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Showing results for tags 'hash plate'.
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Hello, I’m hoping someone will identify some of the fragments on this hash plate for me. It appears to be mostly crinoid stems? It is from my yard in middle Tennessee.
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- crinoid stems
- hash plate
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Hello, I am hoping some of the fossils on this hash plate from my yard in middle Tennessee can be identified. Could any of these be from a very small shark?
- 27 replies
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- early devonian
- hash plate
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As far as slabs are concerned, I've always had a burning question for you all: Do you prefer individuals preserved in a slab, or hash plates with many individuals of multiple organisms? I personally prefer hash plates, as it was an entire community of critters that lived together and died together. It is fascinating to think about what could have done them in at that point in time. And just for clarification to anyone who doesn't know, this is a hash plate: And this is an individual:
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- choice
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- crinoid
- hash plate
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We went hunting by a cliffside here in Manhattan, KS and picked up this chunk of Permian hash that had washed out and was partly covered in mud. The matrix looks similar to an earlier find from that location. I cleaned it up a bit, but I'm not sure what this wedge-shaped thing in the second photo is. Scale in first photo is in inches.
- 4 replies
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- flint hills
- hash plate
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Hi everyone! Well, I've "damaged" my first fossil Actually, to be honest, a student "damaged" the hash plate by removing one of the crinoid discs that was on it - I've circled the disc that was removed in the picture below: I know that it's only one of many discs on a hash plate that's full of them, but I'd like to repair it if I can. What would you recommend is the best adhesive to use to re-attach the disc that's been removed? Thanks in advance for your help! Monica
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- crinoid disc
- georgian bay formation
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From the album: Urban Fossils of Toronto (Georgian Bay Formation, Lower Member)
Zygospira erratica. These two are set on a limestone hash plate with an orthocone to the left. Both are the same species and have an obvious sulcus. Mimico creek, Toronto, late Ordovician, Georgian Bay formation. Edit: I also have found a massive slab of limestone that had a death assemblage of these brachiopods . I forgot to take photos though , and I'm not sure if the slab is still there.© (©)
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- brachiopods
- Georgian Bay formation
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