my id
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- brachiopod
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As with the adult this has more costae than any other brachiopod found in this formation. In this case 32. and 5 of them on the fold. The fold and sulcus are not yet very noticeable, as this species only develops a noticeable fold as it matures.
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Brachiopods, perhaps rhynchonellids most of all, are notoriously hard to identify without their internal features exposed. However, if you know the formation and rough location and have faunal lists it can be possible. Rhynchonella ainsliei, for example, has 26-34 costae with 5-7 of these appearing on the fold. This specimen has 30 and 5 respectively and is the only species that has so many found in this formation. It also has the correct shape and size to support the match.
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