Saturday, April 9, 2011
Atrypina disparilis Brachiopod?
On January 15, 2011, I posted some pictures of a fossil I thought was some sort of Silurian clam. The shell was asymmetric which led me to believe it was not a brachiopod. After studying more of the work of two researchers at the New York State Museum, Charles E. Beecher and John M. Clarke I now believe it could be the Atrypina disparilis brachiopod. Fossil was found in the Waldron Shale of Clark County, Indiana.
They originally called it Coelospira disparilis Hall 1852 but later used the other name.
As for the asymmetry, under Abnormalities they write, "A variation in adult shells, noticed only in rare instances, is a tendency to an asymmetrical development in the plications, as shown on plate 5, figure 18, where, by unequal growth upon the lateral portions of the shell, the median plication on the dorsal valve is deflected to one side, and the corresponding median sinus on the ventral valve displaced, the axial line of the shell being occupied by one of the strong plications bounding the sinus." Yikes, that was one long sentence!
Now after making this identification, I place a 50% certainty on it. Another explanation is this is a fragment of an Athyris reticularis brachiopod. Maybe part of one of the fossil flaked off as a thin layer which fooled me into thinking it was a smaller brachiopod.
The next image is Plate 5, figures 17-19 from the Memoirs of the New York State Museum Volume I Number 1 October 1889 entitled The Development of Some Silurian Brachiopoda by Charles E. Beecher and John M. Clarke.
See my original images and text: (Click here to see post).
Labels:
brachiopod,
indiana,
silurian,
waldron shale
Friday, April 8, 2011
Utah Dinosaur Bone
Unidentified dinosaur bone cross section found in the Morrison Formation of Utah. The fossil appears to be from the Jurassic Period. Dimensions of specimen are 3" x 2.75" x 0.03125-0.5" with a weight of 3.8 oz. Acquired on eBay from seller pondcityrocks.
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
Dokophyllum intertrium Horn Coral
The Dokophyllum intertrium horn coral fossil found in the Waldron Shale of Clark County, Indiana. This creature existed in the Middle Silurian Period (about 425 million years ago). The Indiana State Museum has another specimen in the on-line database that can be seen here: CLICK HERE FOR WEB PAGE!
Thanks to Alan for letting me photograph his fossil.
Labels:
horn coral,
indiana,
silurian
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