BETA TEST - Fossil data and pages are very much experimental and under development. Please report any problems
Locality 34, Todd County, Kentucky, USA
Lat/Long (Decimal) | 36.95,-87.0875 |
---|---|
Co-ordinates Derivation | based on political unit |
Given Location | Kentucky, United States |
Mindat.org Region (for given coordinates) | Todd County, Kentucky, USA |
Collections
Collection | Reference | Stratigraphic Name | Comments | Lithology | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Locality 34, Haney Limestone, Todd Co., KY | Rodriguez J. (1960) | Haney Limestone | the Haney Limestone of Kentucky is equivalent to the Golconda of Indiana [JA: originally entered as "Middle Chester"; the Haney is more specifically Pendleian] | "limestone" | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Recorded Fossils
Accepted Name | Hierarchy | Age |
---|---|---|
Cleiothyridina sp. genus | Animalia : Brachiopoda : Rhynchonellata : Athyridida : Athyrididae : Cleiothyridina | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Prismopora sp. genus | Animalia : Bryozoa : Stenolaemata : Cystoporida : Hexagonellidae : Prismopora | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Archimedes sp. genus | Animalia : Bryozoa : Stenolaemata : Fenestrida : Fenestellidae : Archimedes | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Amplexizaphrentis sp. genus | Animalia : Cnidaria : Anthozoa : Hapsiphyllidae : Amplexizaphrentis | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Agassizocrinus sp. genus | Animalia : Echinodermata : Crinoidea : Agassizocrinidae : Agassizocrinus | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
Pentremites sp. genus | Animalia : Echinodermata : Pentremitidae : Pentremites | 326.4 - 318.1 Ma Carboniferous |
References
Rodriguez J. (1960) Invertebrate Fauna of the Golconda Formation (Middle Chester) of Indiana, Western Kentucky, and Southern Illinois, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, Indiana University, 1-259 |
Data courtesy of: PBDB: The Paleobiology Database, Creative Commons CC-BY licenced. , GBIF: the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, various licences, iDigBio, various licences, and EOL: The Encyclopedia of Life (Open Data Public Domain). Because fossils are made of minerals too!