MAKE A MEME View Large Image Hyolithes gallatinensis (USNM 35218) was collected from the Snowy Range Formation and is now reposited at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Hyolitha YELL-92021 was collected from the Pilgrim Limestone and is housed with ...
View Original:USNM_35218_Hyolithes_gallatinensis.jpg (4486x2984)
Download: Original    Medium    Small Thumb
Courtesy of:www.flickr.com More Like This
Keywords: texture USNM_35218 (pictured here) and YELL-92021: Hyolithes gallatinensis (USNM 35218) was collected from the Snowy Range Formation and is now reposited at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Hyolitha YELL-92021 was collected from the Pilgrim Limestone and is housed with the Yellowstone collection. Hyoliths do not resemble any living organism today making them very difficult to study. But, they were most likely ocean bottom dwellers and like trilobites became extinct at the end of the Permian. Collecting any natural resources, including rocks and fossils, is illegal in Yellowstone. Photo by Megan Norr; March 2016; Catalog #20790d; Original #USNM_35218 USNM_35218 (pictured here) and YELL-92021: Hyolithes gallatinensis (USNM 35218) was collected from the Snowy Range Formation and is now reposited at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Hyolitha YELL-92021 was collected from the Pilgrim Limestone and is housed with the Yellowstone collection. Hyoliths do not resemble any living organism today making them very difficult to study. But, they were most likely ocean bottom dwellers and like trilobites became extinct at the end of the Permian. Collecting any natural resources, including rocks and fossils, is illegal in Yellowstone. Photo by Megan Norr; March 2016; Catalog #20790d; Original #USNM_35218
Terms of Use   Search of the Day