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Show Us Your Coral


Frank Menser

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Ok... Not something I have really gotten into, except maybe these;

post-1313-12553727394272_thumb.jpg Coral Cobra :P

...but getting back to it...in South Florida it makes up the Lion's share of fossils.

Still I think there have got to be some really cool examples out there so let's see em!

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This beauty is from Tampa Bay and is over a foot across.

Be true to the reality you create.

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Ok... Not something I have really gotten into, except maybe these;

post-1313-12553727394272_thumb.jpg Coral Cobra :P

...but getting back to it...in South Florida it makes up the Lion's share of fossils.

Still I think there have got to be some really cool examples out there so let's see em!

post-1313-12553726983566_thumb.jpg

This beauty is from Tampa Bay and is over a foot across.

Hi Frank. Nice snake. Here are some coral fossils most are from honeymoon island clearwater Fl.

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Hi Frank. Nice snake. Here are some coral fossils most are from honeymoon island clearwater Fl.

Heres a few more. Paul

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Nice Corals.

I particulary like the second one and the last... :D

Be true to the reality you create.

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Here are a few of mine. I'll get some pictures of my others later.#1 from Tampa Bay #2 from Suwannee River. B)B)B):)

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Edited by worthy 55
  • Enjoyed 1

It's my bone!!!

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Guest Smilodon

Ok, so I collect aesthetic coral too. A few of my precious agatized babies from Florida:

post-2027-12553921944642_thumb.jpg

crystalized vapor

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burnt peanuts

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tangerine dreams

Edited by Smilodon
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Some of mine..

The first is branching coral I found in the Razorback Quarry,

northern AR.

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Next is colonial coral from a quarry near Rockford, Illinois...

It is filled with quartz or possibly calcite..

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This is my oddest piece found at Whiskey Bridge, Texas.post-13-12553926618672_thumb.jpg

ID and information below, provided by Mike Murphy

It is a scleractinian coral, Endopachys maclurii (Lea, 1833)

One more, I think Syringopora Found in Texas...

post-13-12553939932238_thumb.jpg

Welcome to the forum!

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coral from west tenn pictures:

coral is a pretty common find for us, not nearly as common as petrified wood here, but we get a new piece 'bout everytime we go.

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I found this sitting on one of the shelves in the Dino room

I think it's some type of coral

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this is a pic of my dunno coral. that's some stuff that looks kinda like coral to me, so that's what I been calling it. The big piece at left looks like it could be a crinoid stem, I guess? If you know what they are, please let me know so I can either continue calling them all coral or start calling them something else. Thanks. Enjoy.

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Fantastic specimens chaps !!!.... Unfortunately... im Coral'less... :blink:

Rozzila.... the branching coral is fantastic, no wonder your well happy with that....

Harry....your fossil photography is the best Ive ever seen.... you work wonders with those images....

FrigginsDiggins...you left hand specimen looks calcified... I bet it would polish up a treat and stand out like a gem ... id leave the rock natural... ;)

Edited by Terry Dactyll

Cheers Steve... And Welcome if your a New Member... :)

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Very nice selections, guys. I think your bottom right specimen may be formanifera rather than coral, Figgins, and I agree with Terry that the one may look pretty good polished.

Tennessee has a lot of table - top hills that have reef sediment layers several feet thick at the apex. If you can get past the wood ticks there are some great specimens to be had there. We get a bunch of corals from our mid - Devonian limestone hereabouts. I'll scrounge up a pic later today.

Love that cabochon, Iskandar.

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post-62-12554458186723_thumb.jpg

Early pliocene south Spain solitary corals

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Cyclolites sp. from south-east spanish cretaceous

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a strange coral/briozoan/sponge? from the northern spanish devonian shale

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All Right! Some pretty cool stuff here. :D

Here's some from Florida...post-1313-12554615099618_thumb.jpg post-1313-12554614835231_thumb.jpg

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This one is over 14" across;

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Not a Coral but a Sponge replaced by crystaline calcite;

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Kep em coming Y'all!

This is an unusual Coral from Gainesville, Fla;

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Edited by Frank Menser

Be true to the reality you create.

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This whole thread makes me smile and shake my head....over my own foolishness for having thought of coral as "humble". Wonderful stuff folks; keep 'em coming!

"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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Fantastic specimens chaps !!!.... Unfortunately... im Coral'less... :blink:

Rozzila.... the branching coral is fantastic, no wonder your well happy with that....

Harry....your fossil photography is the best Ive ever seen.... you work wonders with those images....

FrigginsDiggins...you left hand specimen looks calcified... I bet it would polish up a treat and stand out like a gem ... id leave the rock natural... ;)

Best way to polish? Low budget.

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Very nice selections, guys. I think your bottom right specimen may be formanifera rather than coral, Figgins, and I agree with Terry that the one may look pretty good polished.

Tennessee has a lot of table - top hills that have reef sediment layers several feet thick at the apex. If you can get past the wood ticks there are some great specimens to be had there. We get a bunch of corals from our mid - Devonian limestone hereabouts. I'll scrounge up a pic later today.

Love that cabochon, Iskandar.

Thanks for the great info, Bear. Here's a little better picture of that bottom right specimen. I googled formanifera this evening. Interesting creatures.

post-2272-12554925703646_thumb.jpg

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Here is what I have so far.

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In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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Wow. Pretty stuff. I know all the different designs and patterns had a purpose other than creating an attractive appearance, but they all feel really nice to my eyes. Were they a kind of filter?

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