Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'spain'.
-
Hello, in the Internet I saw an offer that was declared as "Gulper shark" for sale. After some research, this cannot be true and in my opinion it would be the jaw of a kitefin shark. I tried to put everything from the offer on one sheet so that it would be easier for you to help me. What do you think, which shark does this jaw belong to? The jaw is about 10cm wide and from Spain (Mediterranean Sea or Atlantic ocean) Thank you in advance and best regards from Germany. I hope, you can help me with this.
- 6 replies
-
- kitefin shark
- modern shark
-
(and 4 more)
Tagged with:
-
Ideal Glass Would Explain Why Glass Exists at All By Natalie Wolchover, March 11, 2020 https://www.quantamagazine.org/ideal-glass-would-explain-why-glass-exists-at-all-20200311/ https://www.quantamagazine.org/print The Spanish amber deposits are discussed in: Delclos, X., Arillo, A., Penalver, E., Barrón, E., Soriano, C., Del Valle, R.L., Bernárdez, E., Corral, C. and Ortuno, V.M., 2007. Fossiliferous amber deposits from the Cretaceous (Albian) of Spain. Comptes Rendus Palevol, 6(1-2), pp.135-149. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233864686_Fossilferous_amber_deposits_from_the_Cretaceous_Albian_of_Spain https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Xavier_Delclos/2 http://www.igme.es/amberia/publi.htm Amberia IGME http://www.igme.es/amberia/English/default.htm Mesozoic and Cenozoic Spanish insect localities. Post-Congress FossilsX3 (2007) Field Trip. Field Trip Guide Book https://www.researchgate.net/publication/286882398_Mesozoic_and_Cenozoic_Spanish_insect_localities_Post-Congress_FossilsX3_2007_Field_Trip_Field_Trip_Guide_Book https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Xavier_Delclos/2 Yours, Paul H.
-
- amber
- cretaceous
-
(and 4 more)
Tagged with:
-
Somehow, I find this terribly sad. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20200128-how-did-the-last-neanderthals-live
- 7 replies
-
- 11
-
- caves
- extinction
-
(and 4 more)
Tagged with:
-
Well, i did hear a while ago that Morocco were thinking of becoming more serious on their 'cultural heritage' laws. I hope this is just an isolated case from the Spanish side and not the beginning of a trend. https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2020/01/291089/spanish-airport-moroccan-fossils/
-
Is there a way to identify this plant? Looks like plant leaves, but I am unsure of the species. Does anyone know?
- 21 replies
-
- bierzo
- carboniferous
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Please can someone help identify pictured fossil. We found 2 of similar shape, with outer shape resembling a stingray, but the spine in the middle seems to be a much simpler structure then that of a stingray
-
I have just gotten back from a two week holiday in Majorca, Spain. We stayed in a self catering apartment. The area around the swimming pool was paved with what looks like sandstone slabs to me. There were shell fragments in all of them. Most were very indistinct, but there was a little detail in in some. No idea where these slabs would have been sourced from. Are these actually fossils??
- 9 replies
-
- 1
-
- inclusions
- paving slabs
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hello again friends. I've found this while hiking at about 1800 m. a.s.l. in Santiago-Pontones (Jaen, Spain), in a place which I believe is quaternary. I've not been able to find it in the local literature. Now I only have this picture (I have more but they are dark and not useful), the rock is limestone and is wet, the fossil is conic, I'll post more pictures if necessary. The ruler is in cm. Thank you.
- 8 replies
-
- fossil
- quaternary
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
I found this near a river in La Matea (Jaen, Spain) the zone is predominantly mesozoic and the rock is limestone. I'm not sure if it's a fossil or some kind of formation. I have two similar specimen, is like a cylinder that goes from one side to the other of the rock, in one of the images I've partially removed some of the rock. Thank you.
-
A new Spinosaurid has been described from Spain's, Arcillas de Morella Formation (upper Barremian) , Vallibonavenatrix cani. Since this Spinosaurid has affinities to those in North Africa and may assist us in identifying material from Morocco. Paywalled https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195667119301302
- 3 replies
-
- 8
-
- arcillas de morella formation
- barremian
- (and 2 more)
-
From the album: Echinodermata
5cm. long. Early Cretaceous Aptian From Morella, Castellon, Spain-
- cretaceous
- hereraster
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hi, please, can you help us to identify this fossil? We found it in an area with trilobites presence, between two slate planes. Thanks!
