these are

jmfg222

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Harry Pristis

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Feb 5, 2009
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jmfg222 said:
i know nothing about fossils but guessing these are flowers or at least a plant.
The details are obscure in the images, but I can see the plates that suggest it is a "sea lily." A sea lily is an animal - a crinoid - not a plant. Nice finds!
 

ohio

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May 28, 2007
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Yup, definitely crinoid cups or calices. They look awful similar to Eucalyptocrinites (one of the many species) from the Waldron Shale. Where were they found????
Chuck
 

ohio

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I have collected Waldron Shale in Indiana many times and have countless examples of this fauna. This link shows some more examples from Indiana

http://www.weekstrilobites.com/waldronshalefossils.htm

The Waldron has awesome preservation and you really should take a second look at where you came up with those calices. There is a huge variety of fossils in the Waldron and you are definitely on the right track to come up with some trilobites as well as other crinoids. Nice stuff.
Chuck
 

ohio

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Here is a Eucalyptocrinites that I had posted a while back.
 

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ohio

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Here are a couple of Flexicalymene breviceps that I collected in the Waldron of IN and posted a while back.
 

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Tnmountains

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I need to find the waldron shale. Those are all very nice fossils.
 

Tnmountains

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Re: these are crinoids

Harry Pristis said:
Ya' gotta' love 'em! They are so strange. They are so fragile-looking, but here they are - durable remnants of an undersea garden.


Looks as if the water just drained away and there they lie,ummm lay.
Is that from your collection and a picture you took?
 

Harry Pristis

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Re: these are crinoids

TnMountains said:
Harry Pristis said:
Ya' gotta' love 'em! They are so strange. They are so fragile-looking, but here they are - durable remnants of an undersea garden.

Looks as if the water just drained away and there they lie,ummm lay.
Is that from your collection and a picture you took?
Yes, I have a chunk of this matrix. Here's another image of the same surface:

crinoidcrawfordsville2.jpg
 

Tnmountains

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Are fossils like that found around any of the old coal strip pits ?
 

LanceHall

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TnMountains said:
Are fossils like that found around any of the old coal strip pits ?

I don't think the conditions that produce coal deposits (swamps) would have any crinoids because they are more open water creatures.
 

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