This is an example of Dendraster ashleyi or Dandraster gibbsii; we believe the two are synonymous. This is one of the most common fossil sand dollars found in Santa Cruz. There are some other specimens from our area that look more closely like Dendraster excentricus but those are extremely rare, only two specimens are known, and there is another species in a different genus called Scuttellaster of the species oregonensis that are found more commonly in the south bay but these are beautiful fossils; They are all extinct species, no longer living today, and they are gorgeous to find along the beach especially in the strand line, and just very beautiful. The genus Dendraster living today out in the Bay form big colonies on the bottom of the ocean if you dive down under surface you can see them there forming a purple carpet, all nestled in the sand at about a 45-degree angle. Here's one of the living species on the left hand side and on the right is the fossil, probably ancestral to the modern one.
#paleontologist, #paleontology, #SantaCruz #santacruzcounty #pacificpaleontology
Pacific Paleontology #FossilFriday #beachfossils #fossils #fossilhunting
#fieldworkresearch #beachcombing #santacruzmuseum #montereybay
#scmnh #universityofcaliforniamuseumofpaleontology #ucmp
#californiaacademyofsciences #academyofsciences #ucmpberkeley
#lacmip #nhmla #fosssilprep #paleo #purisima #PurisimaFormation #sanddollar
#fosssilprep #paleo #purisima