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April 2012 Finds Of The Month


JohnJ

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Another amazing showing of fossils!

My entry this month is the Annularia sphenophylloides I opened on 4/17/12, originally collecting the nodule around 9/17/10. The fossil is 21mm long by 15mm at the widest point.

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Positive

post-420-0-57966700-1335239547.jpg

Negative

Edited by michigantim
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that is a nice greenops Tom

Thank you!

The Greenops thanks you also.

Tom

AVOCATIONAL PALEONTOLOGIST

STROKE SURVIVOR

CANCER SURVIVOR

CURMUDGEON

"THERE IS A VERY FINE LINE BETWEEN AVOCATIONAL PALEONTOLOGY AND MENTAL ILLNESS"

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Another amazing showing of fossils!

My entry this month is the Annularia sphenophylloides I opened on 4/17/12, originally collecting the nodule around 9/17/10.

Mazon 2012 Sphenophyllum Positive.JPG

Positive

Mazon 2012 Sphenophyllum Negative.JPG

Negative

Very Nice Tim!

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This trilobite belongs to a "clade" that has been put into 5 different genera. This species is not described and for now it's referred to as Calymene? sp. It's from the Silurian of Missouri. Collected 4/2/12 and finished prepping 4/24/12 from a block of limestone.

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Looks like a Calymene celebra to me :) The large axial gap below the posterior borders and the occipital lobe is seen in other examples of Calymene celebra from the Silurian of Missouri, including the lumpy glabellar lobes... unless Scott (piranha) or any other trilobitologist can prove me wrong? :o

Henry,

You could be correct but this is not a simple proposition. Additionally, the wide axial gap you mention is a result of the cephalon tipped forward relative to the prone position of the trilobite and not actually a useful diagnostic feature. Follow this LINK to an excellent paper on morphometric and phylogenetic analysis of the Calymenidae. Ironically this paper addresses these issues specifically in an attempt to clarify the dubious status of C. celebra in the past 100+ years. And last but not least, Gerry is certainly one of the top trilobite specialists here at TFF; if he says the bug is undescribed you can bank on it. ;)

image.png.a84de26dad44fb03836a743755df237c.png

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Great find Gerry! I agree with this statement "Gerry is certainly one of the top trilobite specialists here at TFF; if he says the bug is undescribed you can bank on it."

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Vertebrate Entry:

April 22, 2012

Placoderm Armor, possible tenative id = Protitanichthys

Hungry Hollow Formation

Mid Devonian

Hamilton Group

Only a small section was accidentally exposed... the rest is buried in the rock matrix

Here is the exposed section approx 1" section

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post-420-0-58640000-1335450517_thumb.jpg

post-420-0-40776800-1335450502_thumb.jpg

post-420-0-90172600-1335450491_thumb.jpg

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Henry,

You could be correct but this is not a simple proposition. Additionally, the wide axial gap you mention is a result of the cephalon tipped forward relative to the prone position of the trilobite and not actually a useful diagnostic feature. Follow this LINK to an excellent paper on morphometric and phylogenetic analysis of the Calymenidae. Ironically this paper addresses these issues specifically in an attempt to clarify the dubious status of C. celebra in the past 100+ years. And last but not least, Gerry is certainly one of the top trilobite specialists here at TFF; if he says the bug is undescribed you can bank on it. ;)

:blink: :blink: :blink:

My bad, I was just expressing my view but apparently I never thought GerryK was a trilobitologist! :o I seriously thought it was a Calymene celebra but if it isn't then it proves me wrong :)

Great find Gerry! I like the preservation of the lovely Calymene :)

Edited by Sinopaleus
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Henry,

You could be correct but this is not a simple proposition. Additionally, the wide axial gap you mention is a result of the cephalon tipped forward relative to the prone position of the trilobite and not actually a useful diagnostic feature. Follow this LINK to an excellent paper on morphometric and phylogenetic analysis of the Calymenidae. Ironically this paper addresses these issues specifically in an attempt to clarify the dubious status of C. celebra in the past 100+ years. And last but not least, Gerry is certainly one of the top trilobite specialists here at TFF; if he says the bug is undescribed you can bank on it. ;)

This trilobite is not a "celebra" but is in the same "clade" of "celebra." I'll be using this trilobite in an up and coming discussion in Missouri Trilobites in how they are different but related.

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Looks like the month of the trilos! A lot of great stuff.

And here's another trilobite to add to the party, a rare, new species of Altiocculius (Alokistocare) I found in Utah's Drum Mountains. ^_^

Altiocculus n. sp, Middle-Cambrian, Antelope Springs, Drum Mountains, UT, USA

Link to hunting trip: http://www.thefossil...rd-county-utah/

Trilobite is 1" in length.

Found on February 12, Prep finished on April 24

Before Prep

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After Prep

post-4996-0-56008200-1335493356_thumb.jpg

Edited by Sinopaleus
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Went diving today and found some decent megs and mako, but my favorite was this little Great White. Measures about 1 1/4" and has nice color and serrations.

Carcharodon carcharias

1 1/4", Miocene

Charleston, SC

04/28/12

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Okay, I'm going to enter my partial fossil fish from Red Hill that I found a couple of weeks ago. This is my first Vert entry into the FOTM and is up against some good competition:

Limnomis delaneyi

Found April 14th

Red Hill, Hyner, PA

Catskill Formation

Upper Devonian

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Edited by Shamalama

-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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Great entries for the month of April! Best wishes to all who have entered.

This is my first entry for FOTM so I'm really nervous and excited :o:P I can't wait to see what happens next! Great finds everyone ;):)

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Did you hear that???? No, it's not continental drift, the changing of the seasons, or a shift in geologic eras. It's just the clock ticking away the minutes until the beginning of the April FOTM contests.....and the time for me to hand the reins of the FOTM contests over to someone else on our staff. :)

We all know that different priorities can shuffle how much time we devote to the things we do; and the gradual shuffling in my life results in this change. I've really enjoyed the opportunity to help with a little fun and learning the last few years. Cris will organize the April contests and I'll continue to assist behind the scenes. Best of luck to all this month!

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

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Did you hear that???? No, it's not continental drift, the changing of the seasons, or a shift in geologic eras. It's just the clock ticking away the minutes until the beginning of the April FOTM contests.....and the time for me to hand the reins of the FOTM contests over to someone else on our staff. :)

We all know that different priorities can shuffle how much time we devote to the things we do; and the gradual shuffling in my life results in this change. I've really enjoyed the opportunity to help with a little fun and learning the last few years. Cris will organize the April contests and I'll continue to assist behind the scenes. Best of luck to all this month!

Thanks for all the hard work John! ;)

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Did you hear that???? No, it's not continental drift, the changing of the seasons, or a shift in geologic eras. It's just the clock ticking away the minutes until the beginning of the April FOTM contests.....and the time for me to hand the reins of the FOTM contests over to someone else on our staff. :)

We all know that different priorities can shuffle how much time we devote to the things we do; and the gradual shuffling in my life results in this change. I've really enjoyed the opportunity to help with a little fun and learning the last few years. Cris will organize the April contests and I'll continue to assist behind the scenes. Best of luck to all this month!

Thanks John for working on the FOM thread and the work you do for the entire forum!

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