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PRODUCTS BY WEIGHT
BOX SETS
PLASTIC DISPLAY PRODUCTS
PRODUCTS BY WEIGHT
BOX SETS
PLASTIC DISPLAY PRODUCTS
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Fossil Leave specimens from the plant, Glossopteris meaning “tongue”, (because the leaves were tongue-shaped) is the largest genus of the extinct order of seed ferns known as Glossopteridales.The plant was known to have grown along the palaeo-super continent of Gondwana during the Permian. These particular specimens come from Australia and are approx 3″ x 2″ and will come in a small card tray with information label.
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Geological Age: Permian, 299 million years ago
Location: Australia.
Fossil Leave specimens from the plant, Glossopteris meaning “tongue”, (because the leaves were tongue-shaped) is the largest genus of the extinct order of seed ferns known as Glossopteridales.The plant was known to have grown along the palaeo-super continent of Gondwana during the Permian. These particular specimens come from Australia and are approx 3″ x 2″ and will come in a small card tray with information label.
Fossil specimens of this plant were found with the bodies of Captain Scott and his companions. They had been collected from Mount Buckley in the Transantarctic mountains. This species became a vital key in the development of the Gondwana theory and hence the theory of continental drift, changing the way that we view the world.
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Genus Name: Sigillaria rugosa
Division: Lycopodiophyta
Geological Age: Carboniferous period, Westphalian, 313 to 304 Mya
Location: Marles-les-mines, Pas-de-Calais, France
Out of stock
Out of stock
Genus Name: Pecopteris
Division: Pteridophyta
Geological Age: Carboniferous period, Westphalian, 313 to 304 Mya
Location: Marles-les-mines, Pes-de-Calais, France
Out of stock
Genus Name: Sigillaria
Division: Lycopodiophyta
Geological Age: Carboniferous period, Westphalian, 313 to 304 Mya
Location: Marles-les-mines, Pas-de-Calais, France
Out of stock
Fossil twigs, collected from Madagascar. These twigs are Triassic in age and come supplied in packs of 5 pieces. Packaged in a polythene bag with an information label.
Genus Name: Calamites
Division: Sphenophyta
Geological Age: Carboniferous period, Westphalian, 313 to 304 Mya
Location: Marles-les-mines, Pes-de-Calais, France
Plant Fossils from Pennsylvania, USA. Enclosed within a laminated mudstone matrix, these fossils are detailed and perfect for use as tools of analysis as well as display with their dark grey and shiny appearance. Supplied with a white card tray and information label.
Out of stock
Genus Name: Annularia
Division: Sphenophyta
Geological Age: Carboniferous period, Westphalian, 313 to 304 Mya
Location: Marles-les-mines, Pas-de-Calais, France
Out of stock
Out of stock
Geological Age: Carboniferous, Weastphalian ‘A’
Location: Lancashire, UK.
A high quality matching pair siderite nodule containing a Lepidostrobus (cone) plant fossil with a leafy stem. The specimens are 6cm x 4.5cm and come in a white card tray with an information label. These species are uncommon, and has not been damaged during cracking of the nodule.
Out of stock
Alethopteris is an extinct plant from the carboniferous through to the cretaceous. High quality which display very detailed preservation of individual leaves within the mudstone matrix. supplied with a white card tray and information label
ONE-OFF SPECIMEN
Siderite nodule containing a highly detailed and well preserved Alethopteris fossil. Alethopteris was a fern which existed during the Carboniferous. This specimen is a good display piece and was found in WIgan, UK and comes supplied with a card tray and information label.
Out of stock
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