- 1 reply
-
- badajoz
- extremadura
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hi, I found these ammonite specimens in the Oxfordian Ammonitico Rosso facies from the Baleriac Islands, Spain. I know that the preservation state is quite poor but I would like to get some help identifyng the genus and species. I am not familiar with ammonite description but here you have a very basic description of what I see: Specimen 1: No ribs, oxycone/discocone, involut, carinate? Specimen 2 (Taramelliceras sp?): two pair of ribs (primary and secondary), oxycone/discocone, involut Specimen 3: No ribs, discocone, carinate? Specimen 1
- 5 replies
-
- ammonite
- ammonitico rosso
-
(and 5 more)
Tagged with:
-
I found this bone while walking a beach in northern Spain back in January. It is about 5" (12.5 CM) long. The smaller end is somewhat rounded off but it doesn't look broken. In other words, I don't think the bone was much longer than it is now. Does anyone have any idea what it is? I have been told it might be a calcaneum from an ice age artiodactyl? Agree? Thank you in advance for your help. Rich
-
I want to submit for identification the specimen below. It came from the Carboniferous of Leon, Spain, labeled as tree trunk cortex. There are no other informations available. Any thought of what might be exactly, or a more precise ID will be welcomed. Thank you.
- 17 replies
-
- carboniferous
- cortex
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hey, i found this rock in the river, cost of north spain. Theh found some cuaternarian sable teeth and rhino teeth near here, could this be a mamooth tooth??
-
Recently re discovered a bunch of these things that we got from the Canary Islands. They were all washed up on the beaches and they do not look stricktly geological to me and looks kind of like some kind of modern calcified organism or trace of one. I stumbled upon a book at some point, I believe it was called Darwin's Fossils that said these were some kind of remains of algae that have fossilized, but when I looked that up there was no evidence I could find supporting this claim, maybe someone else knows what these things could be? Any new insight is appreciated, Thank you.
-
I should have posted this long ago, but am going to do it now, in the hope that then it is behind me and then I can look forward to future adventures. Due to ill health from 2012, finances and responsibilities, I have been unable to do any personal collecting except for this one wonderful trip which reminded me that I've still got it in me. In October 2016 wifey and I were relaxing in a bar on Tarifa beach, the southernmost point in mainland Europe, located at the south-western corner of Spain, opposite Tangier, the two Pillars of Hercules that are the entrance to the Mediterranean from the Atlantic. I noticed an island connected to the mainland by a man made causeway. it had a lighthouse on and some ruins, so I thought that being only a little distance, I'd go and explore. Here is the location, to the left of the picture is the Mediterranean, to the right, the Atlantic. There are no more location pics, I'm afraid, as wifey can't be prised away from bars very easily and she has the camera phone, but the island was closed to visitors without a guide or permit as it's a place for protected birds, the lighthouse and Napoleonic fortress ruins. But to the left of the causeway was a small beach with exposed rocks and even a little notice board explaining that the rocks were a Miocene oyster bed 5 to 10 million years old. My interest was aroused so I clambered about the beach and found the fossils in the next post. Very pleased with myself, I was, especially as I had no tools and the rock was really seriously hard. Had to use other bits of rock as hammer and chisels. And my breathing held out pretty well. I can still do this! Life's Good.
- 30 replies
-
- 10
-
First of all thank you for accepting me as a member. I have a fossil that I hope catches your attention. I think they are Miocene worms. They belong to the Vallès-Penedés. What is strange is that they are in such good condition, I think they are unique. I await your opinion.
-
New genus and new species first described by Dr. Sebastian Calzada Badia in: C a l z a d a , S., 1974. Almerarhynchia n. gen. virgiliana n. sp. del Maastrichtiense de Figols, Prepireneo catalan. Acta Geológica Hispanica, 9 (3): 92-97. http://digital.csic.es/handle/10261/7365. ID of the specimen confirmed by Dr. Calzada.
