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Strophomenid Brachiopod from Deep Springs Road Quarry
Jeffrey P posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Middle Devonian
Mesoleptostrophia textilis Strophomenid Brachiopod Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y.-
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From the album: Middle Devonian
Pleurodictyum americanum Tabulate Coral Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y. -
From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Dipleura dekayi thorax and pygidium. Windom Shale Member of the Moscow Formation, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian (Givetian) Deep Springs Road Quarry, Lebanon, NY.© © 2022 Tim Jones
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Tiny Strophomenid Brachiopod Preserved in Pyrite from DSR
Jeffrey P posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Middle Devonian
Rhyssochonetes aurora Strophomenid Brachiopod Preserved in Pyrite (just over 1/4 inch in width) Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y.- 2 comments
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My Best Eldredgeops from July 3rd 2011 trip.
Fossildude19 posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Eldredgeops rana, Middle Devonian, Hamilton Group, Windom Shale. Smoke Creek Trilobite Bed. Blasdell, NY LINK to my Collections Entry© © 2011 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Pygidium of Greenops sp. Middle Devonian, Windom Shale Hamilton Group, Near Buffalo, NY.© ©2011 Tim Jones
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I've been working in rocks from the Middle Devonian Windom Shale of Central NY. Although I've found some different "fossils/marine invertrabrates". They are all "mud casts". These two are unknown to me. I posted some photos of my finds on another forum and someone came forward with a comment about the first of the two. It was "Guilielmites umbonatus Geinitz??" I tried looking on the internet and came up the the second photo, which looks similar to me...at the following link: Do you know similar case about pseudo fossil Guilielmites Geinitz ? (researchgate.net) But this article is from France...I can't seem to find an article from North America. Does anyone here happen to recognize them? Thanks Greg
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Hello friends! I've had some time to sort through, organize and take photos of fossils from my recent trip to DSR. I have also attempted to ID some of my finds using Lindsey's Devonian Paleontology of NY but have found doing so with the bivalves especially difficult, I'm not sure if that is up to me not having experience with then, them being generally harder to differentiate or a bit of both. Starting off with the lophophorates: 1. This brachiopod is a Chonetid, I initially just thought that it was Devonchonetes which is common at the site but looking closer it looked much more like Longispina mucronata to me, would this be accurate? 2. Next, another Strophomenid brachiopod. Protoleptostrophia perplana? 3. Finally, I believed this one was a hyolith based on the shape and size but @Fossildude19 believed this one may be a nautiloid. I'm still inclined to say hyolith but would like to hear other opinions. I forgot to include a scale here but the shell is about 2 cm long and .5 wide . Pteriomorphs: 4. .I don't have much to say about these, they range in sizes but their form looks quite similar, I am not sure if they are the same species or different. Shell 1 Shell 2 Shell 3 Shell 4 Shell 5 6. This one also looks quite similar to the last few but the shell itself seems a bit more elongated. 7. this one although just a partial was the only one of the kind I found and still pretty well preserved which made me decide to keep it, not sure about the ID though. Pseudoaviculopecten? 8. I'm throwing these in here because I also had them photographed although I don't think these are bivalves, the objects have an iridescence to them and lack any shell detail beyond the wrinkly texture you see here, might these be phyllocarids? Will add more photos soon. Any help is really appreciated, Thank you.
