Turbidite sequence
Nice little fault
Thick shale bed
Some of the oldest soft bodied fossils known.
Shrimp burrows
The lighthouse on Hook Head
Bunch of fossils in a limestone sequence we logged
Huge crinoid stems. The head of the fossil was stolen
several years ago by some German geologists. They came
by boat with an angle grinder and stole two pieces.
Bummer that it is gone.
My buddy John Duggan and the lighthouse
Zach
small crinoid head
Large gravelly channel that cuts through some nice red sandstone
Sun rise on the Dorset coast. The view that we arrived to.
Zach trying to recoup a little.
A town with fossil industry
Some of the biggest ammonites in the world
Very stunning
Irish and French relations
My friend Neasa
Cast of a tree. They fossilized trees were found in place.
They were subsequently removed and now sit around
a hotel.
MX
'The Broken Beds'. An series of evaporite beds that
lost all evaporites due to fluid influx and subsequently
collapsed.
My friend Kev
Another tree cast. The large bulb near it is a stromatolite.
A large algal dome that grew around the tree when
the area was covered by sea water.
Rob
A new bay
The lads
Ed Jarvis, our professor
Zach and some ammonite zones
Sunset
John and Kev aiding in erosion
Wow-- great looking rocks and those fossils are amazing- especially the ammonite (wow!). Looks like you're getting lotsa lovely coast time... (i'm happily jealous, so enjoy!)
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