Showing 120 items matching fossils
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Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Small mudstone with leaf fragments
8347.1 - Small, almost ovoid piece of mudstone showing partial fossil leaves. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Flat mudstone with plant jumble
8336.1 - Quite thin mudstone containing a jumble of fossil wood and plant matter. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with plant fragments
8319.1 - Elongate piece of mudstone containing numerous fossil wood and leaf fragments. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with leaf fossils
8421.1 - Rectangular wedge-shaped piece of mudstone showing numerous fossil leaves -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with fossilised leaves
8341.1 - Large grey mudstone, one face showing several parallel fossil leaves. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with leaves and plant matter
8338.1 - Flat thin grey mudstone containing numerous leaves and woody fossil material. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Concrestion with fossils
8314.1 - Irregularly shaped stone containing large concretion and numerous carbonised plant fossils. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with fossil
8332.1 - Flat, roughly rhomboid mudstone showing prominent partial fossil of spiny animal (most likely), possibly a polychaete worm. (still possible it is merely a plant fragment). Surface shows striations likely from working to uncover fossil. -
Orbost & District Historical Society
fossil
Inspected by George Rawlings 6.2.2013.Fossils are among the most valuable sources of information about the Earth's history.A large oyster shell fossil from the Miocene Era. There is evidence of borers. It is a Mother-of-Pearl flap.oyster fossil mother-of-pearl miocene -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Small mudstone with plant fragments
8328.1 - Small concave-convex "shell-like" mudstone fragment showing fossil plant fragments. -
Anglesea and District Historical Society
Fossil
Estimated date: c. 40 million years ago.Fossil cycad frond. Name: Pterostoma Zamioiedes Hill (possibly in the Zamiaceae family or even a separate one).cycad, pterostoma zamioiedes hill, alcoa power station -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with leaves and fragments
8353.1 - Irregular- tending-oval mudstone showing partial leaf and small woody/leafy fossil fragments. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with wood
8351.1 - Flattened, roughly trapezoidal mudstone showing surface of fossil wood, adjacent patch of darker mudstone. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Large mudstone with leaves
8344.1 - Large piece of grey mudstone showing fossil leaves, some large, of at least 3 species. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstones with plants and concretion
8331.1 - Irregularly shaped elongate piece of mudstone showing numerous plant fossil fragments, most prominently. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone showing leaves
8324.1 - Overall angular mudstone with one face showing two small but well-formed leaf fossils -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Large mudstone with jumbled fossils
8322.1 - Large, flattened, almost square mudstone numerous but poorly distinguished fragments of fossil plants and wood. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Small mudstone fragments
8321.1 - Small, near-spherical pieces of mudstone showing (poor quality) fragments of fossil plant matter. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone showing prominent leaves
8320.1 - Roughly prismatic pieces of mudstones, clearly showing on one face numerous plant leaf fossils. -
Stawell Historical Society Inc
Fossil's
... Fossils ...Alan Tangey returned with them after working as a survey technician from Stawell area and given to children.Reputed to be Fossilised Eggs and 8 Pieces of wood, also 1 piece of Fossilsed Coral. Probably Fossilised Plant Roots Formed by Cementing Around Roots by minerals such as Calcium. Coral may have come from coastal survey work or holidays. fossils, children -
Glenelg Shire Council Cultural Collection
Print, Allan Mann, Ikon to a Fossil King, c. 1982
NoneAbstract image. Centre image is a human (shown without skin) climbing a narrow mound/hill form. At the top is a screen supported by three poles. The screen reproduces a photograph of what appears to be a classical narrative bas-relief sculpture. On each side of the hill are Celtic and Norse carvings/gilded artefacts/metalworks mounted on long poles. Abstract could patterns are at the top of the print. No matt. Silver metal frame.Front: 1/10 (lower left) Ikon to a Fossil King (lower centre) Allan Mann (lower right) (pencil) Back: (no inscriptions) -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with wood
8348.1 - Roughly triangle-sided prism in shape; pieces of fossil wood; one face seems to have slip-surfaces. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with woody fragments
8334.1 - Roughly oblong in shape mudstone with large woody plant fossil on one face, and small woody fragments on others. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with plant fragments
8325.1 - Flattened mudstones, shaped like a square with one corner smoothly shaved away, and showing low-quality wood fossils -
Orbost & District Historical Society
shells, Lavell, Edgar and Alan, first half 20th century
Shells were collected by Edgar lavell and son, alan.The fossils paint a vivid picture of life below a sea that once covered parts of East Gippsland. They reflect the geological history of the area.Square shaped wooden display case with glass front. Holds a collection of fossil shells on cork. Shells are from the Middle Miocene Age.shells natural-history middle-miocene fossils -
Greensborough Historical Society
Newspaper Clipping, Commuters support move to eco-friendly Vehicles and Cars, 02/12/2015
A community group supported Banyule Council's move to stop directly investing in companies allied to fossil fuels.News clipping, black text, colour image. Date written on pagemontmorency community group, banyule city council -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with plant fossils
8340.1 - Grey, triangular, mid-large, thin mudstone contains carbonised plant fossils, most prominently a small, partial, but well preserved frond. -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Large piece of mudstone with fossils
8318.1 - Roughly rectangular mudstone with fragments of fossil wood and plant matter, notably large ovoid cross section through a piece of fossilised wood. -
Orbost & District Historical Society
fossil, Devonian Age 419.2–358.9 million years ago
Found at the Pyramids , Buchan. Inspected by George Rawlings on 6.2.2013.A heavily calcified fossil rock. Genus Spinella Buchanesis . Devonian age 419.2–358.9 million years ago. It contains blastoids from the echinoid family.fossil spinella buchan devonian -
Coal Creek Community Park & Museum
Mudstone with leaves
8352.1 - Irregularly-shaped mudstone with some waved faces, displaying partial leaf fossils, prominently a nearly-totally carbonised taeniopteris leaf on one face.