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Associated Fossils From Different Species Together


nala

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My favorite strata(Triassic) consist of condensed limestone and therefore different species(mostly ammonoids) together are a quite normal feature to me.post-2660-0-25101600-1382097345_thumb.jpg

From right to left: Arcestes sp., Trachyceras sp., Dittmarites sp., Monophyllites simony, Atractites sp.(orthocone one)

Pompeckjites layeri(visible winding left) Joannites sp(middle below)

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You are so lucky to have this kind of limestone!thanks for Sharing Andrea

Daira speciosa , Middle Miocene withpost-2325-0-41017300-1382099776_thumb.jpg A Xanthoidea moldavicus

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Another really nice samples Eric! :) ,I'm hunting everytime i can and made nice exchanges with friends :fistbump:

Myophorella daedalea Withattachicon.gifMyophorella daedalea on the matrix Albian Strepy-Bracquegnie Hainaut Belgium.jpga Gastropod

Another nice one there too, The snail looks like one of the Ringiculids that we find in our Upper Cretaceous here.

Of course I always like Andreas' ammonites too... :popcorn:

Edited by Wrangellian
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Hope this fits in with the topic.

This a Nuculana that appears to have been swallowed by a Pinna. Found in the Cretaceous in central N.M.

(Not really sure it's a Pinna type but that's as close as I've found so far).

Your thought would be appreciated.

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Nala,

Here is a matrix piece with at least 3 different shark genera (maybe 4). It's from the Mississippian Period (Early Carboniferous), Upper Burlington Formation, near Biggsville, Henderson County, Illinois. It has a cladodont (Symmorium?) tooth in the upper central part with an Orodus just to the upper left of that. There is a Deltodus along the lower edge and several bits of other things all over.

One tooth is not that visible along the lower left edge and appears to be another form of Orodus - not sure.

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Edited by siteseer
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I've got this piece with a bunch of Mosasaur and shark material from Khouribga, Morocco.

A huge Prognathodon tooth and two smaller Mosasaur teeth. And two parts of (maybe?) Mosasaur bones. As well a whole lot of Shark teeth including Squalicorax, some kind of oyster and lots of other fish bones.

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Loose tiny shark teeth from the same matrix.

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Olof Moleman AKA Lord Trilobite

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  • 2 weeks later...

Congrats Gery on the nice topic and everyone on the high quality contributions!!!

My addition is an example of a shark tooth and a double sea urchin coexistence. The small piece of soft rock bears the only Sand tiger shark Carcharias taurus tooth I have ever found on the one side and a double Schizaster sp. on the other side. Late miocene deposits of Panasos, Crete, Greece.

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Edited by astron
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Astrinos P. Damianakis

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That's another one hight quality contribution!Astrinos :) great shark tooth with echinoid :o

only a little cretaceous brachiopod with a serpulid on it post-2325-0-69922600-1383951664_thumb.jpg

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Here's another one from me. This time two different types of tree leaves from the middle Miocene of southern Germany.

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Zelkova ungeri on the right. Liquidambar europaea on the left.

Edited by Ludwigia

 

Greetings from the Lake of Constance. Roger

http://www.steinkern.de/

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I guess if we allow Eocene plants like these from McAbee in we could be inundated with examples, but here we go:

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Metasequoia and a conifier (name escapes me)

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Gingko (extinct variety) and Metasequoia and Fagus?

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An Oligocene slab containing 4 Clypeaster rogersi echs and, some Pectens and a bunch of large forams.

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Grüße,

Daniel A. Wöhr aus Südtexas

"To the motivated go the spoils."

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A stately, one of a kind slab of Eagle Ford limestone (Turonian) containing my best Texas Plesiosaur tooth, 20-30 Moremanoceras ammonites, and a single Ptychodus (anonymus?) tooth.

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Grüße,

Daniel A. Wöhr aus Südtexas

"To the motivated go the spoils."

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Gastropod beneath a Cordaites leaf:

post-6808-0-51604600-1384765239_thumb.jpg

Winterset Limestone, Pennsylvanian

Clay County, Missouri

Edited by Missourian

Context is critical.

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