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Found 10 results

  1. Ludwigia

    Lytoceras fimbriatum (Sowerby 1817)

    From the album: Early Jurassic Ammonites from Southern Germany

    20cm. Augmented with Apoxie Sculpt from 1-3 o'clock in the first photo. Found on a plowed field in Klettgau, southwest Germany near the Swiss border where the stratigraphic info stated merely Lower Jurassic. Probably originates from the Early Pliensbachian.
  2. Ludwigia

    Another field find

    Just wanted to show you some things I found recently on a plowed-up field in the southwestern German region of Klettgau. My wife and I were there for a hike last week and I heard that it was possible to find fossils in the area. So when I got home I did a bit of research and headed back down there the other day. There is supposed to be an exposure in the middle of a forest, but I didn't have the coordinates, and despite an hour or so of driving up and down the loggers roads, I wasn't able to track it down. However, a few fields which can expose Early Jurassic fossils were also mentioned, so I had a go at them and after criss-crossing them for a couple of hours I managed to come up with a couple of things. As is often the case, I forgot to take my camera along, so I'm afraid I can't show you the landscape, which, by the way, is very nice. Sorry 'bout that. Anyway, here are the two finds after prep. The first is a Chlamys sp. bivalve 2.5cm. in length. Two bits of shell popped off which I had to glue back on. The second and last find took quite a few hours to prep, since it was stuck in a concretion. I wasn't even sure if it would be worth the effort, but it turned out very well in the end. I just had to fill in a bit of the outer whorls with Apoxie Sculpt and carve the inner whorls in order to complete the picture. It's a Lytoceras fibriatum with ø 20cm. The geological map marked the field only as Early Jurassic, but this species can be placed somewhere in the Pliensbachian.
  3. From the album: Jurassic stuff uk

    Lytoceras, port mulgrave, yorkshire Uk.
  4. Calcite steinkern.
  5. Calcitized phragmocone.
  6. Ludwigia

    Lytoceras fimbriatum (Sowerby 1817)

    From the album: Cephalopods Worldwide

    11cm. Carixian, lowest Pliensbachian, Lower Jurassic. From Steinbourg, Elsass, France.
  7. Pyritized phragmocone.
  8. Limestone mold of perhaps only a part of the phragmocone. This genus could get very large (deep sea goers) and they lasted chronologically for a long time, existing for most of the jurassic and cretaceous periods. It was not possible to determine the zone, since it was found in a loose block at a construction site where several zones were exposed.
  9. ricardo

    Lytoceras sp,

    From the album: Cephalopoda

    Lytoceras sp, Vale das Fontes Formation, Pliensbachian, Portugal. 4 cm. ps. TRADED
  10. AJ Plai

    Lytoceras Ammonite (Opalescent)

    From the album: Ammonites & Ammolites

    Lytoceras sp. Age: Jurassic/Cretaceous Locality: Madagascar
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