View Full Version : Ordovician Coiled Nautiloid


Architeuthoceras
Nov 21st, 2004, 11:06pm
Found this the other day. Quite remarkable preservation for something almost 500my old. All the shell is missing, an external mold on the left shows how the shell had small ribs or undulations, and the growth lines are visible. The siphuncle, or at least an internal mold of the siphuncle is seen near the top of the photo. Some of the internal molds of the chambers have been silicified and show how closely spaced the septa were. There is also a gastropod internal and external mold just above the nautiloid.

cthulhu77
Nov 22nd, 2004, 04:28am
Awe inspiring...simply beautiful. :notworth:

Phil
Nov 22nd, 2004, 08:46am
That's fantastic Kevin.

Any idea what sort of nautiloid it is?

Architeuthoceras
Nov 22nd, 2004, 01:15pm
Not near as nice as a chunnel nautiloid is it :( Probably Aphetoceras like the other one, but it may be just a partially coiled form, too bad it isnt all there.

Phil
Nov 22nd, 2004, 09:04pm
Maybe not as nice, maybe, but it is five times older....

If anyone is wondering what Aphetoceras looked like, here's a little image. I believe that this type of shell is known as a gyrocone (?).

Jean
Nov 22nd, 2004, 09:27pm
looks a bit like Spirula


J

spartacus
Dec 13th, 2004, 12:46pm
sorry I'm late big Kev, was unavailable at the time of posting & still catching up.
that's pretty special considering what the remains could have gone through after 500my wow :shock:

not quite so impressive but similar was a pair of [/i]Cardioceras chalcedonicumsssss (possibly) I found in a nodule in the UK. A bit fragged, but like Steve Austin, I will rebuild them (on a tighter budget)
when i started getting all the bits together it was amazing what I found I had considering it was up to 160myo. having read up & been educated by you guys on what's what it was pukkal to see how our curly friends were really put together other than by a diagram

hats off :notworth:
I will post as soon as I find their box, now where'd I put 'em ?

Keef

Architeuthoceras
Jan 24th, 2005, 03:12pm
I just attached a larger photo for a little more detail on the first post. And added this photo from another thread.
http://www.tonmo.com/files/a-c/Aphet2.jpg

With the whorl and spiral expansion rates on this I am quite sure it is an Aphetoceras sp. This means it was the first nautiloid that coiled more than 1.25 whorls, and makes it the first member of the Order Tarphyceratida, the ancestral order of all coiled nautiloids*. Those that didnt coil more than 1.25 whorls, and have the large, ventral siphuncle, and close spaced septa, are left in the order Ellesmeroceratida, the order all the other forms of cephalopoda sprang from.
It is amazing what you can learn when you go to the library instead of the desert. 8-)

* this depends on who's classification you are reading.

Phil
Jan 25th, 2005, 06:02pm
Thanks Kevin, a lovely and interesting find. Is this a rare specimen, the first such you have found?

(By the way, I've restored the line drawing above for everyone to see a reconstruction of the shell form)

Architeuthoceras
Jan 25th, 2005, 11:12pm
These two are the only ones I would confidently refer to Aphetoceras. there are a few external molds in the same horizon that have the same ornamentation, but I cant be sure they are the same genus.

This small impression maybe an external mold?? compare it with the external mold (lower left) on the first attachment.

Architeuthoceras
Nov 25th, 2005, 11:36pm
I dont know what to think about this fossil :hmm: With no septa or siphuncle showing it may not even be a cephalopod, but it has the same shape as the Aphetoceras found in the same beds. About the best I found today anyway.

:earlynaut

Phil
Nov 28th, 2005, 02:27pm
Very nice find indeed Kevin.

If it is not a ceph, and surely with that shape it must be, what else could it just possibly be do you think?

I wish I could find cephs that old. Mine are just playful young pups in comparison.

Architeuthoceras
Nov 28th, 2005, 03:04pm
It is probably an internal mold (or a fossil of an internal mold) of the gastropod Maclurites (http://faculty.plattsburgh.edu/david.franzi/ONSCV/ONSCVmaclurites.htm).
I didnt think gastropods had loose coils, but it may just be that the part exposed makes it look loose coiled.

I wonder why it's pink?

Thanks for another wave to surf Phil 8-)

spartacus
Nov 30th, 2005, 08:21am
I wonder why it's pink?

In these modern times pink tends to be associated with gayness :grin: but a lot of time has passed since your gastropod was in its' prime & fashions change !

Keef

Architeuthoceras
Nov 30th, 2005, 04:44pm
In these modern times pink tends to be associated with gayness :grin: but a lot of time has passed since your gastropod was in its' prime & fashions change !

Ya, this thing probably goes way back when pink was associated with girls :wink:

spartacus
Dec 1st, 2005, 12:35pm
you're right, a LONG time ago, only Barbie left to carry the flag now :heart:

Keef