Coral - Favosites sp.
Coral - Favosites sp.
Published 2018-11-02T14:27:22+00:00
Lovely example of the Silurian coral Favosites. This colony also has a number of other fossil remains on its surface including other corals and brachiopods. This specimen comes from Dudley, but is of the same age as material found on Wenlock Edge.
Favosites is an extinct genus of tabulate coral characterized by polygonal closely packed corallites (giving it the common name "honeycomb coral"). The walls between corallites are pierced by pores known as mural pores which allowed transfer of nutrients between polyps. Favosites, like all coral, throve in warm sunlit seas, forming colourful reefs, feeding by filtering microscopic plankton with their stinging tentacles. The genus had a worldwide distribution from the Late Ordovician to Late Permian
Imaged using a canon 5DS R and Stackshot 3x with turntable to provide 114 images which were then processed using agisoft photoscan at high levels.
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This object is scanned by Fossils in Shropshire
Date published | 02/11/2018 |
Title | Coral - Favosites sp. |
Date | circa 425 million years ago |
Dimension | 10.4cm x 9.4cm x 3.9cm |
Place | Fossils in Shropshire |