Contact us about 120 Million Year Old Split Ammonite Pair

This remarkable natural history specimen is a split Cleoniceras ammonite pair, originating from the Cretaceous period and dating back approximately 120 million years. These ancient marine cephalopods were the distant, multi tentacled relatives of the modern octopus and squid, though they navigated prehistoric oceans within beautifully coiled shells. This specific pair has been expertly sliced in half and polished to reveal a mirror image view of its internal architecture, providing a rare glimpse into a creature that thrived long before the first flower ever bloomed on Earth. The interior of the shell is a masterclass in geometric efficiency, showcasing the intricate internal chambers, or septa, that the ammonite once used to regulate its buoyancy. While the living animal occupied only the largest, outermost chamber, the others were filled with gas or fluid to help it float like a prehistoric submarine. Over millions of years, these once hollow voids have been mineralized, often filling with calcite or agate, which creates a stunning contrast against the dark, fossilized walls of the shell.

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Contact us

Hemswell Antique Centres,
Caenby Corner Estate, Hemswell Cliff,
Gainsborough,
Lincolnshire,
DN21 5TJ,
United Kingdom
Call us on 01427 668 389