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Mystery Balls


gpblood

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Greetings to all,

I am new here, and am always in a hurry!

Thought I would jump in with a mystery though ?

I found one of these balls years ago and kept it out of curiosity?

It was in a matrix of crinoids and corals between two layers of Limestone.

Have spent much time searching but have found nothing concise.

I do have many more of them found in another place.

Could use some forwarding advice!!

Greg Blood <gpblood61@gmail.com>

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Porocystis Globularis

post-1315-1250174751_thumb.jpg

Galveston Island 32 miles long 2 miles wide 134 bars 23 liquor stores any questions?

Evolution is Chimp Change.

Life is not about waiting for the storm to pass; it's about learning to dance in the rain!

"I like to listen. I have learned a great deal from listening carefully. Most people never listen." Ernest Hemingway

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Guest Smilodon
Greetings to all,

I am new here, and am always in a hurry!

Thought I would jump in with a mystery though ?

I found one of these balls years ago and kept it out of curiosity?

It was in a matrix of crinoids and corals between two layers of Limestone.

Have spent much time searching but have found nothing concise.

I do have many more of them found in another place.

Could use some forwarding advice!!

Greg Blood <gpblood61@gmail.com>

The title of your post was rather intriguing 'cause I didn't think they would fossilize :D

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The title of your post was rather intriguing 'cause I didn't think they would fossilize :D

Wait 'til you're my age...

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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Guest Smilodon
Wait 'til you're my age...

A former boss of mine had a wife in the same business but she had waaaayyyyy more testosterone than the law allowed. We used to joke that she kept his in a jar on the nightstand and loaned them back to him once in a while.

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Much Thanks to all !%?

I haven't seen any ( porocystis globularis )

that look quite like my balls!!

All I've found have all been the same size,

within a millimeter or two.

I don't know much about these things,

but had high hopes that my balls might be valuable..

post-1632-1250194106_thumb.jpg

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Greg, you mentioned that you found them associated with crinoid fossils. Do you know what geologic formation they came from? In lieu of that, a general location might suffice.

The human mind has the ability to believe anything is true.  -  JJ

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yeah, see, i'm not falling into this particular trap. john's already sniffin' around the clue that there's maybe a couple hundred millions years of difference between those porocystis in the glen rose and these thingamaroonies. it's like watching my brother-in-law's labrador when he gets bird scent. i'm backin' off. i'll be over on another thread callin' something a bison if anybody needs me...

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Guest Smilodon
i never thought id be caught dead sayin this but.....nice balls! :blush:

I give him credit, he's got a lotta balls posting on this site JK JK JK(MOds, I'm being funny, really)

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I give him credit, he's got a lotta balls posting on this site JK JK JK(MOds, I'm being funny, really)

crickets....

:P

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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Hey--I chuckled! We have to keep our beloved Smilodon from becoming a Frownadon.

Get it? Smile---frown... oh never mind.

crickets

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Guest Smilodon
Hey--I chuckled! We have to keep our beloved Smilodon from becoming a Frownadon.

Get it? Smile---frown... oh never mind.

crickets

My job description here is to get people to not take things so seriously and lighten up. Truly. See my new tagline?

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Is it possible that your objects are crinoid floats from free-floating crinoids? Here's one that's much larger than yours, and is from an identified species:

post-42-1250276049_thumb.jpg

http://pristis.wix.com/the-demijohn-page

 

What seest thou else

In the dark backward and abysm of time?

---Shakespeare, The Tempest

 

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Is it possible that your objects are crinoid floats from free-floating crinoids? Here's one that's much larger than yours, and is from an identified species:

post-42-1250276049_thumb.jpg

Testicalus globularis?

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Greg, you mentioned that you found them associated with crinoid fossils. Do you know what geologic formation they came from? In lieu of that, a general location might suffice.

Thanks for the intrest>>! I had sent some samples to

A Professor @ UT@Martin (TN) He asked if they might be

a the lobelville member of the Brownsport Formation..!

The first " ball " I found approx. 1 mile north

of the town of lobelville, Tn.

Of what I understand this is a Silurian Formation.

Clams, crinoids, cephlapods are pretty common in the area;

post-1632-1250465500_thumb.jpg

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Thanks for the intrest>>! I had sent some samples to

A Professor @ UT@Martin (TN) He asked if they might be

a the lobelville member of the Brownsport Formation..!

The first " ball " I found approx. 1 mile north

of the town of lobelville, Tn.

Of what I understand this is a Silurian Formation.

Clams, crinoids, cephlapods are pretty common in the area;

That rules out Porocystis. Maybe someone more familiar with those formations will chime in.

The human mind has the ability to believe anything is true.  -  JJ

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Guest solius symbiosus

I went through some Sil. stuff, and I couldn't find anything. I kind of thought pisolith(big oolite), but I think that they are too large. Can you saw one in half?

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