1.6" Fossil Mantis Shrimp (Pseudosculda) with Fish - Lebanon

This is a really cool, 1.6" long fossil mantis shrimp (Pseudosculda laevis) from near Hakel, Lebanon. There is also a small fossil fish and the impression of a shark tooth on this 5.1" wide piece of limestone.

There are nearly 450 species of mantis shrimp alive today and they are sometime referred to as "thumb splitters" because of how they use their powerful claws to inflict damage to prey with a single strike.

Comes with an acrylic stand.

The discovery of amazingly preserved marine fossils near Hakel, Lebanon dates back many centuries. In fact, they were first mentioned in writing by Herodotus, over 450 years before the birth of Christ. The first scientific work on these localities began in the 1800s: these deposits have been meticulously quarried by several Lebanese families for over a century. We purchase our specimens directly from one of these families.

These deposits represent a warm, shallow sea of the Middle Cretaceous, and have yielded over 70 types of fish and numerous other genera found nowhere else in the world. The preservation on many of these specimens is truly amazing: many examples of soft bodied preservation have been found.

A photo of the quarry at Hakel, Lebanon
A photo of the quarry at Hakel, Lebanon

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DETAILS
SPECIES
Pseudosculda laevis (Shrimp) & Unidentified Fish
LOCATION
Hakel, Lebanon
FORMATION
Sannine Formation
SIZE
Shrimp 1.6", 5.1 x 3.5" limestone
ITEM
#173127
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