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Showing results for tags 'echinodermata'.
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So...... let's say I wanted to collect one specimen of each class of echinoderms (yes, the classes are always in flux, I know). Not a great specimen, just some ossicle or fragment easily determinable to be a member of that class for each class. It would be a fun trip around the world going to a set of localities, each of which was the easiest place in the world to find specimens of some particular echinoderm class. Some classes (crinoids, echinoids) seem almost too easy; others (blastoids, cyclocystoids, paracrinoids) are hard in some parts of the world but trivially easy here in eastern Missouri, USA. But more obscure classes of echinoderms (ctenocystoids, cinctans, solutans, stylophorans) seem to be hard to find no matter where you go; for each of these, I'm curious what formation / location would be the *least* hard. So let's start with a weird one: Where in the world is it *least difficult* to find a fossil readily determinable as belonging to an ophiocistioid?
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- asteroidea
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I’ve been told these blastoids appear to be Mississippian and I have some questions
SilurianSalamander posted a topic in Fossil ID
I’ve been told these blastoids appear to be Mississippian in age. That surprises me because the rocks in Dane county Wisconsin are late Cambrian - early Ordovician and the nearest Carboniferous rocks are a long ways away. I’ve done some research into the history of the buildings on the UW Madison campus where I find these fossils and they were supposedly quarried only a few miles from where they now lie. I was also told that blastoids didn’t appear until the Carboniferous. From a quick google search I got the impression that, while they massively diversified in the Carboniferous, they first appeared during the Ordovician. I’m just confused and curious as to how old these rocks are. They’re packed full of fossils and I often find tiny fossils that have eroded out of them and fallen to the ground to collect. attatched are the 2 or 3 blastoids and some of the other fossils I’ve found in these rocks. Any help as to what the age could be would be wonderful! also any IDs on some of the other fossils more specific than “gastropod” or “cephalopod” or “crinoid” are also appreciated. Thank you so much! Y’all are great.- 1 reply
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- blastoid
- carboniferous
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Are these both blastoids? The larger one is about 2 cm across at its widest point and the smaller is about half a cm across. Ordovician, Dane county Madison Wisconsin. Thanks!
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Brittle star from the Boulonnais, upper Jurassic (Likely kimmeridgian). Does anyone know the species/genus?
Fancysaurus posted a topic in Fossil ID
I am struggling to find proper information on how to identify different brittlestar genuses, so if anyone has a good resource for that, that would be great as well! Found at place de la Crevasse near Equihen, when splitting open a fallen block of layered, clayey shale. Scale is in cm.- 6 replies
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- boulonnais
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Help request: feedback on layout for blastoid identification guide
pefty posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hey all, I could use some specific feedback on this visual guide I'm working on for the diverse blastoid fauna of the Burlington Formation (Mississippian, Mississippi Valley / Illinois Basin). The job of these 3 pages is to show, on each page, one of the three standard views for all Burlington species. Specifically I'd like to ask whether you prefer the horizontal layouts or the vertical ones. For some reasons I prefer vertical, while for other reasons I prefer horizontal. What do you think? Please keep in mind that these are not the only pages in the complete visual guide -- most of the rest of the guide shows all views for a given species together on a single page. Yet other pages show the relative or absolute sizes of the various species. You can view all the pages of this work in progress at tinyurl.com/burlblastguide Thanks for your feedback! HORIZONTAL VERSIONS: VERTICAL VERSIONS:- 3 replies
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- blastoidea
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From the album: My collection in progress
Scyphocrinites elegans Zenker 1883 Location: Boutschrafin, Erfoud, Morocco Age: 420 Mya (Pridoli, Silurian) Measurements: 20x12 cm (plate) Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Echinodermata Subphylum: Crinozoa Class: Crinoidea Subclass: Camerata Order: Monobathrida Family: Scyphocrinitidae -
We've been finding these oddball puffy stars in the Late Ordovician (Sandbian) of eastern Missouri (Illinois Basin), in the uppermost part of the Plattin Group (a Platteville equivalent) or possibly the lowermost part of the Decorah Group (Katian). We've been finding a lot of weird fossils in that zone, including articulated cyclocystoids, but these I'm at a loss on. They seem to be calcite and preserve in the same texture and color as other echinoderm material in the same rock. They vary in convexity and in the presence of a central hump or divot, but there never seems to be a lumen that goes all the way through as far as I can tell. Some possibilities: stelleroid crinoid (but where anatomically? cystoid (but where anatomically? Up for other ideas or insights. Seen anything like this before?
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A friend uncovered this oddball today in the Late Ordovician (Sandbian) of eastern Missouri, in the uppermost part of the Plattin Group (a Platteville equivalent) or possibly the lowermost part of the Decorah Group. He's been finding a lot of weird fossils in that zone, including articulated cyclocystoids, but this one I'm at a loss on. Too wobbly for an orthoconic cephalopod, too much space between calcite elements for a crinoid column. Given the size, is machaeridian a possibility? What other ideas should we be considering?
