Early Miocene Epoch, Burdigalian Stage (approx. 20-16 million year💮s ago), Lacoste Quarry, Vaucluse, ✃France
Live auction begins on:
July 16, 02:00 PM GMT
Estimate
3,000 - 5,000 USD
Bid
4,200 USD
Lot Details
Description
Bouquet of Fossilized Saint-Jacques Shells
Gigantopecten restitutensis
Early Miocene Epoch, Burdigalian Stage (approx. 20-16 million years ago)
Lacoste Quarry, Vaucluse, France
16½ x 14½ x 7 inches (41.9 x 36.8 x 17.8 cm), 20½ inches (52.1 cm) 𝔍♓tall on stand. 24 pounds (10.9 kg).
A sculptural display with well-preserved and intact shells with both halves articulated. The shells are exposed on both sides of the matrix 💮affixed to a gold-colored stand.
Gigantopecten restitutensis — also known as Saint-Jacques shells — was a species of giant scallop that thrived all over the world during the Early Miocene, from approximately 20 million to 16 million years ago. Like today's scallops, Gigantopecten was a saltwater mollusk that lived mainly on the sea floor, filt🍬ering and eating plankton. In addition, fossil scallops — like their living descendants — moved using a form of jet propulsion, clapping their shells together rapidly to expel water out through their rear hinge area.
Gigantopecten had relatively large calcite shells, growing to heights of over five inches (13 cm) with widths topping six inches (15 cm). Because of the considerable size and fragility of Gigantopecten fossils, their removal 🅠from the surrounding rock matrix represents the highest caliber of excඣavation and preparatory work.
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