Fossil Snail Cluster - 4.47"
Fossil Snail Cluster - 4.47"
Fossils are often the remains of a solitary creature, but sometimes they are dramatic scenes of our entire ecosystem, preserved forever. These mass mortality fossils form when a group of animals is wiped out in a cataclysm, an image of their sudden extinction but also a preservation of how they lived.
This specimen is a fossil snail cluster measuring 4.47". This is a mass mortality fossil, preserving the remains of an Elimia tenera colony, dated to 48 million years ago. Found in the Green River Formation in Wyoming, these fossil snails are estimated to number in the billions.
📸 Some examples of fossil snail clusters
a snapshot of a changing ecosystem
These specimens are fossil snail clusters found in the Green River Formation, a formation built up by two freshwater lakes during the Eocene epoch. These pieces are preserved mass mortality events, a quick die-off of a colony of snails preserved forever. They date to around 48 million years ago.
📸 A typical fossil snail cluster in hand
Sometimes known by the misnomer Turritella agate, these snails are actually Elimia tenera, a freshwater snail that flourished in the Green River lakes, rising to a population that numbered in the billions. Their reign was cut shot when a shifting climate collapsed their environment, leaving behind these incredible paleontological specimens.
Each fossil snail cluster is a unique item and are sold individually by size. Each ships in a sturdy shipping container along with a certificate of authenticity. You can find all of our current fossil snail clusters specimens in the collection below.
📸 A sample fossil snail cluster specimen
MORE ABOUT FOSSIL SNAIL CLUSTERS
📸 A cluster of fossil snail clusters
One trillion snails...
These fascinating specimens are clusters of Elimia tenera snails from the Green River Formation of Wyoming. This geologic deposit formed from two extinct lakes: Lake Gosiute and Lake Unita, around 50 million years ago. Because of its formation pattern, Green River has been a boon of extinct freshwater specimens, Elimia tenera among them.
The abundance of such life made such snail colonies vulnerable to group dieoffs, now preserved in mass mortalities plates such as these. Based on the average density of these snail clusters, one estimate says that the formation holds one trillion fossil shells.
📸 When cut, these clusters reveal the shells' insides
These group specimens are often known as “Turritella agate,” but this name is misleading. Turritella is a genus of sea snails that did not live in the freshwater deposits of the Green River formation, but “Turritella agate” has come to be used as common lingo for any such snail cluster.
The difference between the two genera can be found in their shells, with Turritella having a long and thinner shell and then its freshwater cousins, whose shells are also axial and spiral shaped but a bit stouter.
📸 Fossil snail cluster as a display piece
Adding to the confusion around supposed “Turitella agate” are the different classifications used for the snails found in Green River, with both the Elimia and Goniobasis names being used in the past, now synonymized under Elimia. Additionally, these snail foster “agates” are no such thing.
While these snails are surrounded in chalcedony, a crystalline form of quartz, its formation is not banded and thus not real agate. Names aside, fossil snail clusters such as these are incredible specimens, a snapshot of an ancient colony of long-extinct gastropods.
Further Reading
Allmon, Warren D. “The Natural (and Not-So-Natural) History of ‘Turritella Agate.’” Rocks & Minerals, vol. 84, no. 2, 2009, pp. 160–65, https://doi.org/10.3200/RMIN.84.2.160-165.
Smith, Michael Elliot., and Alan R. Carroll, editors. Stratigraphy and Paleolimnology of the Green River Formation, Western USA Edited by Michael Elliot Smith, Alan R. Carroll. 1st ed. 2015., Springer Netherlands, 2015, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-9906-5.
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