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Show Us Your Hash Plates


Guest Smilodon

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Guest Smilodon

There were some comments about hash plates on another post so I thought, why not have a separate topic for members to showcase theirs.

Now while technically these two are just one species, I can't seem to find my best hash. :D but I'll keep looking.

Incredible Coquina rock/script stone from India.

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46 years ago (oof!), my nascent collection included two great hash plates. One was mostly Devonian spiriferid brachiopods (Mucrospirifer sp.), about 2 feet square, rust-colored, and posed in high-relief. The other (also 2' sq.) was covered in various bryozoans, silicified in black, on light grey mudstone. That one I 'prepped' under running water with a soft scrub brush, and it was mesmerizing. I really loved those fossils; sadly, they are long-lost now. Probably the reason I still love hash plates...

"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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I like hash plates and here is one of.. yes, just oysters, but I do like it. When I looked at it more

closely today, I noticed a shark tooth coming out of it. Found in Texas...

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Welcome to the forum!

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I like hash plates and here is one of.. yes, just oysters, but I do like it. When I looked at it more

closely today, I noticed a shark tooth coming out of it. Found in Texas...

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That is awesome... always fun to see cool stuff like that mixed in. Thanks for the photos.

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These are a bunch of Brachiopods, with who knows what else mixed in. I've darkened it a bit for detail, I'm planning on doing the soft-wire-brush-scrub with vinegar to bring them out better.

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I can't get enough of these plates everyone is showing....

Going to add one more of mine found a bit west in Texas..

It's a cornucopia of carboniferous critters. These snails are only

about 1/4 to 1/8 inch long.

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This second plate is from a different trip, Mingus Formation

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Welcome to the forum!

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Some Ordovician material from northern Kentucky. Kope Formation. Crinoids, bryozoans, trilobite pieces, brachiopods, etc.

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Guest Smilodon

Some Ordovician material from northern Kentucky. Kope Formation. Crinoids, bryozoans, trilobite pieces, brachiopods, etc.

I've been trying to locate my specimens of this material. It is out of this world and the guy that found the the stuff and sold it on ebay used a bronze brush so that everything looked pyritized. You can look at it for hours.

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I've been trying to locate my specimens of this material. It is out of this world and the guy that found the the stuff and sold it on ebay used a bronze brush so that everything looked pyritized. You can look at it for hours.

There is some pyritized stuff across the river (brachs) although I have not had the opportunity to collect any of it. It is on my list of place to get to eventually.

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I found some pictures, I still haven't gotten my giant plates of generic plant matter photographed but:

It is small but there are well over 50 tiny bivalves in here... this was collected outside Louisville, Kentucky.

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I got chance to snap some pictures of a few more:

Snaps of "Fossil Marble"

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And one of my generic Upper carboniferous plates:

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Not much to identify so no close ups.

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Guest Smilodon

Well, I finally remembered where I put my best hash - STOP LAUGHING!

This incredible plate is from the Cincinatti area and has been treated with a lite acid bath and a bit of bronze brushing.

It contains:

Isotelus

Flexicalymene

Cryptolithus

Mecrocrinus

Bryozoans

Brachiopods

and who knows what else

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My, that's sweet!

"Start your morning right, with a big bowl of Paleo-Oats in milk!" post-423-12528017212887.gif

"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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I love the multitude of hash plates that I have recovered from the Cincinnattian around OH, KY and IN. Here are three that sit by my computer to inspire me.

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-Dave

__________________________________________________

Geologists on the whole are inconsistent drivers. When a roadcut presents itself, they tend to lurch and weave. To them, the roadcut is a portal, a fragment of a regional story, a proscenium arch that leads their imaginations into the earth and through the surrounding terrain. - John McPhee

If I'm going to drive safely, I can't do geology. - John McPhee

Check out my Blog for more fossils I've found: http://viewsofthemahantango.blogspot.com/

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Beautiful plates, and is that last one worm tubes?

Those are bryozoa. I'll bring you a couple branches to Waco if you want.

Looks like we were all in about the same place on that Kentucky stuff.

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Early Middle Ordovician Hash, from the Kanosh Shale, Ibex area, western Utah

I have some of this also. Do you know the ID of the trilobite?

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I have some of this also. Do you know the ID of the trilobite?

Sorry grandpa, I have no idea, I cant even ID most of the cephalopods from this location:(

Kevin

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Oh man these are great I need to get some of mine out too and take pics. Tomorrow for sure.

The best days are spent collecting fossils

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  • 2 years later...

I was about to start this subject when Indy pointed out in his fantastic post that it had already been done. So here's my attempt to revive one of these old threads.

This is a slab I picked up while collecting the Ordovician aged Platteville Formation(Mifflin member) of Southwest Wisconsin. In the paper "Platteville And Decorah Trilobites From Illinois and Wisconsin"(DeMott, 1963), DeMott states that there are 20 species of trilobites represented in the Mifflin member of the Platteville Formation. While we have added to this list in the many years of collecting, I will stick with DeMott's list because it's accompanied by a nifty chart.

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Ok, back to the slab... This is a very diverse slab that includes 8 different species of Trilobites(or 40% of DeMott's list), at least 3 different types of Gastropods, and many other things including brachiopods, crinoid stems, ostracods, and a cool cephalopod with shell material preserved.

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Cluster of 4 different species of trilobites

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Cephalopod

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Edited by Caleb
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