Any ?piston heads geologists?
Any ?piston heads geologists?
Author
Discussion

Benengo

Original Poster:

647 posts

219 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Cool story I know... but I was walking the dog and found this rock:



Any idea what type it is? Looks like sandstone on the outside and flint on the inside.






YankeePorker

4,820 posts

257 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Flint nodule, but cool shape.

TTwiggy

11,793 posts

220 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
I think it's one of those 'part-baked' baguettes. The other thing is a can of coke. HTH.

allegro

1,230 posts

220 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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You know how they used to bulk out dog food with bone dust.....well.....

KP328

1,875 posts

211 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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Worst 'i wear a Rolex' post ever wink

eldar

24,055 posts

212 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
YankeePorker said:
Flint nodule, but cool shape.
Looks exactly like it. Cretaceous dildo, perhaps?

Jimmy Recard

17,547 posts

195 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
KP328 said:
Worst 'i wear a Rolex' post ever wink
Damn, I wanted to do that one frown

Lynchie999

3,543 posts

169 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
YankeePorker said:
Flint nodule, but cool shape.
what he said... flint / chert nodule... forms in limestone / chalk ... etc..


Roofless Toothless

6,613 posts

148 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
I studied geology and oceanography in a previous incarnation (well, feels like it anyway) and it certainly looks like a flint nodule from the chalk, but the second picture seems to show a kind of central core to it. This me wonder if it could possibly have formed around a belemnite fossil.

Your profile puts you in Bristol, which is a bit far from the chalk outcrops in the south, but flints do get everywhere. Having said this, it is a very unlikely shape to have travelled any great distance.

normalbloke

8,101 posts

235 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Is it a fossilised sausage from many years ago? Are there any hammer marks on the end?

Dogwatch

6,329 posts

238 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
It was a trial run for a high-street peddler of sausage rolls which went wrong, was thrown away and fossilised due to being inedible. yuck

HTH



Benengo

Original Poster:

647 posts

219 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Roofless Toothless said:
I studied geology and oceanography in a previous incarnation (well, feels like it anyway) and it certainly looks like a flint nodule from the chalk, but the second picture seems to show a kind of central core to it. This me wonder if it could possibly have formed around a belemnite fossil.

Your profile puts you in Bristol, which is a bit far from the chalk outcrops in the south, but flints do get everywhere. Having said this, it is a very unlikely shape to have travelled any great distance.
I'm currently living in the south of the netherlands near the border between germany and belgium so that might fit the bill...Off to google 'flint nodules' and 'cretaceous dildos' now.

eharding

14,549 posts

300 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
quotequote all
Dogwatch said:
It was a trial run for a high-street peddler of sausage rolls which went wrong, was thrown away and fossilised due to being inedible. yuck

HTH
Could it...actually...be the original sausage-roll that was brought to the infant Jesus in a Bethlehem stable?

Somebody phone Robert Langdon.....and somebody owes Greggs a *huge* apology.

Simpo Two

89,225 posts

281 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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Maybe send the photos to http://www.sedgwickmuseum.org/

The Dangerous Elk

4,642 posts

93 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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LOL, miss read the thread title as Gynaecologist

Beati Dogu

9,284 posts

155 months

Thursday 16th November 2017
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Topical $450m sausage roll.