Product Description
While many prehistoric fish dominate fossil market, this authentic prehistoric bony fish is definitely scarce and one of the earliest of its kind, dating to well before the vast majority of fossil fish usually offered for sale. This fish lived well before the dinosaurs and was alive even in the last days of trilobites! No fossil collection should be absent such a unique specimen.
This fossil Paramblypterus duvernoyi is an early bony fish with unique anatomy. Out of all the specimens we have offered and handled, this one stands out as having much longer and larger fins than any other we have seen. This example displays detailed preservation of the complete fish with the original shale on which it was found. The Paramblypterus was a primitive fish that had an asymmetrical tail. The longer upper lobe had a small edge of fin outlining a fleshy tail covered with heavy armor scales, like the rest of the body. The close-up image shows fin and scale detail of this unique anatomy. The fossil's original dark hue is original. The stone is original and displays a beautifully colored combination of naturally occurring layers of shale to contrast with the fossil.
HISTORY
The Paramblypterus fish was a primitive osteichthyan (bony fish) and a member of the actinopterygians or ray-finned fish. Now extinct, Paramblypterus duvernoyi possessed some very primitive features, most notably, its shark-like tail with a fleshy upper lobe. To put in perspective just how old the Paramblypterus is, these primitive fish were around well before the very first dinosaurs, when trilobites still existed on our planet!
SPECIAL NOTE: The laws in this region of Germany have forbid the collection of these remarkable fossils since 1986. Such legislation has permanently ended the supply of such magnificent specimens such as this one being offered here. This rare example comes from an old German private collection and was collected long ago before the ban was enacted. With digging in the formation now off-limits, these German Permian fossils are sure to appreciate in value and become increasingly difficult to acquire.