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Showing results for tags 'worthenia'.
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From the album: Texas Pennsylvanian: Gastropods and Corals
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The wife surprised me with a trip to Kansas City this weekend for my birthday. We stopped at a road cut on the way out of town headed home and found some fun specimens. My neice and mother stopped at the same location a few weeks ago as well. We are excited to identify the finds for my nieces 4H geology project. I always wonder about some of these specimens if they are just the larger and smaller varieties of the same fossils. Here is a shot of the road cut. Here is an overall of our finds from the day. We think these are all Worthenia despite the large variety of sizes encountered. These look like Turritellas but not sure or confident what they are quite yet. need to research some more. The turritellas I am familiar with are from Kanopolis and smoother than these. We found this one that has an angle between a worthenia and all of the smaller ones. It also has smoother and rounder coils. It's the only one that looks this way. It's not as narrow as the turritella shaped ones, and not as wide as the worthenia shaped ones. Lastly we found these small bivalves from what it looks like. My wife was particularly handy at finding these. Overall it was a blast and a great stop and addition to my birthday weekend!
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While working on a specimen, this little gastropod fell out. Its measures about 7mm wide. Is it a Worthenia or something else? Being so small, I'm not sure it looks like the classic examples I find on fossil plates. Ruler is in mm. Found in the Glenshaw Formation. Pennsylvanian in age.
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- gastropod
- glenshaw formation
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Dolomites with gastropods. Maybe Carboniferous or Permian?? Found in South Lithuania
D.N.FossilmanLithuania posted a topic in Fossil ID
Dear Guys, In a time of two years I collected these gastropod fossils in dolomite erratics of Varena town, South Lithuania. There are many Naticopsis, Euomphalus like snails and also Worthenia, Omphalotrochus and Anomphalus are identified. The temporal range of the majority of these gastropod genera begins in Devonian and ends in Triassic or even early Jurassic. I would think these dolomites are Carboniferous or Permian in age but I would like to be sure which epoch they belong to and what other fossils I can expect to find in the future. Any help will be appreciated! Best Regards Domas At first, I will show Naticopsis like snails.- 11 replies
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- anomphalus and other gastropods
- euomphalidae
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Large Worthenias from Lost Creek Reservoir Borrow Pit, Near Jacksboro, Texas
gwestbrook posted a topic in Fossil Hunting Trips
I had forgotten I had found Worthenia fossils of this size at the Jacksboro Pennsylvanian period Finis Shale site. Found these probably on my first or second collecting trip to that site 5 or 6 years ago. I have boxes of stuff I haven't looked in for years. Finding stuff that's surprising me.- 20 replies
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- borrow pit
- jack county
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From the album: Gastropods and Bivalves Worldwide
3cm. From the Pennsylvanian Lake Bridgeport Shale at Lake Bridgeport, Texas. Thanks to Dan Woehr for the gift!- 1 comment
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