COLD DARK ROOM

JoesMum

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Here, too!!!!!!!!
Yaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
But it confuses the locals no end.
My Mum used to teach evening classes in rural communities. She had one lady who always had trouble with time-keeping after the clocks changed because her husband flatly refused to change them. Apparently it upset the cows so instead of changing his milking routine to an hour different the whole family had to try and work with their clocks and watches not telling the same time as the rest of the country.
 

Tidgy's Dad

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This is a fossil stalked barnacle or goose barnacle.
It has even preserved it's colour after 7 million years or so which is incredible.
20161028_225232.jpg
Most species of goose barnacle are patterned grey, or black and white, hence the name of the barnacle goose which has similar markings.
people thought that goose barnacles were the larvae of the geese!
20161028_225313.jpg
And in the broken section below we see some of the interior lophophore support, the internal structure that holds the filter feeding apparatus of the animal. All barnacles are actually distant relatives of shrimps, with their legs used as filter feeding tentacles and their body armour converted into the barnacle's armour. The larvae are still very shrimp like and mobile but the adults become fixed, or sessile, some anchored direct to a rock, or shell, others, like this goose barnacle,fixed by a stalk to the substrate.
20161028_225416.jpg
 

Tidgy's Dad

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48,539
Location (City and/or State)
Fes, Morocco
My Mum used to teach evening classes in rural communities. She had one lady who always had trouble with time-keeping after the clocks changed because her husband flatly refused to change them. Apparently it upset the cows so instead of changing his milking routine to an hour different the whole family had to try and work with their clocks and watches not telling the same time as the rest of the country.
Most of the Medina here never change their clocks.
It's called Medina time.
But the modern new town folk do. And i do.
4 times a year! (extra one back and forward for Ramadan).
 

Tidgy's Dad

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Fes, Morocco
And the pick of the fossils from Tarifa.
A beautiful bryozoan colony, an inch and a half across, wonderfully preserved. (though broken in two and glued back together by yours truly.)
It's a 'moss animal', a single, tiny, filter feeding animal lived in each of the tiny holes in it.
20161028_225651.jpg
And closer to see more detail.
20161028_225657.jpg
And closer still. Look at the amazing preservation of this fossil.
20161028_225701.jpg
And on the reverse more organic remains and some other bits of bryozoans, including a different species or two.
20161028_230319.jpg
All in all, a remarkable specimen.
Hooray!!!!!!!
 

Moozillion

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Louisiana, USA
This is a fossil stalked barnacle or goose barnacle.
It has even preserved it's colour after 7 million years or so which is incredible.
View attachment 190865
Most species of goose barnacle are patterned grey, or black and white, hence the name of the barnacle goose which has similar markings.
people thought that goose barnacles were the larvae of the geese!
View attachment 190866
And in the broken section below we see some of the interior lophophore support, the internal structure that holds the filter feeding apparatus of the animal. All barnacles are actually distant relatives of shrimps, with their legs used as filter feeding tentacles and their body armour converted into the barnacle's armour. The larvae are still very shrimp like and mobile but the adults become fixed, or sessile, some anchored direct to a rock, or shell, others, like this goose barnacle,fixed by a stalk to the substrate.
View attachment 190867
Fascinating!!!!!!!:)
 

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