Great South Gems & Minerals
• Ammonite specimens (Morocco) •
• Ammonite specimens (Morocco) •
ammonites - ammonite fossils - parapuzosia seppenradensis
These are beautiful fossil specimens showing the ammonite free of matrix, ground and polished on all sides. 2-1/4" to 2-1/2" specimens. From the Sahara Desert, Morocco.
Geologists and paleontologists
have used the extinct cephalopod ammonite as an index fossil in
dating a particular rock layer, as the ammonites are so wide-spread
and abundant worldwide and different species existed over an extremely
long period of time. Ammonites existed from the Silurian
period, about 400 million years ago, all the way up until the
end of the Cretaceous period which ended about 65 million years
ago. A period of over 300 million years! And, during this extremely
long period of time ammonites were extremely abundant. Many genera
evolved and ran their course quickly, becoming extinct in a few
million years. Due to their rapid evolution and widespread distribution
Geologist and Paleontologist can date a rock layer based on the
particular species of ammonite found in the strata.
Ammonites started out as babies with tiny button-like shells and as
they grew they made consecutive chambers to their shell. And what's
interesting is, as the animal grew, made an addition to it's shell,
it would move into the now larger shell section and seal off the old
smaller chamber section. Scientist believe that the ammonite would
fill the closed-off chamber with a type of gas. This enabled the
ammonite to float and therefore be a free-swimming animal. Many
illustrations of the ammonite show the larger section of the animal
at the top, probably for aesthetic reasons, however this an incorrect
presentation. The smaller shell section would have been filled with
gas and therefore would have floated above the larger sections.
Ammonites were predators much like the modern cephalopods, the squid
and octopus. The ammonites had tentacles in which it could grasp
it's prey and sharp beak-like parts at its mouth. It is believed
that the ammonites fed on fish and crustaceans.
According to "Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia" most ammonites were
in the one inch to about nine inches diameter range. However,
ammonites have been found with a diameter of 6.5 feet! This giant of
an ammonite is the species Parapuzosia seppenradensis, from the
Cretaceous period of Germany. The largest documented North American
ammonite found is the Parapuzosia bradyi from the Cretaceous Period
measuring 4.5 feet in diameter.
While most ammonites had rounded spherical shells, there is a species
coming from China that has a partial rounded shell at its base or
beginning end, and then the ammonite abandoned the rounded shell type
to forms a straight shell much like the Orthoceras.
Ammonite fossils have been found world-wide.
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