Product Description
ITEM #
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SF016
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ID
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Ophiurina lymani
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FOUND
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Hunsruck Shale - Bundenbach, Germany
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AGE
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LOWER DEVONIAN (EMSIAN): 390 million years ago
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SIZE
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7.4" x 4.7" overall, starfish .8" across
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CONDITION
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NO REPAIR, RESTORATION OR ENHANCEMENT
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NOTE
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NICE EXAMPLE FROM FAMOUS DEPOSITS
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INCLUDES STAND - Actual Item - One Only
Comes with a certificate of authenticity / information sheet |
CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE ABOUT STARFISH
This is a beautiful Brittle Star starfish fossil from the famous Bundenbach Slates of Germany. The species is Ophiurina lymani and it is a very ancient starfish from the Lower Devonian Period. This world-renowned fossil-bearing site is known for a rare deposit of marine invertebrate fossils that have been preserved in pyrite with extraordinary detail including a very rare occurrence of fossilized soft tissue. This can be seen in this particular fossil we offer here. Soft tissue preservation is extremely rare in the fossil record and it provides us a unique opportunity to view the prehistoric creature in the form that it was in when alive.
Often found in distorted positions where the delicate anatomy is difficult to appreciate, this is a superb example of this starfish with perfectly spread arms and soft tissue center. It is well-centered on the slate tile and affords superb 100% natural, authentic detail of a very old form of starfish from a time when the seas were swarming with bizarre marine life such as trilobites and crinoids. Slate is COMPLETELY NATURAL, with slight gold color of the pyritized Brittlestar exhibiting fantastic detail without distortion. NO REPAIR, RESTORATION OR ENHANCEMENT. HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
The Hunsruck Slates of Bundenbach, Germany are now protected and have been closed to collecting for quite some time. The only way to acquire a fossil from this famous location is to find an old collection piece for sale. The quarries were once worked for slate roofing tiles, with the slate being cut and split by manual labor which permitted the occasional discovery by quarry workers of fossils in the slate tiles. When a fossil was discovered, they were usually set aside for collectors. Later technological advances in fossil preparation utilized various methods to further remove the matrix around the fossil without damaging the specimen thereby revealing incredible preservation rarely seen in preserved remains. The last mines were abandoned in the 1960's.