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Showing results for tags 'pelycopod'.
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From the album: Miocene of Maryland
Chesapecten Calvert Cliffs, Maryland -
Hi guys! Haven't made any posts in a while but as I was going through some finds from Penn Dixie recently I have come across a few more fossils I would like to ID. The first few are what I believe to be Pelycopods but I have no further info on them. 1. Part and Counterpart 2. Part and Counterpart, found in the same piece of shale very close to number 1 3. Smaller one among some horn corals 4. A larger one, this one is thicker than the rest and is very different in texture. I have a few more pictures but I don't have space so I will include them below, Thank you guys for any help, Misha.
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- brachiopod
- coral
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From the album: Vaches Noires spring 2018 and a bit of 2016
Lima (Plagiostoma) sp : an oxfordian bivalve from "les Vaches Noires" Cliffs - collected during winter 2017 -
From the album: Urban Fossils of Toronto (Georgian Bay Formation, Lower Member)
Caritodens demissa, a late Ordovician bivalve from Mimico Creek, Toronto, Ontario and belongs to the Georgian Bay Formation. A dolostone specimen.© (©)
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- bivalve
- Georgian Bay formation
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Pholadomorpha pholadiformis (synonym: Whiteavesia pholadiformis)
JUAN EMMANUEL posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Urban Fossils of Toronto (Georgian Bay Formation, Lower Member)
Pholadomorpha pholadiformis (Hall, 1851). Clam found this December 2014, at Mimico creek, Toronto, Canada. Georgian Bay formation, late Ordovician. Was originally in a nodule that was smashed by the erosion.© (©)
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From the album: Urban Fossils of Toronto (Georgian Bay Formation, Lower Member)
A second and more detailed photo of the modiolopsis slab. This one shows a little bit more detail, hopefully. Also, it appears that this thing is not full of modiolopsis as I first concluded, but rather it is full of Whiteavesia pholadiformis. There is also a Cymatonota lenoir, and it appears to me that there is only one specimen of modiolopsis, which would be M. concentrica. Dime shown for scale, and Georgian Bay formation, Mimico creek.© (©)
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