3.5" Multiple Fossil Brachiopod (Hebertella) Plate - Indiana

This is a 3.5" wide plate with 4 brachiopod (Hebertella occidentalis) fossils collected from the Waynesville Formation of Brookville, Indiana. The fossils are Upper Ordovician in age or roughly 445 million years old. Most of these brachiopod fossils have been removed from the shale, cleaned using air abrasives and remounted back to the slab of shale to create a beautiful display. Some of the brachiopods are still within the rock and have only been cleaned, not remounted

It comes with an acrylic display stand.

Brachiopods are members of the phylum Brachiopoda. They are clam-like with wide shells composed of two halves called valves. They are filter feeders that live fixed to rocks or on the seafloor. Brachiopods first appeared in the early Cambrian as simple forms with non-articulating shells. Their diversity peaked during the Devonian, and there are currently 12,000 described fossil species of Brachiopoda from 5,000 genera. Most species of brachiopod died out during the Permian-Triassic Extinction but about 450 species still live today. They live in cold marine environments like polar seas or continental shelves and slopes. The largest fossil Brachiopod found is 7.9 inches (200 mm), but most are 2-4 inches (3-8 cm). Living Brachiopods also fall into this range.

Brachiopods are more closely related to Bryozoans than Mollusks. The easiest differences to identify are in the shells of clams, part of the mollusk family, and Brachiopods. Mollusk shells are divided into left and right while brachiopod shells are divided top (dorsal) and bottom (ventral). Mollusk shells are usually equal on the right and left. In brachiopods, the bottom shell is larger than the top. The other big difference is in how they feed: both are filter feeders, but mollusks extend their filter into the water and pull food into their shells. Brachiopods have internal feeding structures: water is drawn into the shell where the food is filtered out before expelling it out.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Hebertella occidentalis
LOCATION
Brookville, Indiana
FORMATION
Waynesville Formation
SIZE
Largest brachiopod 1.3" wide, plate is 3.5 x 3.3"
CATEGORY
ITEM
#136505
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