Mama's Minerals.com
Showing posts with label fossils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fossils. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Mama's Weekly Rock Facts


Ammonites are extinct cephalopods (class Cephalopoda) as are the modern-day squid, octopus, and nautilus.  Various types of Ammonites lived over a long time range, 400 to 65 million years ago, and therefore have a relatively large amount of orders and suborders, which means there are a lot different types of Ammonite fossils available.
Ammonite septa & chambers
It is believed that the age of an Ammonite at death is estimated from the number of septa it has.  Septa are the dividing walls between the chambers of the shell.   The septa along with the suture (where the septa joins the outer wall) and the siphuncles (tubular outer rim connecting the chambers) determine the orders and species.  

Ammonites are named for their spiral shaped shells, which resemble the ram’s horns of the Egyptian god Amun.





by Amanda Rice, Resident Geologist, Mama's Minerals 

Monday, July 30, 2012

Mama's Weekly Rock Facts - KNIGHTIA FISH

KNIGHTIA FISH
Knightia Fish Plaques starting at $13.99
Knightia fish (Knightia eocaena) belong to the family Clupeidae, which includes herring and sardines.  Found in large quantities in the lacustrine sediments of what is now known as the Green River Formation, Knightia fish are well-preserved due to a slowed decomposition with the lack of oxygen at the cold lake bottoms. 

The green river formation is a group of sedimentation records from multiple intermountain lakes in three basins around what is now the Green River in Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado, USA.   One of the best know fossil locations is Fossil Butte National Monument, which is part of the Fossil Lake Formation and highly prized for the abundance of well-preserved fossils.

These small schooling fish rarely reach 10 inches in length and ate mainly plankton and diatoms, but were a good food source for larger predators of the Eocene epoch, lasting approximately 56 to 34 million years ago.
By Amanda Rice