View Full Version : This weeks find
neuropteris Oct 26th, 2005, 01:41pm Hello all
Spent a pleasant Sunday pottering about on the beaches of Robin Hoods Bay (Yorkshire coast again) on Sunday and had quite a good haul - the stormy weather is back and stirring things up. Attached is the first to come out of the preparation laboratory (aka the cellar but laboratory sounds better!). Its an Androgynoceras sp(maculatum?) and proved to be quite easy to do - certainly the best I've found from 3 visits. Currently working on the other main find of the day - a big Amaltheus but will have to attach that one when finished. Find of the day goes to my mate John though - a near complete Jurassic Brittlestar!:shock:
All the best
Andy
bobwonderbuns Oct 26th, 2005, 06:07pm Wow!! Those are some remarkable specimens!!
Phil Oct 26th, 2005, 06:38pm Stunning Andy. I've got to come up to your area one of these days. Are those ammonites treated in some way, or is that the natural colour?
erich orser Oct 26th, 2005, 07:12pm What Phil asked...
Smashing "serpent stones"!
Incidentally, isn't that the part of the Yorkshire coast where one of the towns boasts a veritable warren of secret smugglers' tunnels?
Architeuthoceras Oct 26th, 2005, 09:03pm Nice find Andy! And many nice previous finds too.
Nice to have soft(?) rock and a sympathetic interface between fossil and rock :wink:
neuropteris Oct 27th, 2005, 04:20am Unfortunatley I can't claim credit for some of the ones in the background - the only tool used in the finding and prepping of those was the credit card.
Robin Hoods Bay was indeed a smugglers paradise and featured in the recent BBC series 'Coast'. The area must have been very different 100 -300 years ago what with the smuggling and large scale alum and jet mining. Not nearly as desolate as it is today. RHB town is a great little place - a real warren of higgledy piggledy houses and lanes perched on a steep hillside.
The colour is just about natural Phil - I usually give the ones I do a thin coat of matt varnish (diluted in white spirit) or just warm them in the oven and brush on a little bees wax. It gives them a slight brown/yellow tinge but its hardly noticeably and helps to hide any dings or scratches which seem to stand out a mile otherwise.
Andy
spartacus Oct 27th, 2005, 12:38pm curlycephtastic Andy, I regularly kick myself (hard) that I never made the trip north having been besotted by Monmouth Beach that I may never seen again sniff, though have discovered Longeville-sur-mer here which appears to have good potential
Keef
AndyS Oct 30th, 2005, 12:33pm Good stuff there Andy, nice Androgynoceras maculatum.
Where's that good Oxynoticeras to the right of the Androg from ?
AndyS
neuropteris Oct 31st, 2005, 06:01pm Hi Andy
Its from Mike at Yorkshire Coast Fossils - way too good to be the product of my airpen. Originally found in RHB though the label said.
Andy
neuropteris Nov 1st, 2005, 01:34pm Here's the partially prepped Amaltheus found on the same day as the Androg. Still needs a bit of work doing on the nodule to make it presentable. Such a shame its damaged but its my first one so I'm still happy and it might be possible to do a bit of reconstruction to replace the missing bit. Will post another pic when its finished.
Andy
AndyS Nov 1st, 2005, 01:35pm Andy,
Must have been a good time to find brittlestars, here comes mine from about a week earlier, same location. It is nearly complete as well, Mike was so good to cut & stabilize it for me before transport back home.
AndyS
neuropteris Nov 1st, 2005, 02:07pm Wow what a beauty :shock: Lovely arms! Must put more effort into finding one of these.
Phil Nov 14th, 2005, 08:02am Oh crikey, I'm sorry I missed these pics. I've been very busy over the last week and am trying to catch up here.
Both are absolutely fantastic fossils; that brittlestar is absolutely stunning and I imagine must be quite a rare fossil. What date would that be exactly?
Great prep job on the Amaltheus there Andy. How long did it take?
neuropteris Nov 16th, 2005, 07:46am Hi Phil
The brittlestars and other asteroids aren't common at RHB (unless you're called AndyS :wink: ), but they do turn up. They're Pliensbachian (Middle Jurassic I think) - Andy can correct me if I'm wrong.
The Amaltheus took about 2 hours to get to that stage - the sea had already popped the middle for me and it was found lying there in all its glory. Just needs tidying up a bit so there's another 3 hours or so to go carving the nodule. Only other Ceph related acquisition recently has been a Haugia phillipsi found at Ravenscar earlier in the year which I've had professionally prepped by Mike at YCF - its a rare species from there so didn't want to mess it up by doing it myself. Came out very nicely (pic to follow when I get home).
Haven't been out to the coast since as I've been spending all my time looking for that 2m long Arthropleura nodule (inspired by Walking with Monsters!) but hope to get back to the Jurassic again soon.
Andy
cthulhu77 Nov 16th, 2005, 08:47am Fantastic...simply fantastic.
neuropteris Nov 16th, 2005, 02:11pm Heres the Haugia, before when I'd started it and found it wasn't going to be as easy as I'd thought and after when someone who knew what they were doing had had a go.
Andy
Architeuthoceras Nov 16th, 2005, 05:53pm Someone is a fantastic preparator :notworth: :notworth: :notworth: :notworth: :notworth: :notworth:
dbbga Nov 17th, 2005, 07:18am :rainbow: That is really interesting
neuropteris Nov 17th, 2005, 07:00pm Yes, Mikes very good at what he does - he's prepped a couple of my finds for me know and I've been very impressed.
neuropteris Nov 17th, 2005, 07:03pm "he's prepped a couple of my finds for me know" KNOW???? That'll teach me to type after coming back from the pub! Should, of course, read "now". :oops:
neuropteris Nov 30th, 2005, 08:03am Another trip to Ravenscar, another ammonite. A Grammoceras thourense found with just a waterworn section showing on the nodule. 4 hours with the airpen and a grinder et voila! Not bad - shame about the waterworn bit though. The body chamber was very crushed so I took it off for aesthetic reasons. Would have been a fairly sizeable example for this species had it come out intact.
Notice that I have now dusted the shelves!
Andy
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