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Showing results for tags 'enrolled'.
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From the album: Pennsylvanian fossils
Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Trilobita Order: Proetida Family: Proetidae Genus: Ameura Species: Ameura missouriensis-
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- ameura
- deer creek formation
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From the album: Pennsylvanian fossils
Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Trilobita Order: Proetida Family: Proetidae Genus: Ameura Species: Ameura missouriensis- 1 comment
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- 9
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- ameura
- deer creek formation
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Enrolled specimen of Eldredgeops rana. Found July 16, 2018. Middle Devonian, Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group. Deep Springs Road, Lebanon, NY.© 2018 T.Jones
- 8 comments
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- deep springs road
- eldredgeops rana
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We found this near Eureka Kansas in association with Americus Limestone. It is my first time finding more than a fragment. We were wondering if a genus could be narrowed down. I don't have any items for scale yet to put in the picture but it is approx 3/8" across. At its widest.
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From the album: Trilobite Sketches and Drawings
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- enrolled
- illustration
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Back at the end of June at our spot in the Thedford area a small group of us were busy making benches and unlocking slabs from the Widder Formation. Once we got to splitting, one lucky split resulted in finding three Greenops widderensis on a single plate. With flying genal spines and lappets on an already delicate and thin-skinned species, it was nothing short of miraculous that I was able to get it to the car with no damage. Right away I applied cyanoacrylate, and then it started to rain. This is how it looked in the field:
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I try to find my own rather than buy fossils but I had to have this one..... An enrolled Flexicalymene from a local quarry in Ontario that was too nice to pass up. Roughly 0.75" across.
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So I had a chore this evening. Check the wooded area behind the house for downed or dead trees to work up for the woodstove this coming winter. Well, there was this oak that had blown over in the spring. The uprooted root ball was full of shale chunks. There I was .... nothing to dig or split with so I just pulled a few chunks out of the upended roots and broke the open by hand as they were quite fragile being exposed all summer. SUPER rich in fossils throughout, especially the bryozoans ! The first pic looks almost like an enrolled specimen. I just happened to notice the other guy peeking out, like he was hiding. I'll dig him out soon as the glue dries holding him to the board. Should be a fine cephalon, species to be determined. (bet eldredgeops). The firewood will have to wait a day ...... or more
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- devonian
- eastern wv
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Curled up trilobite, midsegments are missing and the edges are somewhat damaged.
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A curled up trilobite.