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- annelida
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I collected this rock slab two years ago outside Napoleon, Indiana, and didn't get around to identifying the two "rings" until this week, when I asked two members of my fossil club for their help. What we have are two specimens of cyclocystoid in the same slab. Each is about 12mm in diameter. Because I collected this from spoils piles, I can't pinpoint the period, but my guess is Silurian or Ordovician. There's no evidence of the peripheral skirt, plates or radiating lines from the center. Only the cupules. I will call on another club member to see if he can do any cleaning that might reveal more of these specimens. I'd appreciate any help you can provide regarding genus and/or species.
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- cystoid
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Help request! I am putting together a tool for judging rock age based on very crude, whole-rock, hand-sample observations of fossil faunas/floras -- the types of observations a child or beginner could successfully make. I view this as a complement to the very fine, species-level identifications commonly employed as index fossils for individual stages, biozones, etc. Attached is what I've got so far, but I can clearly use help with corals, mollusks, plants, vertebrates, ichnofossils, and the post-Paleozoic In the attached file, vibrant orange indicates times in earth history to commonly observe the item of interest; paler orange indicates times in earth history to less commonly observe the item of interest. White indicates very little to no practical probability of observing the item of interest. Please keep in mind that the listed indicators are things like “conspicuous horn corals,” purposefully declining to address rare encounters with groups of low preservation potential, low recognizability, etc. Got additions/amendments, especially for the groups mentioned above? Toss them in the comments below! Thank you..... https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1tVm_u6v573V4NACrdebb_1OsBEAz60dS1m4pCTckgyA
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- algae
- ammonoidea
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Greetings, all! I am currently writing a thesis involving fossils from the Burlington Limestone near its type section along the Illinois/Iowa border. To demonstrate the diversity of the crinoidal remains from the limestone (over 400 species have been described from the Burlington alone!), I am looking for photographs of articulated crinoids. Do any of you have any that you would like to let me include in my thesis? If possible, I would like high-res images of crinoids identified to genus or species with a scale bar/ruler present in the image as well as the collection/locality info. I can't guarantee that I will use every image posted, but if I use your image, then I will acknowledge you in my acknowledgements and give you credit for the image. Thank you for your time & assistance! -Elasmohunter
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- burlington limestone
- crinoid
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Different views of a single element, 3 mm at its biggest dimension. I find a lot of echinoids as well as bourgueticrinid and starfish ossicles in the sediment. What's your opinion? Calyx fragment? Lower Campanian, marine, southern Poland.
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- cretaceous
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Silurian (?) erratic boulder from Poland. Echinoderm ossicles. Cyclocystoids or crinoids (eucalyptocrinitid crown & arms?). Please help
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Southern Poland. Found in parking lot gravel, so age unknown, although Late Jurassic or Late Cretaceous to Paleocene likely. I quess it's an isocrinid - could anything more be added to that?
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I have 3 specimens of Recent asteroids as a comparative material to my fossils. Is there a place on the internet where I could have them identified? I suspect they are oreasterids: Pentaceraster and possibly two species of Protoreaster, but I'm not sure if really and what species.
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Hello guys, can someone help determining the genus and species of this Protasteridae from Kaid Rami, please? 4,2 cm maximum diameter, part and counterpart. Thanks in advance, Miguel
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- echinodermata
- morocco
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К сожалению , я не говорю по английски, но я не плохая фотография, так что позвольте мне сказать , мои фото .. На фото полного цикла от процесса экстракции до готового образца морских лилий Neotaxocrinus. Искренне, Александр Unfortunately, I do not speak English, but I'm not a bad photograph, so let me say my photos .. On the photo of the complete cycle from the extraction process to the finished sample of Neotaxocrinus sea lilies. Sincerely, Alexander
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Hello! I'm new to the forum and fossil hunting. I've actually come to it by way of hiking. I've been hiking for years and grown curious about my finds. Most I've come across are easily identifiable, but these two have proven more challenging. A geologist friend suggested that they are a type of echinodermata. But since the first has six rays I thought it might possibly be evactinopora radiata. However, the examples of evactinopora radiata I have seen online are significantly smaller than this example. I know I should have photographed a coin or something next to them to give them scale, but I didn't do that with my early finds. The first fossil, with six rays, was about six inches across at the widest point. The second, with five rays, is about four inches across. I found them next to each other embedded in the rock north of Barcelona at the following coordinates: 42° 08'08.20" N, 2° 14'22.17" E I don't know if it is of any help, but I added the third photo as an example of other fossils I found in the area. Any help is appreciated!
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Any help what kind of this crinoid? thanks
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Hello again from Finland! I need your expertise again This big Sea star fossil was found a couple of years ago from an energy peat stock in inner Finland. It originated from a Finnish mire (drained to a peat bog). The pics are poor, but can you identify what species this is? How old can it be? Thank you very much! - Kara
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Death assemblage of rare Oligocene crinoids, Isocrinus, ---ALSO, I'm pointing at an unidentified starfish; there is also a second in the center of this image
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