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Jazfossilator

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Find a lot of this mostly unidentifiable stuff at the beaches of Lake Champlain in Vermont, I know that Ordovician material is found here. I’m curious about the small circular fossils, they appear on many of the rocks around the beach, any ideas? They are tiny, about 2 or 3mm

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Or horn coral cross sections.

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"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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3 minutes ago, Auspex said:

Or horn coral cross sections.

Or both! I think I see examples of each in some of these pictures.

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...How to Philosophize with a Hammer

 

 

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Could be a mix of the two, though I see primarily crinoid bits.

Edit: Beat me to it!:)

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“...whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been and are being evolved.” ~ Charles Darwin

Happy hunting,

Mason

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Thanks guys! I’ve wondered about these little things for so long. There are thousands of them scattered across some of the bigger rocks.

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10 minutes ago, Jazfossilator said:

Thanks guys! I’ve wondered about these little things for so long. There are thousands of them scattered across some of the bigger rocks.

Must’ve been a beautiful sight, huge reefs of crinoids covering the Paleozoic ocean floor. Isle la motte is famous for its outcrop of the Chazy Reef. Your probably working with a later Ordovician formation, Geologic map says iberville formation.

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“...whilst this planet has gone cycling on according to the fixed law of gravity, from so simple a beginning endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been and are being evolved.” ~ Charles Darwin

Happy hunting,

Mason

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A few of the classic Vermont paleo publications:

 

Raymond, P.E. 1910
Trilobites of the Chazy Formation in Vermont. In: Perkins, G.H. (ed)
Report of the State Geologist on the mineral industries and geology of certain areas of Vermont, 7:213-248   LINK

 

Erwin, R.B. 1957
The Geology of the Limestone of Isle La Motte and South Hero Island, Vermont. 
Vermont Geological Survey Bulletin, 9:1-94   LINK

 

Welby, C.W. 1962
Paleontology of the Champlain Basin in Vermont.

Vermont Geologic Survey, Special Publication, 1:1-87   LINK

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looks like crinoid and tips of horn corals to me

"Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence"_ Carl Sagen

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8 minutes ago, WhodamanHD said:

Must’ve been a beautiful sight, huge reefs of crinoids covering the Paleozoic ocean floor. Isle la motte is famous for its outcrop of the Chazy Reef. Your probably working with a later Ordovician formation, Geologic map says iberville formation.

Must have been Truly beautiful! I’ve been to Isle La Motte many times it’s still a nice spot. I was looking for this info earlier, thank you!:)

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10 minutes ago, piranha said:

A few of the classic Vermont paleo publications:

 

Raymond, P.E. 1910
Trilobites of the Chazy Formation in Vermont. In: Perkins, G.H. (ed)
Report of the State Geologist on the mineral industries and geology of certain areas of Vermont, 7:213-248   LINK

 

Erwin, R.B. 1957
The Geology of the Limestone of Isle La Motte and South Hero Island, Vermont. 
Vermont Geological Survey Bulletin, 9:1-94   LINK

 

Welby, C.W. 1962
Paleontology of the Champlain Basin in Vermont.

Vermont Geologic Survey, Special Publication, 1:1-87   LINK

Thank you very much, these will come in handy to me

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