Nice pictures.
I know it is hard to tell from photographs - but - are you sure that
it is a crinoid and not an uncoiling ammonite; could the things in the
wood be boring bivalves?
I agree with you about the small scale stuff being fascinating - but
have now found that some of my microfossils are starting to get pyrite
rot.
rgds, Mike
--- In speeton@yahoogroups.com, "gnomon9992000" <nigel.hutchings@e...>
wrote:
> I have added some pictures of some Speeton bits and pieces.
>
> Particularly interesting are the pyritic inclusions in the fossil
> wood. I am no Botanist but I think they must be axillary buds -
> although they do look rather like beetle cases!
>
> Also there is a 2cm piece of crinoid stem and a pyritic phragmocone.
>
> I find looking at Speeton "in the small" very productive. Taking away
> consolidated blocks of clay and then examining it microscopically at
> home has yielded some interesting stuff. I will post further pictures.
>
> BTW - the link in my last post needed the trailing bracket removing -
> it should have been:
>
> http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/%7Epalaeont/palbio3/17.pdf