Uploaded on:
2009-03-11 03:20:05.0
Type:
Digital Asset
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1000 x 665 pixels
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P number: P521143
Caption: A fossil specimen of Diplograptus truncatus Lapworth var. pauperatus Elles and Wood. A fossil graptolite. (Graptolithina.) Dobb's Linn, Moffat Water, near Birkhill about 9.5 miles north-east of Moffat, Dumfriesshire, Scotland.
Description: Diplograptus lived between the Middle Ordovician to the Lower Silurian (Llanvirn to Landovery). This specimen is from the Lower Hartfell Shales. British Geological Survey Biostratigraphy Collection number GSE 8231. It is biserial, it has two rows of thecae arranged back to back and grew in an upwards direction away from the sicula and scandent (stipes grow upwards from the sicula with the thecae growing outwards). Graptolites are related to the living Protochordata. They consisted of colonies of tiny individuals enclosed in a common horny sheath. They were widely distributed as they floated in the surface waters of the ancient oceans. On death the sheaths sank to the ocean floor and were buried and preserved.
Date taken: Wed Jan 01 00:00:00 GMT 2003
Photographer: Unknown
Copyright statement: NERC
Orientation: Landscape
Size: 265.42 KB; 1000 x 665 pixels; 85 x 56 mm (print at 300 DPI); 265 x 176 mm (screen at 96 DPI);
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