Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'beekite'.
-
A nice Dictyonema flabelliforme dendroid graptolite from Oslo Fields in Norway. It's Tremadoc, Lower Ordovician in age and is thus maybe around 480 mya. Another angle :
- 723 replies
-
- 2
-
- amplexopora
- amplexopora septosa
-
(and 75 more)
Tagged with:
- amplexopora
- amplexopora septosa
- ampyx
- ampyx priscus
- anti atlas
- anti-atlas
- arenig
- arnheim formation
- asaphid
- asaphus
- asaphus expansus
- asaphus fallax
- asaphus latus
- asaphus lepidurus
- ascocystites
- ashgill
- ashgill shales
- athyrid
- athyridida
- australia
- baota formation
- batostoma
- beekite
- bendigo
- bendigonian
- beroun
- bou nemrou
- bryozoa
- bryozoan
- bullengarook
- bumastoides
- calymene
- calymenid
- calymenina
- campylorthis
- campylorthis deflecta
- canada
- caradoc
- caradocian
- castlemainian
- china
- cincinnati group
- cincinnatian
- colphocoryphe grandis
- colpocoryphe
- colpocoryphe aragoi
- colpocoryphe lennieri
- colpocoryphe rouaulti
- colpocoryphe thorali
- coniston
- constellaria
- constellaria antheloidea
- constellaria florida
- cornulites
- cross fell
- cumbria
- cummingsville formation
- cyathophylloides
- cyathophylloides stellata
- czech republic
- czechia
- czechoslovakia
- dalmanella
- dalmanella testudinaria
- dalmantina
- dalmantina socialis
- decorah
- decorah formation
- decorah shale
- ded
- ded hill
- dendroid
- diacalymene
- dictyonema
- dictyonema flabelliforme
- didymograptus
- didymograptu
-
Found at work among crinoid, brachiopods, silicified corals as well as a possible cephalopod and some silicified stromatoporoids. Silurian SW Wisconsin. Looks kind of like a cartoon bone in shape
- 6 replies
-
- beekite
- beekite rings
- (and 10 more)
-
Looks like it’s been turned to beekite. Found in Paleozoic gravel alongside numerous gastropods on a rail road.
-
Over a year ago when I was just starting to hunt and collect fossils I came across this the ravine slope of a creek that cuts through the Winterset limestone at my old house. It could be washed from another formation. It looked interesting so I kept it and have been trying since then to identify it. I’m not sure if I’ve landed on the right thing – or even if it’s a fossil but I am thinking it might be a beekite ring similar to the one here https://lakeneosho.org/Paleolist/99/index.html only more 3D. It’s also quite possible it’s just quarts and I’ve just looked at it too long! However I’m curious what y’all think? Thanks!
-
I hadn't seen an echinoid with beekite before so I had to buy it. Micraster glyphus?, Campanian, Höver, Germany.
-
I scored a First (for me) . . . an example of Beekite from the Peace River. An invertebrate ("shrimp") burrow. How common is this?
- 12 replies
-
- 3
-
Hi Everyone, I found this at a strata in Providence ,TN I'm pretty sure its Beekite. I cant figure out if it's only beekite or is it covering something?
-
I found this in Nashville, TN . I did post it on Facebook while the site was down. Some think it may be a horn coral. It looks to me that it's beekite covering something but I dont think it's a coral even though the shape and size is right. I would like hear what you guys think.