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Phanerozoic Collection (page 14)

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Zygolophodon atticus, mastodon

Zygolophodon atticus, mastodon
Front view of a skull of an extinct elephant from the Miocene of Pikermi, Greece. This fossil gave rise to the myth of the one-eyed giant, Cyclops

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Megazostrodon skull

Megazostrodon skull
Specimen from the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic of Lesotho, Africa. Megazostrodon was thought to be a small, mouse-sized, nocturnal mammal and fed on insects

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Dalmanites myops, trilobite

Dalmanites myops, trilobite
A Silurian fossil trilobite from the Wenlock Limestone, Dudley, Worcestershire. This specimen measures 40mm head to tail

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Palaeoniscus freislebeni, fossil fish

Palaeoniscus freislebeni, fossil fish
Palaeoniscus freislebeni a fossil fish from the Permian rocks near Midderidge, Durham

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Fungus gnat in amber

Fungus gnat in amber
Fungus gnat, about 2mm in length, in Eocene Baltic amber about 40 million years old

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Isochirotherium footprint

Isochirotherium footprint
A cast of fossil footprints, measuring 38 cms long, from both hind feet of Isochirotherium herculis, an extinct reptile, discovered in Tarporley, Cheshire

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Rhynchosaurus footprints

Rhynchosaurus footprints
Fossil footprints made by Rhynchosaurus on a slab of Triassic, Keuper Sandstone from a quarry in Rathbone Street, Liverpool. Dimensions of slab are 5 inches x 6 inches

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Troodon tooth

Troodon tooth
A fossil tooth specimen that once belonged to the dinosaur, Troodon. It was a carnivorous dinosaur that lived around 65 million years ago

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Stegosaurus skull

Stegosaurus skull
A cast of a fossil skull that belonged to Stegosaurus stenops, an Upper Jurassic dinosaur that lived 155 to 144 million years ago. The original fossil was discovered in the USA

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Lithostrotion, coral

Lithostrotion, coral
Shown here is a Carboniferous coral. Corals comprise a soft bodied animal called a polyp. Each polyp inhabits a calcareous skeleton called a corallum

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Lonsdaleia, coral

Lonsdaleia, coral
Shown here is the Carboniferous coral, Lonsdaleia. Corals comprise a soft bodied animal called a polyp. Each polyp inhabits a calcareous skeleton called a corallum

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Jurassic Britain

Jurassic Britain
An artists impression of Jurassic (206 to 144 million years ago) Britain from space, with forested swamps and warm seas

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Slate

Slate
Cambrian slate from North Wales. Slate is metamorphosed shale

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Cheirotherium

Cheirotherium
Arid desert of Triassic Britain with imagined reconstructions of Cheirotherium ( hand-beast ), a labyrinthodont reptile, whose prints are common in Triassic rocks but no remains have been found

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Didymograptus, graptolite

Didymograptus, graptolite
Didymograptus, Ordovician tuning-fork planktonic graptolites. Graptolites are an extinct group of marine, colonial animals

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Hyolithes, primitive mollusc

Hyolithes, primitive mollusc
Shown here is Hyolithes, a Cambrian primitive mollusc. Hyolithes had an oval or cone-shaped, elongated shell and often occured in clusters along bedding planes of Cambrian shale

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Dictyonema, graptolite

Dictyonema, graptolite
Shown here is Dictyonema, a Cambrian dendroid graptolite. Graptolites are the fossil remains of small colonial animals. Graptolite colonies were connected together by living tissue

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Quartzite

Quartzite

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Protobarinophyton obrutschevii

Protobarinophyton obrutschevii
The fossilised leafless stems of Protobarinophyton obrutschevii topped by a cone-like array of sopre sacs. Approximately 3 mm wide

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Rhynia major, fossilised plant

Rhynia major, fossilised plant
A complete soft tissue preservation at the cellular level in Rhynia major. Transverse section through stem, approximately 2mm in diameter. From Rhynie Chert, Scotland, Early Devonian

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Bothrodendron minutifoliu, fossil clubmoss

Bothrodendron minutifoliu, fossil clubmoss
Shown here is a fossilised leafy twig of a clubmoss originating from Carboniferous rocks near Barnsley, England

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Ammonite selection

Ammonite selection
Three ammonites as follows: (Left to right) Oistoceras wrighti; Asteroceras obtusum (zonal index species); Tragophylloceras loscombi all specimens originate from the Jurassic rocks near Lyme Regis

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Athleta luctator, fossil sea snail

Athleta luctator, fossil sea snail
A fossil sea snail (Athleta luctator) dating from the late Eocene rocks around Barton, England

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Sigillaria rugosa, fossil club moss

Sigillaria rugosa, fossil club moss
This section of a club moss trunk displays leaf scars where leaves grew straight out from. Club mosses could grow up to heights of 30 metres

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Fossil branches of Calamites

Fossil branches of Calamites
The fossil branches of Calamites sp. bearing leaves and cones; Palaeostachya and Asterophyllites. Specimen discovered in Wales, dating back to the Late Carboniferous period

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Coal, from the late carboniferous

Coal, from the late carboniferous
Coal is formed from fossil plants. The regular pattern on the surface of this 14 cm long piece is the impression of the bark of a fossil tree; Lepidodendron

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Lepidotes, fossil fish

Lepidotes, fossil fish

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Pentacrinites, crinoid

Pentacrinites, crinoid
Pentacrinites is a fossil crinoid from the Jurassic. Crinoids are ancient, marine organisms. The majority have long stalks anchored to the bottom

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Sigillaria rugosa, fossil plant

Sigillaria rugosa, fossil plant
Shown here is a section of the stem of a 300 million year old Carboniferous plant, probably abundant in the Carboniferous swamplands. The stem or trunk is the most common part to be fossilised

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Cupressinoxylon, fossil wood

Cupressinoxylon, fossil wood
Composite photomicrograph showing transverse (left), tangential (centre) and radial (right) sections through fossil wood; Cupressinoxylon from the London Clay at Ashford, Kent, England

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Asteroceras obtusum, ammonite

Asteroceras obtusum, ammonite
Shown here is a Jurassic ammonite. Ammonites are an extinct group of fossil cephalopods related to todays Nautilus

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Trigona, bivalves

Trigona, bivalves
Shown here are a pair of Jurassic bivalves. Bivalves are shelled creatures and first appeared in the Middle Cambrian and are still common in todays seas and oceans

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Pleistocene glacial landscape

Pleistocene glacial landscape
During the Pleistocene (1.8 million years ago to 10, 000 years), ice covered much of Britain north of the Thames. Cold climate animals included the woolly mammoth (left) Mammuthus primigenius

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Coal forest

Coal forest

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Ordovician seascape

Ordovician seascape
An artists impression of the Eden Valley, Cumbria in the Ordovician period (490 to 443 million years ago), with volcanoes in the sea

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Dapedium orbicularis, fossil fish

Dapedium orbicularis, fossil fish
A well preseved example of an enamel-scaled fish from the Lower Lias, Lyme Regis, Dorset, England

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Pleistocene landscape

Pleistocene landscape
An artists impression of the Eden Valley, Cumbria during the Pleistocene epoch which occurred between 1.8 million years ago to 10, 000 years ago

Background imagePhanerozoic Collection: Asteroceras marstonensis and Promicroceras, ammonites

Asteroceras marstonensis and Promicroceras, ammonites



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