[Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Thread Index] [Date Prev] [Date Next] [Date Index]

RE: paleonet Need some fun on this list



Such an approach would solve some of our museum and personal storage problems alright.  Get my desk cleaned up too.  Super glue work on fossils?   I'll just stick them on my office wall until it's filled up with old fossils, manuscripts and junk from the university. 

I will certainly take along my Geiger counter before I buy.  But check out the views!


At 03:59 PM 12/14/2005, you wrote:
This reminds me of the German university that solved part of its storage
problem by mortaring large fossil slabs (crinoids, ichthyosaurs, etc.)
directly into the walls of classrooms. It seems that, in the case at hand, a
collector not only solved his storage problem but even found a way to profit
from it.

I especially like the "large amethyst cave". It reminds me of "Jaws".

Say, Jere, is that yellow-green sandstone in the wall over the large
trilobite cemented with carnotite, or just epidote? I would suggest a radon
inspection before buying this house.

Andy

Andrew K. Rindsberg
Geological Survey of Alabama

-----Original Message-----
From: paleonet-owner@nhm.ac.uk [ mailto:paleonet-owner@nhm.ac.uk] On Behalf
Of Jere H. Lipps
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 8:13 AM
To: paleonet@nhm.ac.uk
Subject: paleonet Need some fun on this list


Here's something that may interest PaleoNetters that's a bit lighter and it
sure doesn't look like it involves ID --

A house of rocks and fossils:
http://calabashviews.com/DinosaurHouse/Minerals-Fossils.htm

And you can buy it for $2,800,000 more or less.   


--
No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG Free Edition.
Version: 7.1.371 / Virus Database: 267.13.13/199 - Release Date: 12/13/2005