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Thread: Ordovician in Tennessee (Help!)

  1. #381
    By the way, nice avatar Terri
    Kevin

  2. #382
    Well thank you very much Kevin, I like it and it's an original to boot! I thought it was about time to chose something, I was getting tired of the blue silhouette. Thanks for the Id on that last fossil too, very cool.

  3. #383
    It sort of looks like a siphuncle and chamber to me or it could just be an oddly shaped rock, if it's the latter I'll be a little embarrassed. I'd really like to know so I'll risk it. About 5 cm. long.
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  4. #384
    It has the appearance of a well worn siphuncle and body chamber from a cyrtocone. However, without much symmetry, I'd have to say it's just an oddly shaped rock. Sorry,
    Kevin

  5. #385
    Thanks Kevin, I had a feeling it probably wasn't but wanted to know for sure before I put it away. The similarity between this one and the first fossil in this thread had me doubting myself.

  6. #386
    The siphuncle looking part keeps wanting me to say it used to be a fossil of a cephalopod, but the rest of it just don't look right. If there were a more well defined distinction between the siphuncle and last septa, or if the body chamber showed it's shape a little better.
    Kevin

  7. #387
    If there were a more well defined distinction between the siphuncle and last septa
    Cool, I didn't even catch that, went back to the first page again and looked at mine and one Hajar posted. Now I'll know what to look for next time.

  8. #388
    Here's one more fossil (maybe) that I've been trying to figure out for a while...It may be just another weird rock. In the first pic. you can see the lines on the left side, on the second pic. you can see that the lines go around to the other side. There are a few more lines that aren't showing in the photos. So what do you think fossil or not?
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  9. #389
    Fossil

    On the left side of the top & bottom photos, it looks like septa. On the right side of the bottom photo, some lines look kinda like septa. This looks like two breviconic cyrtocones connected in a single concretionary mass.

    Pathologic crinoid columnals...

    Just throwing this into the mix as something to be eliminated. While alot of these fossils look like cephalopods, they also look like crinoid stems (see posts 106 to 115) that have had some kind of parasite caused swelling. Have you ever noticed a bulge in some of the crinoid stems you see? Again, just trying to eliminate this as a possibility.
    Kevin

  10. #390
    hhmmmm....are you saying this could be two b.c.'s connected in a concretionary mass OR pathologic crinoid columnals? When I picked this fossil up it was the shape that caught my eye and when I saw what appeared to be septa I was really thrown. Holding it up with the larger curved edge towards me I see more lines and I can almost see what you're seeing (b.c.). I'll take a pic. from that angle tommorrow. But in the meantime how about some of those squiggly lines you like to draw so much? (please) I can't really SEE the pathologic crinoid columnal angle, but I don't have your eye. It would have to be really distorted or crushed, wouldn't it? Either way pretty cool, I'm just glad it's a fossil.

  11. #391
    I was betting rock
    "D"

    "Of all the things that I have lost, I think I miss my mind the most".

  12. #392
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    My vivid imagination at work.

    The red is the two BCs, (the one on the right is questionable). The green is an imaginary crinoid stem with two bulges (parasitic infestations). Have you seen anything like this on a complete crinoid stem?

    I may just be barking up the wrong tree.
    Kevin

  13. #393
    like the ladder
    Last edited by DWhatley; Jul 08, '11 at 12:08am.
    "D"

    "Of all the things that I have lost, I think I miss my mind the most".

  14. #394
    Have you seen anything like this on a complete crinoid stem?
    I don't think so, nothing that large. I went back and looked at the posts you mentioned, I can see some distortion in the first one.

    I'm really liking the B.C. angle though. Here's a picture I took today....
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  15. #395
    Looking like a BC

    I think we can eliminate the pathologic crinoid hypothesis
    Kevin

  16. #396
    Mystery solved! I was really getting tired of looking at this one, it was one of the first fossils I picked up at this location. I don't think I would have come to this solution on my own.

  17. #397
    I'm really proud of this little fossil, it's the first one I found while learning how to split rock, there are a couple of pockets of gravel left behind (mostly hand size chunks) where I practice. So I've done a lot of browsing and can't figure out what it is, I'm wondering if it could be part of a gastropod shell? It's about 1 cm. long.
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  18. #398
    It looks like a very nice little Horn Coral

    Rugosa

    Kentucky Horn Corals

    Cincinnati Horn Corals

    We get them in Devonian-Permian rocks out here, but not in the Ordovician. Nice find!
    Kevin

  19. #399
    Well, I'm a little embarrassed, I searched everything but corals! I think the shell material is what threw me (looks like original shell material??). The Horn Corals I've found around here usually are covered with beekite, like these below. They're a little older too from the Ridley Limestone, middle Ordovician.You can see the beekite rings on the little broken one in the left top corner of pic. thanks for the id. and links.
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  20. #400
    Wow! Those are really replaced! I can see why you wouldn't look at coral.


    Thank you for the Beekite explanation, I have never heard of that before.

    That explains the circular pattern on these little Triassic ammonoids.

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    Beekite Rings.
    Kevin

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