This Specimen has been sold.
27.7" Green River Fossil Fish Display with Mioplosus - Wall Mount
Due to the size and weight of this piece it will be shipped on a pallet or in a crate via freight. Our website cannot automatically calculate freight shipping costs, so these costs will be calculated and billed after purchase. Please contact us prior to purchase if you need a shipping quote.
This is an impressive fossil fish "mural" from the Green River Formation. It was collected from Warfield Quarry outside of Kemmerer, Wyoming. The entire mural measures 27.7 x 21.75" and features a 10.1" wide Mioplosus labracoides, a 5.05" wide Diplomystus dentatus fish, and 12 Knightia eocaena fish (ranging from 3.3" to 3.9"). All of the Knightia fish were naturally preserved in this layer, with only two fish having been inlaid into the rock (Mioplosus and Diplomystus).
The entire piece has been backed with wood for stability and upon request we can add wall mounting hardware at no additional cost. It weighs just over 29 lbs and will be shipped in a wooden crate on a pallet.
About Fossil Lake
50 million years ago, in the Eocene epoch, these fish thrived in Fossil Lake, which was fed by the Uinta and Rocky Mountain highlands. The anoxic conditions at the bottom of Fossil Lake slowed bacterial decomposition, prevented scavengers from disturbing corpses, and, most interestingly, suffocated creatures that ventured into the oxygen-starved aquatic layer. The result is a miraculous exhibition of Eocene biota: a subtropical aquatic community within sycamore forests, teeming with creatures such as freshwater stingrays, dog-sized horses, menacing alligators, early flying bats, and one of the first primates.
50 million years ago, in the Eocene epoch, these fish thrived in Fossil Lake, which was fed by the Uinta and Rocky Mountain highlands. The anoxic conditions at the bottom of Fossil Lake slowed bacterial decomposition, prevented scavengers from disturbing corpses, and, most interestingly, suffocated creatures that ventured into the oxygen-starved aquatic layer. The result is a miraculous exhibition of Eocene biota: a subtropical aquatic community within sycamore forests, teeming with creatures such as freshwater stingrays, dog-sized horses, menacing alligators, early flying bats, and one of the first primates.
SPECIES
Mioplosus labracoides, Knightia eocaena & Diplomystus dentatus
LOCATION
Fossil Safari Quarry, Kemmerer, Wyoming
FORMATION
Green River Formation
SIZE
Rock: 27.7 x 21.75", Mioplosus: 10.1" long, Diplomystus: 5.05" long
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#280229
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