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Dr. Sukhendu Mukhopadhyay posted a new specimen in the group
What is it? from the myFOSSIL app. 3 years, 7 months ago
3 years, 7 months ago3 years, 7 months agoDr. Sukhendu Mukhopadhyay has contributed specimen mFeM 60602 to myFOSSIL!
Dr. Sukhendu Mukhopadhyay posted a new specimen in the group What is it? from the myFOSSIL app. 3 years, 7 months ago
Dr. Sukhendu Mukhopadhyay has contributed specimen mFeM 60602 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
Beautiful ammonite, @drsukhendu-mukhopadhyay. Do you know what formation it is from?
@ samantha-ocon, sorry ma’am, I’m professionally a medical doctor,working in the field of radiodiagnosis. Collecting fossils is my passion.I do not have that much of clear and technical knowledge in this field to answer you. It is my pleasure to be here and have such wonderful friends like you who can guide me. Thank you.
That is totally okay! Apps like Rockd can tell you what formation you are in and what fossils are around when you are in the field. If you are on a computer at home, you can use https://macrostrat.org/sift/#/ to search for the place you were at, and find out what rocks you were standing on.
thnx….
Narendra Kumar Swami, a geologist with the Himalayan Geology Division, Geological Survey of India, says, “Geologically the Langza section consists of Tagling (bedded limestone) and Spiti Formation (black shales) and ranges from the Lower to Upper Jurassic period.”
@samantha-ocon I found this information 👆
Thank you so much, @drsukhendu-mukhopadhyay! Could you update the specimen information? If you are unsure how to do this, let me know.
@samantha-ocon please guide me.
No problem, @drsukhendu-mukhopadhyay! Are you using a mobile device or a desktop? To edit the specimen data, you must be on a desktop computer and navigate to the specimen page, located at this URL: https://www.myfossil.org/dwc-specimen/60602/. There, you should be able to edit the blanks on the specimen page. Let me know if you have any further issues!
@samantha-ocon possible changes have been updated, is everything alright?