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Two Eocene Fossil Snake Eggs - Bouxwiller, France
This is a pair of unusual fossils: Eocene-aged fossil snake eggs from Bouxwiller, in the Alsace region of northastern France. These were laid on the bank of a lake during the Eocene period, about 48 to 40 million years ago. The rock formation was exposed in a now abandoned quarry in 1983, and over 44 vertebrate species have been described since then. Eggs are generally difficult to trace to a single species, so these eggs are classified as Ophidenovum, a genus parallel to Linnean taxonomy but reserved only for eggs. In this case, Ophidenovum translates from Latin to literally "snake (Ophid-)" and "egg (-ovum)".
SPECIES
Ophidenovum sp.
LOCATION
Bouxwiller, Alsace, France
SIZE
Largest Egg: .65" long
CATEGORY
ITEM
#293111
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