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Showing results for tags 'poland'.
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- 6 replies
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- cretaceous
- kraków
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Hi all, I am hoping to get some help, identifying some ammonites and a nautiloid (?) from Podleze, Poland. The locality is oxfordian and a famous place where you can find a lot of Perisphinctid ammonites. I am new to this locality and because I do not know polish language I only find a few paper on this locality, but they are only dealing with the Perisphinctes ammonites. Here is the section of the locality, the fossils are found in 2 layers of 10cm thick glauconitic marl. Here are the pieces: I will gladly send bigger or other pictures if needed, but I reached the upload limit. The bigger coin is 23mm in diameter Thank you for any help! Kind regards.
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Hi Whats is fossil it? Age: ? Location: Southern Poland Ps:This mussel on the second photo is of the same kind of rock. This may help. The rocks come from the debris brought to the Jagiellonian University in Cracow on Ruczaj.
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- 3 replies
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- fossil
- małopolska
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Hi Is this tooth shard fossil? Age:Cretaceous /Jurassic? Location: Skałki Twardowskiego ,Kraków , Southern Poland
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A closed tube-like fossil with delicate ornamentation on sides and a weird barbecue-like surface on the apex, with bryozoan epibionts. From a Polish Callovian locality rich in bivalves, brachiopods, and other fossils. Having looked from all sides, I am certain it is not a chimaera but definitely one tube-like shell, with shell continuous (where preserved) from sides to the apex, similar in shape to a belemnite phragmocone.
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From a Callovian site in southern Poland I collected a lot od thick-walled tubes. Sometimes they seem to be a part of something bigger, but I mainly search small rocks on heaps so I don't have a more complete picture of the fossil. Associated are various brachiopods, bivalves (including oysters and Ctenostreon), serpulids, ammonites, belemnites and various different fauna. I think these are clearly not belemnites. I don't think these are crinoids. I consider bivalve fragments (e.g. spines of Ctenostreon) or some huge serpulids. Any ideas? Specimen No. 1: Specimen No. 2: