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PRODUCTS BY WEIGHT
BOX SETS
PLASTIC DISPLAY PRODUCTS
£1.10 – £1.62 ex VAT
Species Name: Leptaena depressa
Family: Brachiopod
Age: Silurian, Wenlock Series
Location: Dudley, West Midlands, UK
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Leptaena depressa brachiopod fossil preserved within a limestone matrix from the Silurian limestone of Dudley, West Midlands, UK. Leptaena depressa dates from 427 to 433 Mya during the Wenlock Series of the Silurian period. A wide variety of crinoids, brachiopods, corals and trilobites can all be found within the Wenlock Limestone of the UK, indicative of the shallow tropical marine environment which existed in many parts of the UK throughout the Wenlock Series. The size of the specific brachiopods which we supply naturally varies but on average they measure 2.5 cm in width and they are supplied within 2″ x 2″ or 3″ x 2″ white card trays according to the size of the matrix in which they are preserved.
Weight | 133 g |
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Size | 2" x 2", 3" x 2" |
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Ogyginus comdensis was a species of asaphid trilobites from the Ordovician period, and found in abundance in Wales. They were characterised by their squat, rounded bodies. These specimens are preserved within a mud stone matrix, some of which has been polished, but all of which has been cut to display the fossils in their entirety. A perfect specimen for analysis of different orders of trilobite if purchased along side a more common variation, these fossils could also be used as a display piece. All fossils are provided with a white card tray and information label.
Available in the folowing sizes:
These sizes refer to the length of the trilobite, not the matrix they are contained in. Matrix size varies between specimens.
A colonial coral which lived in warm shallow waters and is common in the limestone rocks of the Silurian period. Favosites is often associated with other corals that formed small reefs. Favosites specimens have a honeycomb appearance when viewed from above. Specimens come in multiple sizes in a white card tray with an information label.
Species Name: Bos primigenius
Geological Age: 10,000. Pleistocene period
Location: North Sea Bed, Holland
Body Part: Ankle Bone
Fossil specimens of the solitary coral Calceola. The coral is from the Devonian period (lower – middle) and was found in the Western Sahara. The specimens are supplied in a small card tray with an information label. Specimens come in multiple sizes, in a white card tray with an information label.
• Geological Age: Devonian period, Old red sandstone, Sandwick beds
• Location: Orkney Islands, Scotland
• Family: Osteolepidae
• Species: Osteolepis macrolepidotus
1 in stock
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.
Palaeofavosites coral of Silurian age – Wenlock Series, collected from Dudley, West Midlands, UK. Palaeofavosites is an extinct genus of tabulate colonial coral; they were suspension feeders and lived in warm shallow seas. Specimens come in multiple sizes, in a white card tray with an information label.
• Geological Age: Carboniferous period
• Location: Clitheroe, Lancashire, UK
• Family: Echinoderm
• Species: Crinoid
Fossil crinoid stems from Clitheroe, Lancashire, these specimens are excellent for collectors and educational use, they are of an fairly good size where morphological details can be easily seen, ranging from 40 to 60 mm in length and varying thicknesses. They samples will come supplied in a card tray with a label.
A chain 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. Specimens come in various sizes in a white card tray with an information label.
• Geological Age: Pennsylvanian stage, late Carboniferous period, 323 to 298 million years old
• Location: Indiana and Oklahoma, USA
• Family: Echinoderm
• Class: Blastoidea
• Species: Pentremites sp.
Pentremites sp. blastoid collected from Pennsylvanian sediments in Indiana or Oklahoma, USA. Pentremites belong to the class Blastoidea and they are a type of echinoderm. These specimens measure approximately 2 cm in diameter.
Isastrea fossil coral of Jurassic age, collected from Steeple Ashton, Wiltshire, UK. Isastrea is an extinct species of Scleractinian coral which existed in the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. These reef building corals had a symbiotic relationship with photosynthetic algae and so lived in in shallow, warm, clear marine waters. These specimens measure approximately 3″ in size and come in a white card tray with an information label.
7 in stock
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