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June 2013 Finds Of The Month


Cris

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Hi,

this is my contribution to the Vertebrate contest.

It is 7 cm (2.8 inch) long juvenile individual of a Discosauriscus sp. (Amphibian)

Date of the discovery and preparation: June 22th 2013

Locality: Boskovice, Czech Republic (Europe)

Geologic Age: Letovice formation (Paleozoic, Permian, 299 Ma)

Fossil after preparation

Field where it was found:

Situation at finding and before preparation:

Nice!

I'd be happy to find a beat up hash plate in a field like that. :)

Context is critical.

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JIm, your find was not in "Fiddlers Green" formation it was the "Williamsville A" never the less a very nice find and worth the hard days work you put in.

Edited by Malcolmt
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JIm, your find was not in "Fiddlers Green" formation it was the "Williamsville A" never the less a very nice find and worth the hard days work you put in.

And more than likely Eurypterus lacustris rather than E. remipes.

Tom

AVOCATIONAL PALEONTOLOGIST

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"THERE IS A VERY FINE LINE BETWEEN AVOCATIONAL PALEONTOLOGY AND MENTAL ILLNESS"

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Jim's find might actually be a remipes , it is not quite typically of the body ratios of a lacustris, remipes is also found at this location but not anywhere near as common the lacustris. Some believe these are actually the same species , I have not really come to an opinion on this

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thanks Malcolm I was misinformed as to the formation and I identified it as a remipes from Sam's website.

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Hi,

this is my contribution to the Vertebrate contest.

It is 7 cm (2.8 inch) long juvenile individual of a Discosauriscus sp. (Amphibian)

Date of the discovery and preparation: June 22th 2013

Locality: Boskovice, Czech Republic (Europe)

Geologic Age: Letovice formation (Paleozoic, Permian, 299 Ma)

Fossil after preparation

Field where it was found:

Situation at finding and before preparation:

Is this site known for such fossils? Because I have to say that is not a site that would make me say "Whoa, I've got to check this out" if I were driving by. Excellent fossil, I'd love to find something like that.

Don

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Hi.

There is very famous outcrop with permian flora and fauna nearby. It is famous namely for its insects (https://is.muni.cz/publication/842837/cs?lang=en). The site (field) was discovered by students of geology during the excursion at 2006. The layers are tilted and they found the place where it goes up on the field. I know the locality from my friend. He was there and says that the field was plowed up and the amphibians were creeping all around :)

I am visiting the site from time to time. It was first time I found entire specimen :).

Is this site known for such fossils? Because I have to say that is not a site that would make me say "Whoa, I've got to check this out" if I were driving by. Excellent fossil, I'd love to find something like that.

Don

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post-5177-0-76527300-1372186051_thumb.jpgpost-5177-0-01108300-1372186066_thumb.jpgHello! I would like to post my 1st fossil of the month entry find which is the very rare trilobite Dolichoharpes aff. D. reticulata

Age: Middle Ordovician

Formation: Verulem

Location: Gamebridge ON Quarry

Collected: June 16th.

Prepared by Malcolmt

Edited by Quarryman Dave

Quarrycomber

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Hi Dave,

Dolichoharpes dentoni is sunk as a species because the type material was lost. The correct ID on this trilobite should be Dolichoharpes aff. D. reticulata. The closing discussion in the posted PDF gives a detailed explanation of these points.

Congrats again on a spectacular-super-rare trilobite! :fistbump:

  • I found this Informative 3

image.png.a84de26dad44fb03836a743755df237c.png

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post-11638-0-31417000-1372194812_thumb.jpgpost-11638-0-37630700-1372194840_thumb.jpgpost-11638-0-19254400-1372194865_thumb.jpgpost-11638-0-44727600-1372194787_thumb.jpg

Sciurus (squirrel)

Mandible w/ Incisor & Molar

Hawthorn Group, Hardee

Pleistocene 6/15/13

I'm including some reference material as this has been a tricky ID for me. Rodent was the only thing I was sure of.

Fossil Vertebrates of Florida

R Hulbert

pp230 Fig 12.6 Protosciurus

uwsp.edu/biology

Sciurus Carolinensis

Fossil data

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Invertebrate

post-11220-0-43545000-1372206720_thumb.jpg

Placenticeras Pseudoplacenta

Late Cretaceous (Turonian) Carlile Shale

Discovered: June 22nd, 2013

New Mexico, USA

"I am glad I shall never be young without wild country to be young in. Of what avail are forty freedoms without a blank spot on the map?"  ~Aldo Leopold (1887-1948) 

 

New Mexico Museum of Natural History Bulletins    

 

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Wow, you guys are gonna make it hard this month to choose!

In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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Another display of beautiful fossils. Wheww, will be a tough vote.

Process of identification "mistakes create wisdom".

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