Saturday, April 25, 2020
Favosites niagarensis Coral Fossil
My cousin Kenny sent me some images of something he had been working on recently. He extracted a silica coral fossil from a boulder using muratic acid. What emerged was a Favosites niagarensis coral with other corals or stromatoporoids. The fossil was found the Silurian Period Louisville Limestone of Jefferson County Kentucky USA.
Labels:
coral,
Kentucky,
louisville limestone,
muratic acid,
silurian
Wednesday, April 22, 2020
Asaphus expansis Trilobite Fossil
These pictures are of pieces of the Asaphus expansis trilobite fossil. They were found in Gillberga Quarry (Hjorthamn Limestone?) on the Baltic Sea island of Ă–land, Sweden. Dr. James Conkin (1924-2017) collected them there in May 1986. The fossils date the Ordovician Period (Volkov Stage?). My cousin Kenny prepped and photographed them.
Labels:
conkin,
ordovician,
sweden,
Trilobite
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Cone-In-Cone Structures
The cone-in-cone structures form in sedimentary environment.The specimen pictured appears to be from the Coral Ridge Member of the New Providence formation of Bullitt County, Kentucky USA. It formed in the Early Mississippian Period (Osagean). Known as "beef rock" in the British Isles since it looks like a slab of roast beef.
Specimen from the estate of Dr. James Conkin (1924-2017). No label provided so identification is an educated guess. Dr. Conkin first described this structure in 1957 at the Coral Ridge site. He described it as "This double cone-in-cone occurs as two layers of inverted cone-like "golf tees" surrounding an essentially undisturbed solid central mass of impure siderite (FeCO3). These double cone-in-cones occur as elongated lenses embedded in the olive-gray, shale in the upper part of the Coral Ridge Member, approximately 20 feet of the lower New Providence Formation." This layer is associated with "marcasitized megafossil fauna (with goniatite cephalopods, blastoids, "pleurotomarid type" Bembexia ellanae snails, clams, trilobite Philibole conkini ... and the worm burrow Scalarituba missouriensis".
Learn more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cone-in-cone_structures
Labels:
cone-in-cone,
conkin,
coral ridge member,
Kentucky,
mississippian
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)