Late Cretaceous✨ (approx. 71 million years ago), Bearpaw Formation, Alberta, Canada
Auction Closed
July 17, 03:28 PM GMT
Estimate
25,000 - 35,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Iridescent Ammonite on Matrix
Placenticeras costatum
Late Cretaceous (approx. 71 million years ago)
Bearpaw Formation, Alberta, Canada
Ammonite specimen measures 16¾ x 14¾ inches (42.5 x 37.5 cm), r⛄ock matrix measures 34½ x 26⅜ x 5 inches (88 x 67 x 12.7 cm). 112 pounds (50.8 kg).
Beautifully cleaned and polished ammonite shell displayಌed on matrix. The black rock slab is rigged for wall hanging.
A STUNNING RAINBOW AMMONITE ON MATRIX
Placenticeras ("flat horn") was a fast-swimming, carnivorous cephalopod — a taxonomic class that includes present-day nautilus, oct🐽opus, and squid. Much like a submarine, ammonites employed gas- and liquid-filled chambers to regulate their position in the water column. The animal itself lived only in the outermost compartment, employing its tubular siphuncle to connect its chambers along the shell's ventral surface.
While dinosaurs ruled the land during the Late Cretaceous, Placenticeras flourished in the oceans and spanned the globe. However, the vast majority of these animals resided in the Western Interior Seaway, an ocean that cut North America in half from the Arctic Circle to what is now the Gulf of Mexico. In ideal circumstances for preservation, a recently-deceased ammonite would sink to the bottom of the sea and become covered in sediment. Over time, its muddy tomb would eventually become converted to shale, and it is these ancient shale deposits in the Canadian Rockies that yield the world's most significant — and only gem-quality — ammolite deposits.
Along𒁃 with amber and pearl, ammolite is one of the world's only biogenic gems. Resembling inorganic opal, it is found exclusively in the shells of ammonites that have undergone the𒉰 fossilization process known as permineralization.
The quality of gem ammolite is determined by a number of factors, first and foremost being its number of primary colors: reds and greens are somewhat more common, whereas blues and purples are much more rare. Also of great significance is the range of the ammolite's chromatic shift, graded by the way its colors change in hue and intensity as they diffract 🔴light when viewed from different angles. Lastly, the ammolite's magnitude of iridescence impacts its quality and value, with the finest specimens displaying large and uninterrupted swaths of lustrous, rainbow-like colors.
The Placenticeras costatum offered here ranks highly on all of these metrics, making it literally a shimmering example of aꦍn ammonite from Canada's world-renowned Bearpaw Foꦯrmation.
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