BAC21-10
Pyrite ps. Baculites yokayamai
State Bridge area, Eagle Co., Colorado, USA
Large Cabinet, 25.4 x 6.8 x 2.8 cm
$9,500.00 Payment Plan Available
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At 25 cm tip to tip, this elegant specimen of golden metallic fossil replacement is one of the largest single organisms found at the locality and preserved as a good specimen. The piece stands dramatically (on a custom base, we can make for it) and just demands attention because it looks so strange - immediately seen as neither purely mineral in shape or purely fossil in color. It is impactful for the size and straight symmetry. The top has small crystals of pyrite formed above and on the fossil, draping part of the upper 4 cm of growth. We have not obtained any larger than this, from processing of literally tons of raw rock material from this old stash. These formed from simple chemical processes over time as with several other famous finds of mineralized fossils, given the right conditions in the ground as the soft mud turns to soft stone and then hard stone that entombed the pyrite within: decaying organic matter (the Baculite) provided the Sulfur necessary to react with iron in the environment (likely water rich in iron trickling down when the rock was still porous) and caused iron sulfides (Pyrite) to precipitate and force their way out into the stone as they grew, followed by the whole thing being preserved in rock. All of the pyrite found here is actually associated with the same process, even if you do not see a fossil with it (it would have nucleated the pyrite cluster, in any case). These particular specimens represent some of the best of the best of the best, found over 40 years of painstaking searching and filling trucks with ugly black rock to see what is inside, collected by amateur paleontologist and mineral preparator Bill Hawes. They have been expertly worked out of the encasing stone to show the beauty within and make for fabulous mineral/fossil specimens that are simply unique to this location. Please note, due to the physical process of removing the rock carefully around the pyrite, that the specimens are repaired and/or stabilized.