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GIANT
LYTOCERAS AMMONITE ON HOLZMADEN SHALE
Holzmaden Black Shale Formation (Lias Epsilon) - Stuttgart, Germany
JURASSIC
PERIOD: 200 million years ago
From the
world-renown Black Jurassic oil-bearing shale of Holzmaden, Germany
comes this MONSTROUS and exquisitely preserved Lytoceras
trautscholdi species
ammonite. Specimens like this are seldom discovered at this highly
unique formation famous for producing some of the world's finest
Jurassic marine life fossils. Modern quarry efforts have failed to
produce many specimens like this that were once found in greater
frequency years ago. If you are an advanced ammonite collector wanting one
of the rarest possible ammonite specimens from one of the world's rarest
and most coveted Jurassic provenances, then this specimen poses a VERY
UNIQUE opportunity for you. If you wish to accent a room with one
of nature's most beautiful prehistoric masterpieces, then this fossil
would really set off any interior.
This is
a very large Lytoceras
from
Holzmaden with the finest preservation and orientation on its original
slab. The entire ammonite is complete and possesses dense,
original gold
pyritization to the shell imprint that is so HIGHLY-prized. This gold
tone to the creatures on the slab is COMPLETELY GENUINE AND NATURAL,
formed by mineralization as the fossil was formed millions of
years ago. The slab has been chemically sealed to protect
and permanently stabilize this rare feature. Immense architectural
value when used in any interior setting.
From ANY
location, a Lytoceras this size is beyond 'remarkable' but to come from
HOLZMADEN just makes this one heck of a hard specimen for us to part
with. Like the very rare, ex-private collection Dapedium
we once offered from this same site, fossils like this seldom come along
and are almost always from advanced private collections or museums.
Some of
the largest dinosaurs that ever walked the earth were in existence when
this Lytoceras ammonite swam in the ancient seas alongside massive plesiosaurs and
ichthyosaurs!
Absolutely
our highest recommendation. Even if you could care less about
fossils of any kind, you would be hard-pressed to not find this specimen
anything less than breath-taking!
Ammonites
are extinct members of the Cephalopod class.
Modern members include nautilus, squid and octopus.
They first appeared during the Silurian Period (435 million to
410 million years ago) and were abundant and widespread in the seas of
the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods (175 million to 65 million years
ago). Ammonites are important index
fossils—that is, they often link the rock layer in which they
are found to specific geological time periods.
Ammonites varied greatly in size.
The largest
known
as small
as 2 cm (0.75 in) in diameter. During the Jurassic and Cretaceous
periods, ammonites evolved more streamlined shells for swimming and the
structure of the shell became stronger. Different shell shapes emerged
as well, such as snail-like or uncoiled.
The shells of
ammonites
had hollow chambers separated by walls called septa. A tube called the siphuncle, connected the body with the
chambers allowing the animal to fill them with water or air, changing
its buoyancy in order to rise or drop in the ocean.
Only
the last and largest chamber was occupied by the living animal.
Ammonites
probably lived for one to six years, with the majority living two to
four years. They fed on plankton (tiny free-floating organisms), sea
lilies, and smaller
orthoceras. Although many fed off the ocean floor, others may have
caught plankton while floating or swimming via jet propulsion,
expelling water through a funnel-like opening to propel themselves in
the opposite direction.
Because ammonites lived
exclusively in marine environments, their presence also indicates the
location of prehistoric seas.
SIMPLY
GORGEOUS NATURAL SPECIMEN - VERY
RARE AND A SUPREME
ARCHITECTURAL DISPLAY PIECE!
23.75" x
18" wide, ammonite 7.8" wide
$995
AM-032 INCLUDES
STAND Actual
Item - One Only
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