Fish vertebrae?

Laat hier je fossielen determineren. Voorzie duidelijke foto's en vermeld zo mogelijk de grootte, de vindplaats en de ouderdom.
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Colin Ashcroft
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Fish vertebrae?

Bericht door Colin Ashcroft » 04 sep 2015, 12:25

Afbeelding

Afbeelding

Hi all!

I went searching the beach last week along the beach at Cadzand. I found a small item (see attached photograph) and thought it might be a fish vertebrae fossil. Can anyone confirm it is or isn't? I'm not sure having never found one before!

Thank you for your help.

Cheers,

Colin.



 
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FossilDude
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Antw: Fish vertebrae?

Bericht door FossilDude » 04 sep 2015, 13:09

Hi Colin,

The item in your photographs is indeed a Neogene fossil of a fish, but not of a vertebrae. It is the fossil base of a spine of a skate, more precisely of the Thornback ray ( Raja clavata )

See comparable examples in our database:

http://www.fossiel.net/id_system/fossil ... tformatie=

Cheers,

Johan

[Bewerkt door FossilDude op 04-09-2015 om 12:10 NL]


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Colin Ashcroft
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Antw: Fish vertebrae?

Bericht door Colin Ashcroft » 04 sep 2015, 13:30

Hi Johan,

thanks a lot for the detailed and quick response! That's really fascinating! I was looking for Shark teeth but found this instead. Really happy I found it! I'm familiar with the modern day Thornback ray, completes the story! One question, a ray has cartilage instead of true bone. Does this mean that the fossilisation process had to be very quick to preserve this?

Thanks very much for the info and link.

Cheers, Colin.



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FossilDude
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Antw: Fish vertebrae?

Bericht door FossilDude » 04 sep 2015, 13:51

Hi Colin,

Actually, I've made a translation mistake in my response. Unfortunately, I misused the word 'spine'!

Your fossil is not a part of the spinal chord (vertabrae). I actually mean that it is the base of a thorn. The Thornback ray has a series of large thorns on its back (hence the name). These thorns are actually large (placoid) scales. In contrast to their spinal chord, the scales of rays and sharks are not from cartilage, but from the same material as there teeth (the placoid scales are also known as 'dermal denticles'.

Cheers,
Johan

[Edited by FossilDude on 04-09-2015 at 12:52 GMT +1]


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Colin Ashcroft
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Antw: Fish vertebrae?

Bericht door Colin Ashcroft » 04 sep 2015, 14:10

Hi Johan,

that's no problem. Even more fascinating to me that it comes from the base of a thorn. I have actually worked with Thornback rays in the past and I know exactly what you are talking about! A species you could feel many denticles scratch your hand if rubbed the wrong way is the Dogfish, a member of the shark family.

I wonder if there is a way of working out the size of the ray which my thorn came from? I measured the diameter to be approx 1.8 - 2.0 cm. I suppose there would be too many variables.

Thanks again for your expertise and time!

I'm going to post a couple more items. They might really be nothing but we can see!

Take care,

Colin.





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