Yesterday, I got to tour the Indiana University Southeast Geosciences Department. Toward the end of our tour, we went into one of the labs and one the shelf was a jar with a clear preservative. In the jar was this white crinoid which were told was found in about 400 feet of water off the coast of Florida. It was interesting to see a creature that usually is only found as fossil.
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Some of the images are not too clear since I had low lighting and was taking pictures through a jar filled with liquid.
(UPDATED: 09/12/2010)
Here are pictures of a modern day sea lily/crinoid (
Metacrinus rotundus) of the phylum Echinodermata. Pictures taken in August 2010 at the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C.
I include some pictures for Mississippian Period (Lower Carboniferous) crinoid stems from the Fort Payne Formation located at Lake Cumberland, Kentucky.
2 comments:
VERY cool.
It's interesting to see a relative of the fossils I've been collection :-) I have a small collection of crinoid fossils from Lincolnshire beaches.
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