Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Dotternhausen Quarry

Over the last two days we visited the Dotternhausen Museum, collections, and quarries. Many thanks to Annette Schmidt-Röhl for the amazing visit! We had a great time! For those not familiar with the Early Jurassic in Germany, here is a stratigraphic column representing the Posidonia Shale (it is the Pink unit, epsilon):



The coolest part of our visit was getting to go into the quarry!


Here we have the Pleinsbachian-Toarcian boundary (not terribly pretty...)

And the seagrass beds (really just a heavily bioturbated unit)

Here is the section, standing on the Fleins and looking up at the fossil rich shale (also the TOAE isotope excursion)

We collected lots of ammonites, one small lobster claw, and an indistinguishable Vampyromorph.

The museum has some beautiful ichthyosaurs!



And some nice crocodiles with armor plates!


Also some sharks!

And fish...


And crinoids of course!

They have a great wall of pyritized ammonites!


There were some ammonites with little crayfish or lobsters inside them!

And some very nice lobsters! This one is Proeryon

Here's his "face"

And here's his tail

This guy is a different lobster, Uncina posidonia

And of course, the octopods! Check out that ink sac!

If you get the light just right, you can see growth lines on the gladius. Those growth lines tell us what the shape of the gladius was and thus, what genera and species we are looking at.

They look like little parallel scratches making a series of V shapes!





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