4.35" Fossil Ammonite (Hoploscaphites) - South Dakota

This is a 4.35" wide Hoploscaphites (Jeletzkytes) spedeni ammonite specimen collected from the Fox Hills Formation of South Dakota. Much of the shell has chipped away and portions of the ammonite are compressed from being within rock for millions of years. What could be considered that back side of the specimen didn't preserve as nicely as the "front side".

It comes with an acrylic display stand.

These 70 million year old ammonites lived when South Dakota was a shallow inland sea. They were found preserved in concretions when split open. They then had to be hand-prepared to remove the hard rock surrounding them from their shells, a very time consuming task.

Ammonites were predatory cephalopod mollusks that resembled squids with spiral shells. They are more closely related to living octopuses, though their shells resemble that of nautilus species. True ammonites appeared in the fossil record about 240 million years ago during the Triassic Period. The last lineages disappeared 65 million years ago at the end of the Cretaceous.

What an ammonite would have looked like while alive.
What an ammonite would have looked like while alive.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Hoploscaphites (Jeletzkytes) spedeni
LOCATION
North Central, South Dakota
FORMATION
Fox Hills Formation
SIZE
Ammonite 4.35" wide
ITEM
#137272
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