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Showing results for tags 'Ameura'.
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From the album: Pennsylvanian fossils
Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Trilobita Order: Proetida Family: Proetidae Genus: Ameura Species: Ameura missouriensis- 4 comments
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- 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 There is some restoration on the front and end tip of the genal spine were the shell had fractured when the rock was split. -
From the album: Pennsylvanian fossils
Phylum: Arthropoda Class: Trilobita Order: Proetida Family: Proetidae Genus: Ameura-
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- bond formation
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Hello, Could someone explain the specific distinctions between the Pennsylvanian-aged proetid trilobites Ameura vs. Ditomopyge vs. Paladin? They all seem quite similar-looking trilobites so I often have a hard time distinguishing them. Thankfully @piranha has already outlined Paladin vs. Ditomopyge in a PM, but I would like to know a comparison with Ameura as well. Thank you.
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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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- deer creek formation
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From the album: Missouri Trilobites
These last few months have been very generous with its fossil output so far. This specimen's head is about 7.5mm long and is what I consider to be very rare. I have only ever found 2 heads in the upper Winterset limestone. In the future, I plan to clean it up a bit, but for now, he stands with his glabella exposed.-
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- ameura missouriensis
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Good morning all! A couple successful days of collecting and to my amazement, two trilobite pygidiums!. My amateurish guess is Ameura missourensis? It was found in Kansas City in a Winterset limestone outcropping. When I looked closer, there is something I thought could be part of the cephalon or some other fossil in the second photo about 12:00? Not sure if I should pursue cleaning it (and don't know how )-thoughts appreciated! Bone
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I need help identifying these two trilobites. I am pretty confident it is either Ameura or Ditomopyge but they look so similar and I cannot tell which one it is. It was found in Overland Park Kansas Pennsylvanian Period. Also those fossils are not together if you can't tell they were separately but in the same formation.
- 3 replies
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- Ameura
- Ditomopyge
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