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Showing results for tags 'Middle Devonian'.
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Middle Devonian Fossils - Swatara State Park (Pine Grove, PA)
Masonk posted a topic in Fossil Hunting Trips
Hi All, Took a trip last weekend to break rock @ Swatara State Park. Formation is Mahantango, however as I understand, the material itself is a roadcut transplant from nearby I-81. Spent about 5 hours looking and did fairly well overall. Main goal was trilobites (have yet to find any personally - goal achieved). Highlight is a possible Phyllocarid (suggested species - Echinocaris). I've attempted to ID mostly everything, however please feel free to correct me as I'm still learing. Few photos from the site: Looking down from atop the formation In situ Brachiopod - Cyrtina hamiltonensis? Brachipod?, Mucrospirifer?, Unsure of the 3rd photo. Coral and Sponge have been suggested. Possibly Receptaculites? Or maybe Bryozoan? Trilobite - Trinucleus? Trilobite - Greenops pygidum? Trilobite - Greenops pygidum? Trilobite - Greenops pygidum Crinoid stem?- 14 replies
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I'm off today not feeling well and was walking my dog. I happened to look down at the rocks in my yard and found this nice thorax and pygidium of a trilobite. I only know the rocks exposed are in the Mahantango. This is the first recognizable fossil I've found aside from small brachs.
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From the album: Fossil Collection: DC Area and Beyond
Bivalvia Deep Springs Road Quarry, NY Windom Formation Middle Devonian-
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So I know I recently posted some fossils that I couldn’t identify, but I’m sorting through my collection and I have found a lot more fossils which I can’t t identify. Could someone help me identify these clam-shaped fossils that I found in Arkona? Any help would be appreciated.
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- arkona ontario
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I found these fossils near Rock Glen Gorge in Arkona. I’m not sure what they are. Could someone help me identify their genus/species?
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Here is another specimen I collected in West Virginia at a well known collecting site. The local university paleontologist prof indicated it was an apparent echinoderm, but could not identify it- needed more researching. If any of you guys have come across an example of this and can identify it, let me know. Thank
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From the album: Fossil Collection: DC Area and Beyond
Brachiopoda Gainesboro, Virginia Mahantango Formation Middle Devonian-
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From the album: Fossil Collection: DC Area and Beyond
Eldredgeops (Phacops) rana Penn Dixie Fossil Park & Nature Preserve, NY Moscow Formation Middle Devonian-
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From the album: Fossil Collection: DC Area and Beyond
Viaphacops cristatus Franklin, WV Needmore Formation Middle Devonian-
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From the album: Nautiloid’s Trilobite Collection
Basidechenella sp. from the Middle Devonian Tully Limestone of Central NY. This is one of my favorite trilobites in my collection.- 1 comment
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Platyceras erectum Windom Shale Member, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Hawletrochus macrostomus Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Tornoceras uniangulare Windom Shale Member, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Greenops sp. Windom Shale Member, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Windom Shale Member, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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- deep springs road quarry
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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- deep springs road quarry
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Dipleura dekayi - around 1.5 cm. Crushed in half - both sides of the one trilobite showing. Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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- deep springs road quarry
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Naticonema lineata Middle Devonian Arkona Shale Arkona/Hungry Hollow, Ontario.© 2023 Tim Jones
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From the album: Wanakah Shale Ostracods
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Tentaculites from Arkona. Middle Devonian. There are also crinoid bits and ostracods mixed in.© 2023 Tim Jones
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I have no clue what this could be. Not a trilobite, not sure if it's a rugosan. Age: Late Eifelian Locality: Southern Belgium Width: 1,3 cm Length: 1,5 cm
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I have assembled quite the collection of stromatoporoid fossils in the last year and a half since I began this hobby. They are my 'main focus' for now, together with brachiopods and corals to a lesser extent (especially Gypidulid Brachiopods). I have been reading scientific papers on stromatoporoids for a few days because I hope to get a full understanding of them. The articles were mainly by Stephen Kershaw and collaborators and by the late Colin Stearn who have both produced some great stromatoporoid literature. I am currently reading https://journals.ku.edu/treatiseonline/article/view/4088/3855 (Internal morphology of the Paleozoic Stromatoporoidea by Stearn 2015) in order to identify my fossils. I have found it a good tool but I'm having a hard time distinguishing between pillars and pachysteles and between laminae and pachystromes. I understand pachysteles and pachystromes are thicker and more robust versions of their counterparts, but the problem is that the figures provided in the paper don't have a scale (only magnification is mentioned) and it subsequently becomes very hard to distinguish. I have also not found any other clear illustrations of the difference on the internet. Here's a useful table by Stearn for determining the type of stromatoporoid: cyst plates and pillars (Labechiida) laminae and pillars (Clathrodictyida, Stromatoporellida) pillars and colliculi (Actinostromatida) pachysteles and pachystromes in an amalgamate structure (Stromatoporida, Syringostromatida) My questions are: Does anyone know a useful way to determine genus/family other than what I'm doing? Is there any particular way to distinguish pachystromes and pachysteles from laminae and pillars other than looking at their robustness? If anyone has some interesting literature about this, please tell me about it. I have provided close-up pictures of an example specimen below (I have dozens more, so I'm able to provide them if necessary). Is anyone able to say if it is composed of laminae and pillars, pachystromes and pachsteles or any combination thereof (maybe also cyst plates)? Also, I assume all my specimens are the same genus because: They were all found at the same locality in the same formation (Middle to Upper Hanonet fm.) Stromatoporoid assemblages typically have low species diversity, having one genus more abundant than others ( as stated in Kerschaw 1990; Da Silva, Kershaw, Boulvain 2011) I will look at every specimen before assigning it a genus/species though, just to be sure. There's also a question I have about why there are less stromatoporoid fossils in units 1 and 2 of Hanonet fm relative to the later units (at least in my experience). They are more abundant where there are argillaceous limestones than where there are calcareous shales. I know stromatoporoids preferred to grow on carbonate substrates so it might be because there's simply more carbon in the limestones. Then there's the question of why the shales are followed by limestones, which I think is because of a transgression resulting in the deepening of the sea (as mentioned by others in research). Limestones are more characteristic of deeper areas so that's why I think that. I have read articles about this in the past but I'll have to re-read them to fully understand. Also, if there's anything I got wrong please point it out.
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This piece, (around 2.5 cm) split out from some shale. I know very little about fish at this point, but other pieces I have found Placoderm plate pieces before. This appears to be a fin. Maybe Placoderm or Onychodus ... or other? Does it look familiar to anyone?
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Beltzville State Park - Middle Devonian (Mahantango Formation)
Masonk posted a topic in Fossil Hunting Trips
Family and I took a trip to Beltzville State Park earlier this week. We stayed around the lake, looking along the shoreline and wading through water. Found some pretty cool Middle Devonian fossils. My wife lucked out with two Trilobite pieces, one of which is a really nice head imprint. I'm still working on identification, so please bare with me. Any help of course is appreciated. Coin is 22mm Shoreline Trilobite head (Phacops rana?) surrounded by Crinoid stems Trilobite (Phacops rana?) - lower abdomen Crinoid stems Crinoid stems Pleurodictyum tabulate coral (?) and brachiopod Crinoid stems Brachiopods and I'm not sure what the orange/black dotted impression is.- 15 replies
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Tentaculites bellulus - Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© 2023 Tim Jones
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