if you haven’t done so before, could you do the chambered nautilus please?
Have you seen the chambered nautilus (Nautilus pompilius)?
I have now
Yes, in photos/videos
Yes, irl
I'm not sure

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if you haven’t done so before, could you do the chambered nautilus please?
Have you seen the chambered nautilus (Nautilus pompilius)?
I have now
Yes, in photos/videos
Yes, irl
I'm not sure

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Although the only nautiloids living today have characteristic tightly coiled shells, earlier in their evolutionary history these cephalopods were much more diverse.
And Glossoceras gracile here is an example of one of the more unusual groups of nautloids: the ascocerids.
Living during the Late Silurian, about 422 million years ago, in wheat is now Gotland, Sweden, Glossoceras was only around 5cm long as an adult (~2"). Like other ascocerids it started out its life looking like a fairly standard early nautiloid, with a long straight shell that curved slightly upwards, but as it approached maturity things got weird – the front part of the shell grew out into a much more bulbous flask-like shape, and the old juvenile section broke off entirely.
The gas-filled buoyancy chambers of its adult shell were positioned directly above its body chamber rather than behind like in other nautiloids, giving it very good stability in the water. The shell walls were also very thin and lightweight, which would have made it a much more maneuverable swimmer.
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Umbeloceras
Phragmoceras
Look at the darker spots, could it be pigment telling us about this creatures original pattern?
The shell doesn’t seem to be intact on the other side so my guess is that this side was preserved thanks to being buried in sediment.
Found this one in Ireviken, Gotland, Sweden
Cymatoceras paralibanoticum

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Almost-Living Fossils Month #12 -- The Other Nautiluses
Nautiloids are represented today by just two living genera (Nautilus and Allonautilus), but they have a lengthy evolutionary history going back almost 500 million years.
The peak of their diversity was during the first half of the Paleozoic, with many different shapes of shells from coiled to straight, then they began to decline when their relatives the ammonites and coleoids appeared and began to compete for similar ecological niches. Although a few groups of nautiloids survived through the end-Permian mass extinction, most of them had disappeared by the end of the Triassic, leaving just one major remaining lineage known as the Nautilina (or Nautilaceae).
During the mid-to-late Jurassic (~165 mya) two new groups split away from the ancestors of the modern nautiluses -- the cymatoceratids and the hercoglossids.
Cymatoceratids such as Cymatoceras sakalavum here had shells with a ribbed texture. Living during the Early Cretaceous, about 112-109 million years ago, this particular species is known from Japan and Madagascar and could reach a shell diameter of over 15cm (6″).
Hercoglossids, meanwhile, were much more smooth in appearance, but both groups also had more complex undulating sutures between their internal chambers than modern nautiluses do.
These nautiluses made it through the end-Cretaceous mass extinction and had a brief period of renewed success, filling the ecological roles left vacant by the extinct ammonites. But by the end of the Oligocene (~23 mya) both the cymatoceratids and hercoglossids vanished, possibly unable to deal with cooling oceans and the evolution of new predators.
Some of the hercoglossids’ Cenozoic descendants, the aturiids, managed to last a little longer into the Early Pliocene (~5 mya) before another period of cooling seems to have finished them off. Past that point, all that was left of the once-massive nautiloid lineage were their cousins the nautilids, who gave rise to today’s few living representatives.
(It’s also worth noting that the classification of the cymatoceratids seems to be in flux right now. Some paleontologists currently don’t consider Cymatoceras itself to actually be part of the group, instead being a nautilid much closer related to modern nautiluses. If this is the case then the cymatoceratids may not have actually survived past the Late Cretaceous -- but the Cymatoceras genus alone still counts as an “almost-living” fossil since its various species ranged from the Late Jurassic to the Late Oligocene.)
Octameroceras sinosum.
Little story about this cephalopod.
When I was done fossil hunting for the day and was sorting through my finds I forgot to put this little beauty back in the bag and went home without it. Returned some days later when I realised my mistake. Luckily it was still there waiting for me. The end.
It’s about 6 cm.
Hemse beds, Gotland, Sweden.
Why does he look like an orthocereas nautiloidea from the ordovician