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PRODUCTS BY WEIGHT
BOX SETS
PLASTIC DISPLAY PRODUCTS
PRODUCTS BY WEIGHT
BOX SETS
PLASTIC DISPLAY PRODUCTS
£8.00 – £20.00 ex VAT
Specimens of Ichthyosaur Bone, collected from Abingdon, Oxfordshire in the UK. These specimens are from the Brachypterygius Sp. and date to approximately 157 – 152 Ma. This puts these samples in the Kimmeridgian stage of the Jurassic period, which is the apex of the dinosaur’s rule on Earth. Ichthyosaur’s are an order of large ancient marine reptiles, that went extinct around 95 million years ago. The pieces are from undetermined body parts and could be remnants from various parts of the animal. These samples are available in various sizes and come supplied in a white card tray with an information label.
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Your return will usually be processed within a week to a week and a half. We’ll send you a Return Notification email to notify you once the return has been completed.
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Specimens of Ichthyosaur Bone, collected from Abingdon, Oxfordshire in the UK. These specimens are from the genus Brachypterygius, and date to approximately 157 – 152 Ma. This puts these samples in the Kimmeridgian stage of the Jurassic period, which is the apex of the dinosaur’s rule on Earth. Ichthyosaur’s are an order of large ancient marine reptiles, that went extinct around 95 million years ago. The pieces are from undetermined body parts and could be remnants from various parts of the animal. They range in colour from grey to rusty orange. These samples are available in various sizes and come supplied in a white card tray with an information label.
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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.
A genuine fossilised fragment of a dinosaur egg shell, discovered in Patagonia, Argentina. It has been dated to approximately 70-90 Million years ago, comes supplied in a perspex box with a detailed info label and 10x magnifying hand lens.
10 in stock
Leptopius duponti fossil weevil cacoons from the Holocene period found in Elliston, south Australia. Known informally as pixie clogs, the cacoons were spun by the weevils in their pupae stage in order to protect them during metamorphosis into adult beetles. An interesting piece for fossil collectors or educational use to exhibit an example of a ‘trace fossil’, the cacoons are approximately 50 mm in length and 30 mm in diameter and come supplied in a card tray with a label.
25 in stock
• Geological Age: Silurian period, 443 to 416 millions years old
• Location: Djebel Issoumour, Alnif, Morocco
• Family: Echinoderm
• Species: Crinoid
Moroccan fossil crinoid stem specimens supplied in packets of 5 pieces, dated to over 400 million years old, they lived during the Silurian period and show excellent clear morphological details such as stem segments. Ideal for educational use and young collectors.
• Geological Age: Devonian period, Old red sandstone, Sandwick beds
• Location: Orkney Islands, Scotland
• Family: Osteolepidae
• Species: Osteolepis macrolepidotus
1 in stock
A colonial coral which lived in warm shallow waters and is common in the limestone rocks of the Silurian period. Halysites is often associated with other corals that formed small reefs.
Out of stock
One of the most common and best known Carboniferous corals. In the above species, the corallites are circular in outline and not in contact with each other.
Sometimes referred to as “spaghetti Rock”
Out of stock
Specimens of Thecosmilia annularis from the Jurassic period, Corallian beds. The specimens were found at Steeple Ashton, Wiltshire, U.K.
Out of stock
A specimen of a Hexagonaria, which is an extinct genus of rugose coral, found in the Sahara Region, Morocco. The specimens belong to an unknown species and have been polished. This makes them a great addition to any collection. Additionally, the rough genuine face beneath provides an excellent tool for analysis. All specimens are Devonian in age, approximately 2-3″ in size and supplied in a white card tray with an information label.
Perisphinctes are an extinct species of ammonite which lived during the lower Jurassic period, 163 to 145 million years ago. The animal could grown from anywhere between 10 mm to over a meter in diameter, making them among the largest of the ammonites. Their shells exhibit excellent morphological features such as clear, distinct ribbing and occasionally, well defined ammonitic suture lines, among the near perfect coil shape, it could be said that perisphinctes are the text book ammonite. These specimens are 1.5″ – 2″ in size and come supplied in a white card tray with information label.
46 in stock
Specimens of Dinosaur Bone, collected from Abingdon, Oxfordshire in the UK. These samples are from an unidentified species, however they date to approximately 157 – 152 Ma. This puts these samples in the Kimmeridgian stage of the Jurassic period, which is the apex of the dinosaur’s rule on Earth. The specimens display a rusty brown colouration and showcase their porous bone structure. The pieces are from undetermined body parts and could be remnants from various parts of the animal. These samples are available in various sizes and come supplied in a white card tray with an information label.
A colonial coral which lived in warm shallow waters and is common in the limestone rocks of the Silurian period. Heliolites is often associated with other corals that formed small reefs.
Out of stock
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