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polishing some of my Goniatites


Manticocerasman

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I recently got a new job, and to make things even better, my job is at a company who processes and places floors and walls in stone, mostly marble.

 

This opened a few opportunities for me , having access to a huge amount of polishing and cutting tools, so this week I gave it a try:

 

I took 2 of my Goniatites that weren't of top quality, or to hard to prep. and today the helped me to cut the fossils and polish them.

 

The fossils turned out really well :)

 

here are my first 2 polished Manticoceras sp. from the Frasnian layers of Lompret in Belgium:

 

before polishing them:

IMG_20180919_081408.thumb.jpg.aedf4751024d7134e20ad9fa480a782c.jpg

 

after cutting and polishing:

top goniatite:

IMG_20180921_184556.thumb.jpg.a91aef6202939ffb59152cf7baef87a7.jpgIMG_20180921_184624.thumb.jpg.417633fd6d4d30301a04e625ce512536.jpg

 

Bottom Goniatite:

IMG_20180921_184606.thumb.jpg.3bc3e18bdea6dba2776b6e8b6ac4ba63.jpg

 

IMG_20180921_184632.thumb.jpg.ed21d238c5e9748f1229e951112c22aa.jpg

 

 

both of them:

IMG_20180921_184544.thumb.jpg.0c7c5a5a471db0331ed44709fa962c1d.jpg

 

 

And a question for the moderators: the fossils have been cut and polished today, but were found earlier this year, are they valid entries for FOTM since al the cleaning , cutting and polishing was done now? 

Thx

 

 

Kevin

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Very nice Kevin :1-SlapHands_zpsbb015b76: You did a great job! Congrats :) 

 

Many greetings from Germany ! Have a great time with many fossils :)

Regards Sebastian

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Ah, polished goniatits! Very, very lovely! You did a great job and you have opened up a new "source" of fossil specimens: The discard piles!

Franz Bernhard

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And a question for the moderators: the fossils have been cut and polished today, but were found earlier this year, are they valid entries for FOTM since al the cleaning , cutting and polishing was done now? 

Thx Kevin

 

The staff will discuss this. 

    Tim    VETERAN SHALE SPLITTER

   MOTM.png.61350469b02f439fd4d5d77c2c69da85.png      PaleoPartner.png.30c01982e09b0cc0b7d9d6a7a21f56c6.png.a600039856933851eeea617ca3f2d15f.png     Postmaster1.jpg.900efa599049929531fa81981f028e24.jpg    VFOTM.png.f1b09c78bf88298b009b0da14ef44cf0.png  VFOTM APRIL - 2015  

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"In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks."
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Wonderful that You took a couple of garden rocks and ended up with nice display pieces!:thumbsu:

Congratulations on the successful experiment!:yay-smiley-1:

Darwin said: " Man sprang from monkeys."

Will Rogers said: " Some of them didn't spring far enough."

 

My Fossil collection - My Mineral collection

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2 hours ago, belemniten said:

Very nice Kevin :1-SlapHands_zpsbb015b76: You did a great job! Congrats :) 

 

Thx Sebastian.

2 hours ago, Tidgy's Dad said:

Very pretty! 

Good work. :)

Thx T.D. :)

 

2 hours ago, FranzBernhard said:

Ah, polished goniatits! Very, very lovely! You did a great job and you have opened up a new "source" of fossil specimens: The discard piles!

Franz Bernhard

Thx. Indeed, I have a whole box of specimens that will never come out nicely with regular prepwork, I know what I will be doing with those :)

32 minutes ago, ynot said:

Wonderful that You took a couple of garden rocks and ended up with nice display pieces!:thumbsu:

Congratulations on the successful experiment!:yay-smiley-1:

Thx Tony, there will be more to come :)

23 minutes ago, Innocentx said:

Major fun times with your access to machines. Very nice!

 

Thx. I will also experiment with other kind of fossils in the future like corals

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Your goniatites look great when cut and polished that way.  They have been transformed into works of art! :wub: It's a perfect use of otherwise unpreppable discards. 

 

However, from the perspective of fossils as data for paleontology, sectioning and polishing does not add information that would enhance the scientific value of these specimens, for example by allowing them to be identified with greater certainty.  On the other hand, sectioning and polishing corals reveals details of internal structure that are generally required for a confident ID, as well as commonly enhancing the appearance of the specimen. 

 

From the perspective of the FOTM contest, prepping should enhance the scientific value of the specimen by uncovering diagnostic features and by repairing (as in gluing back together) broken pieces.  Of course a good prep job will also enhance the appearance of the specimen, and this will naturally influence how people vote for an entry.  A great prepper has both sublime technical skill and an artist's eye.  However, manipulation of a specimen in a way that improves its appearance at the expense of loss of detail or scientific value will not count as "preparation".  As an example, cutting/polishing pieces of agatized bone so they can be mounted in a pendant would not result in something that could be entered in the FOTM contest, although the result might be beautiful as jewelry.