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Turrilepas nitidulus - Machaeridian/armored worm plate. Western NY. Middle Devonian, Hamilton Group Windom Shale, Smoke Creek West Seneca, NY. Thank you to @piranha for the ID on this specimen.© 2020 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Platyceras sp. Middle Devonian Hamilton Group, Windom Shale, Hamburg, NY.© © Tim Jones 2010
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Partial Disarticulated Dipleura from Deep Springs Road Quarry
Jeffrey P posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Middle Devonian
Dipleura dekayi Disarticulated Homalontid Trilobite (Cephalon, pygidium, and partial thorax) Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y.-
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From the album: Middle Devonian
Pseudoaviculopecten princeps Pteriomorph Bivalve (1 inch across) Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y.- 2 comments
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From the album: Middle Devonian
Ptomatis patulus Bellerophontoid Gastropod (1 and 3/4 inches across) Middle Devonian Moscow Formation Windom Shale Hamilton Group Deep Springs Road Quarry Earlville, N.Y. A generous gift from Al Tahan. Thanks again Al.-
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Eldredgeops rana molt. Middle Devonian Windom Shale. Orchard Park, NY.© © 2013 Tim Jones
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From the album: Fossildude's Middle Devonian Fossils
Enrolled Eldredgeops rana from the Hamilton Group. Windom Shale, Moscow formation, Orchard Park, NY. Found on 7/3/2020© © 2020 Tim Jones
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Both carapace valves as well as the almost complete telson are present. The telson is wrapped underneath the carapace and one valve is underneath the other.
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Bryozoan encrusted gastropods from Brookfield, NY
Nautiloid posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Middle Devonian in Central New York
Gastropod: Paleozygopleura hamiltoniae Bryozoan: Leptotrypella amplectens? Middle Devonian Hamilton Group Upper Ludlowville Formation Brookfield, New York Collected 7/18/20- 2 comments
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From the album: Middle Devonian in Central New York
Retispira leda Middle Devonian Hamilton Group Moscow Formation Windom Shale Deep Springs Road Lebanon, New York Collected 7/18/20-
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From the album: Middle Devonian in Central New York
Athyris spiriferoides Middle Devonian Hamilton Group Moscow Formation Windom Shale Deep Springs Road Lebanon, NY Collected 7/18/20-
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From the album: Middle Devonian in Central New York
Tornoceras uniangulare Middle Devonian Hamilton Group Moscow Formation Windom Shale Deep Springs Road Lebanon, New York Collected 7/18/20-
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I found this a few weeks ago at DSR on the NYPS trip to madison county. Im having some trouble ID’ing it. Doesn't seem to be anything like it in Karl A. Wilson’s Field Guide to the Devonian Fossils of New York
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From the album: Middle Devonian in Central New York
Eldredgeops rana Windom Shale Moscow Formation Hamilton Group Middle Devonian Deep Springs Road Lebanon, New York Collected 7/18/20-
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Hello all. Found this oddity in a small piece of shale, adjacent to the northern branch of Smoke Creek. I believe this is Windom Shale, Hamilton Group, Middle Devonian. It reminds me of something, but I can't place it. Any ideas are welcome. Pelecypod was my first impression, but ... ? EDIT: to add size. 6 mm in length.
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I'm thinking this might be a shard of bivalve shell, but I'm having a hard time placing it in the context of the possible taxa. Just wanted to post for ideas before I toss it in case it's something more notable. DSR, Windom Shale, Moscow Fm., Middle Devonian. Scale in mm.
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This one has me stumped. I think it is the body whorl of a gastropod (DSR, Middle Devonian, Hamilton Group, Moscow Fm., Windom Shale). It is smashed, but the full circumference of the whorl is present, which means the aperture has to be on the left (which is consistent with the direction of the growth lines) (see arrow). If that is the case, there should be a shallow furrow or ridge in the center of the whorl running parallel with the cords and perpendicular to the growth lines if it were something like Mourlonia or even a Bellarophontacea. I see no evidence of such, not even on the crimped / folded / smashed edges above and below. One would think that with such distinct surface detail that this one would be easy... Any thoughts? The fossil is about 46 mm in length. Scale in mm. @Jeffrey P, @Fossildude19, @Darktooth, @Kane Here is outer side of the shell. Here is the shell flipped over to show the other side of the whorl. I think the broken area on the right is where the body whorl continued to the second whorl (which is missing). Here is both views side by side: Here is where I believe the aperture is located (I have prepped to the edge of the shell, and the shell ends there).
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