|
LIGHT GREEN PERISPHINCTES AMMONITE FROM RARE DEPOSIT
Grafenberg, Germany
UPPER JURASSIC PERIOD
(MALM): 154 - 144 million years ago A
VERY rare occurrence can be found at an exclusive Upper Jurassic
fossil-bearing site in Germany. The ammonites have been preserved
a beautiful and completely natural GREEN hue in the light gray host
rock! This is one of the last of a small group we purchased from
the original collector many years ago. The ammonites preserve in a
stunning three-dimensional form with full delicate chamber detail on the
surface. Ammonites from the source range from a limey-gold to a rich
dark blue-green hue caused by unique mineralization in the fossil stone.
This RARE
green Perisphinctes species ammonite from this site in
Grafenberg, Germany is sure to please any collector of the unusual.
Out of the few specimens that we were fortunate enough to collect, this
is one of the best. Detail is impeccable and creature has been
freed of its surrounding host rock and richly displayed in this glass
case. No
restoration and no repair.
Yes, the color is 100% natural! A unique
site and a beautiful specimen for collectors desiring rare
and uncommon fossils!
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.
RARE NATURAL
LIGHT GREEN
SPECIMEN FROM EXCLUSIVE SITE - HIGHLY UNUSUAL COLOR!
1.85" in
width
$125 AMX-131
INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX
Actual Item - One Only
|