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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Botryllopora from Sylvania

A fairly rare Bryozoan from the Silica Shale at Sylvania is Botryllopora. It is found encrusting shells and other hard surfaces and has a star shaped look to it. Here it's covering part of a Strophodonta shell.




This is a different shell where the Bryozoan has colonized a flipped over Strophodonta shell.


It even grew onto the other side at one point, maybe the shell got flipped again?




This Bryozoan reminds me of a similar looking genera called Constellaria that is found in Ordovician aged rocks.


I'm labeling my specimens Botryllopora socialis based on the 1975 book by Robert V. Kesling & Ruth B. Chilman: Strata and Megafossils of the Middle Devonian Silica Formation: Museum of Paleontology, Papers on Paleontology, No. 8, pg. 62, pl. 18.

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