 

Don

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@Manticocerasman Nice results! It sure can be a relevation when you start cutting and polishing what would often just be rejects when seen from the outside. I started doing this quite a few years ago on the machine I used to use to cut and polish agates after I discovered that fossils can also have interesting internal mineral replacement structures. I did it mostly for the sake of the aesthetic quality of the "slices", as I call them, but it's also instructive viewing the internal structure of not only ammonoids, but also other fossils as well. Corals and sponges, for instance, often need to be cut in order to be properly identified.          

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Greetings from the Lake of Constance. Roger

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8 hours ago, Manticocerasman said:

Indeed, I have a whole box of specimens that will never come out nicely with regular prepwork, I know what I will be doing with those

 

8 hours ago, Manticocerasman said:

I will also experiment with other kind of fossils in the future like corals

Can not wait... ;) (Some may know that I am a somewhat polished freak ;))

Franz Bernhard

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18 hours ago, FossilDAWG said:

Your goniatites look great when cut and polished that way.  They have been transformed into works of art! :wub: It's a perfect use of otherwise unpreppable discards. 

 

However, from the perspective of fossils as data for paleontology, sectioning and polishing does not add information that would enhance the scientific value of these specimens, for example by allowing them to be identified with greater certainty.  On the other hand, sectioning and polishing corals reveals details of internal structure that are generally required for a confident ID, as well as commonly enhancing the appearance of the specimen. 

 

From the perspective of the FOTM contest, prepping should enhance the scientific value of the specimen by uncovering diagnostic features and by repairing (as in gluing back together) broken pieces.  Of course a good prep job will also enhance the appearance of the specimen, and this will naturally influence how people vote for an entry.  A great prepper has both sublime technical skill and an artist's eye.  However, manipulation of a specimen in a way that improves its appearance at the expense of loss of detail or scientific value will not count as "preparation".  As an example, cutting/polishing pieces of agatized bone so they can be mounted in a pendant would not result in something that could be entered in the FOTM contest, although the result might be beautiful as jewelry.

 

Don

 

I do agree that the polished fossils should not enter the FOTM contest, but I have to disagree on the loss of sientific value on the specimens.

Especialy for paleozoic cephalopods: for the study and identification we often have to refer to destructive methods like cutting them to be able to identify the species of the fossil.

For example Orthocone fossils are cut and polished to determine the shape and position of the siphuncle to make the determinations.

This is also true for the goniatites like Manticoseras, due to the lack of ornamentation on the shells we have to cut them through the microconch and see the shape of the shell to make propper idintifications towards species :

 

mantico.thumb.PNG.d03d9d22867be1e6ca5d99d21a745c75.PNG

 

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Kevin, we are looking more for preparation that reveals the original, external morphology of a specimen (with very rare exceptions) for the Contest.

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

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  • 2 weeks later...

IMG_20180928_164711.thumb.jpg.8e5fed9abeb01d35925c09eea4cf4836.jpg

 

A new try. This time a double one.

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IMG_20180928_164657.thumb.jpg.6dcf96d05ae336bd954eb605dfff0743.jpg

 

and this one. 

he turned out very wel, I got this one right in the middle.

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  • 2 months later...

This time we used the tools on cutting and polishing a few rock containing 2 orthocones.

On one of them  got cut more or les on the syphuncle, so maybe I can get this specimen identified.

the specimen is from Lompret in Belgium ; Frasnian ( late Devonian )

 

IMG_20181220_091456.thumb.jpg.ed9e5f2c38f9bf05b5111ba1be9bf372.jpgIMG_20181220_091511.thumb.jpg.519566e07193baa3125a7d93065e453e.jpgIMG_20181220_091543.thumb.jpg.c45c556c48a0f78d6efbef5a4822a45a.jpg

 

 

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  • 4 weeks later...

A new Manticoceras sp. that I pollished yesterday.

the original piece was broken, I restored it using special epoxy to glue marble. ( you can see the black crack through the fossil )

They have a lovely colour variation in the chambers ^_^ .

 

The piece was then cut and both sides pollished.

IMG_20190116_153520.jpg.67a43e7d741b2855a02682fc50f4317a.jpgIMG_20190116_153504.thumb.jpg.52a36395695872db9ed20077156bb778.jpg

 

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  • 5 months later...

a few extra pollished critters:

IMG_5096.thumb.JPG.a9aea22fcd4aae06ceda67d75be2eac9.JPGIMG_5097.thumb.JPG.1ee0ecb8e8be18592d9807abc59ade2b.JPGIMG_5098.thumb.JPG.21d35bf0b456a50edd68af438f5922af.JPGIMG_5099.thumb.JPG.37a5f4304d5102ee8e42ad8284f7c90e.JPG

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