-
Ginger Merker posted a new specimen in the group
Cincinnatian Collectors from the myFOSSIL app 4 years, 2 months ago
4 years, 2 months ago4 years, 2 months agoGinger Merker has contributed a new specimen to myFOSSIL!
Ginger Merker posted a new specimen in the group Cincinnatian Collectors from the myFOSSIL app 4 years, 2 months ago
Ginger Merker has contributed a new specimen to myFOSSIL!
FOSSIL UPLOAD
First, make sure you have a myFOSSIL account, this is required to upload your fossil information. If you are interested in seeing if your fossil can be used for research purposes, please follow through the following steps. They walk you through the information needed and why it is helpful for other scientists to use it for research questions. Even if the information you have on your fossil is not enough to be used for research purposes it will still benefit the community through educational means and help others identify their fossils. Specimens that have sufficient information will be uploaded to iDigBio and GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facility) for public accessibility.
If you have already gone through the stepwise process that explains each piece of data please click through to a summary tab where you can enter in your specimen data on a single page.
Data Quality Information Page
I’d say it’s a nautiloid cephalopod.
Though I’m no professional.
Give yourself some more credit, @ian-forsythe. You are right!
@ginger-merker this specimen is on the site twice, is there one where you would want to fill in the classification and other information? You can easily edit your specimens on the website and I could put one just in the groups you posted them in and the other can have all the information. Let me know if you need help with any of that. – Jen
I am having a few problems with the web site, I’ll try to remove one, thanks for the heads up and help.
It’s an endocerid nautiloid, and the clue is what looks like a large tube (called a siphuncle) inside the larger shell. The upper half of your fossil is the siphuncle, and a little bit of the siphuncle projects at the bottom. The entire shell would have been much, much longer, and it would have been occupied by a squid-like animal.
Thank you so much Steven