Jump to content

Soon, I am headed back to Newberry, MI


dalmayshun

Recommended Posts

After a bust season in Florida for the Peace River, it has been way too high. I am excited to be planning a trip back to Newberry, Mi. Two years ago when I was there, I was able to collect at a degrading hill side east of the town. There is a quarry of Collingwood Shale south of the town, but I was fortunate to find drift cobbles, and some Collingwood Shale on a friends property. Last time I found several nice impressions of Pseudogygites , mostly just the pygidium. I also found a couple of kinds of graptolites, and brought back a 4 inch thick, 16" long slab of shale with a nice orthoceras impression on the top. As i began salivating about my new trip, I returned to the shale and decided to split it, hoping I would not break the orthoceras impression on top. Well I am glad I did. It was such an interesting afternoon. One of the splits revealed just a fine grain layer of dark mud, with nothing in it. That was the middle split. Then I split each of those halves...in the have below the clean layer, I saw lots of little white dots...ranging from 1/32 of an inch to 1/16...Turns out they are braciapods. I captured a photo of one of the largest, and in it, the hinge even shows. Amazing. On the the half lying between my orthoceras impression on top of the clean grainy mud. Excitement. And drum roll please. I popped open what appears to be a small orthoceras, but perhaps it is a conularid, can't really tell. The exciting thing for me was the preservation. It has a nice decomposition blow ring of color around it, deriving from the decomposition gasses. I learned that from studying my Conasauga trilobites. And then it has some nice detail indicating structure. I was really excited. In the photo of the two halves, one looks larger because it is closer to the camera. On the other side, the top of this piece, my orthoceras was preserved, but a little chip from the side revealed a nice graptolite. A bit more might be revealed, but my  previous experience with  graptolites. precludes that...I don't plan to touch it. I found so many of them last time,  I played around  to see if they would be cleaned up....not the ones I have, they just break apart at the slightest touch. So overall, I feel like  I am experiencing my trip once again, and I hope to be able to post new photos in June after I return. 

   First photo is the little brachiopod (unknown type). Second photo is the Collingwood shale after splitting. Third photo is the two halves in same photo. Fourth photo is half A - fifth is half B

20190329_091602-picsay.jpg

20190329_092202-picsay.jpg

20190329_092045-picsay.jpg

20190329_091828-picsay.jpg

20190329_091904-picsay.jpg

  • I found this Informative 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Very interesting finds. 

I love the tiny brachiopod. :)

Life's Good!

Tortoise Friend.

MOTM.png.61350469b02f439fd4d5d77c2c69da85.png.a47e14d65deb3f8b242019b3a81d8160-1.png.60b8b8c07f6fa194511f8b7cfb7cc190.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yep those brachs are cool and seem worthy of taking the chance for splitting glory. That is an interesting colorful little find--that banding does make me think Conularia like as well. Nice! I've never found one of those before but have seen them in collections/photos a bit...

Have a safe trip north and happy hunting!

Regards, Chris 

rods conularia.jpg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, Chris,  those faint striations you circled are what strongly suggested a conularid to me.  I am unfamiliar with hyolithids... would they occur in the time period with Collingwood shale? Maybe i'll post it under fossil and see what others suggest. Thanks.  Im so looking forward to my trip.  Think I may get to stop at paulding again  also.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...