- 9 comments
-
- 2
-
- brachiopod
- cretaceous
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
The seller wasn't sure if the Crab was found near Huesa which is south of the Pyrenees in northern Spain near the Canyons of the Sierra de Guara.
-
From the album: Plants
Annularia Sphenophylloides from the Upper Carboniferous of Spain.- 3 comments
-
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 :
- 723 replies
-
- 2
-
- amplexopora
- amplexopora septosa
-
(and 75 more)
Tagged with:
- amplexopora
- amplexopora septosa
- ampyx
- ampyx priscus
- anti atlas
- anti-atlas
- arenig
- arnheim formation
- asaphid
- asaphus
- asaphus expansus
- asaphus fallax
- asaphus latus
- asaphus lepidurus
- ascocystites
- ashgill
- ashgill shales
- athyrid
- athyridida
- australia
- baota formation
- batostoma
- beekite
- bendigo
- bendigonian
- beroun
- bou nemrou
- bryozoa
- bryozoan
- bullengarook
- bumastoides
- calymene
- calymenid
- calymenina
- campylorthis
- campylorthis deflecta
- canada
- caradoc
- caradocian
- castlemainian
- china
- cincinnati group
- cincinnatian
- colphocoryphe grandis
- colpocoryphe
- colpocoryphe aragoi
- colpocoryphe lennieri
- colpocoryphe rouaulti
- colpocoryphe thorali
- coniston
- constellaria
- constellaria antheloidea
- constellaria florida
- cornulites
- cross fell
- cumbria
- cummingsville formation
- cyathophylloides
- cyathophylloides stellata
- czech republic
- czechia
- czechoslovakia
- dalmanella
- dalmanella testudinaria
- dalmantina
- dalmantina socialis
- decorah
- decorah formation
- decorah shale
- ded
- ded hill
- dendroid
- diacalymene
- dictyonema
- dictyonema flabelliforme
- didymograptus
- didymograptu
-
A rangeomorph holdfast trace fossil from the Ediacara formation, Rawnsley quartzite of the Flinders Range, South Australia. This specimen is Medusina mawsoni, so called because it was until recently thought to be a jellyfish, but is now believed to be the attachment point of a fractal rangeomorph as Charniodiscus is the point of anchorage for Charnia sp. This one may have been the holdfast point for some species of Rangea. The diameter of the outer circle is 1.5 cm and the fossil is estimated to be 555 million years old.
- 177 replies
-
- 7
-
- achlysopsis
- acorn worm
-
(and 71 more)
Tagged with:
- achlysopsis
- acorn worm
- acrothele
- acrothele subsidua
- afon mawwdach
- agnostid
- ajax mine
- algae
- altiocculus
- altiocculus harrisi
- alum shale
- antelope springs
- anti atlas
- aphelaspis
- aphelaspis brachyphasis
- archaeocyathid
- asaphiscus
- asaphiscus wheeleri
- australia
- barrandagnostus
- barrandagnostus inexpectans
- barrios fascies
- beltane
- biwabek
- biwabek formation
- bolaspidella
- bolaspidella housensis
- bradoriid
- bradoriida
- brantevik
- british colombia
- california
- cambrian
- cambropallas
- cambropallas telesto
- canada
- chambless limestone
- chengjiang
- chengjiang biota
- china
- choia
- choiidae
- collenia
- collenia undosa
- conasauga formation
- conasauga river
- cranbrook
- cricocosmia
- cricocosmia jinningensis
- crumillospongia
- ctenopyge
- ctenopyge affinis
- cyanobacteria
- czech republic
- czechoslovakia
- diandongia
- diandongia pista
- dolgellau
- early cambrian
- east kootenay mountains
- ediacaran
- ellipsocephalid
- ellipsocephalus
- ellipsocephalus hoffi
- elrathia
- elrathia kingii
- embalse del luna
- enteropneusta
- eoorthis
- eoorthis primordialis
- ethmocyathus
- ethmocyathus lineatus
- fali
-
From the album: Ammonites of Southern Spain and world
Substreblites zonarius (ventral view)