DISSOLUTION (INTERNAL
MOLDS
& EXTERNAL MOLDS)
Many fossils of shelly organisms (e.g., bivalves,
gastropods, brachiopods, cephalopods) have had the original hard parts
dissolved away. In such cases, the fossil itself is an impression of the
outside of the shell (external mold) or an impression of the inside of
the shell (internal mold).
Hormotoma (Mollusca, Gastropoda, Archaeogastropoda, Murchisonioidea,
Murchisoniidae) (4.9 cm tall) - this fossil snail from eastern Iowa is preserved as an internal mold (=
the coiled portion; fine-grained sediment has filled up the originally-hollow
shell) and as an external mold (= the cavity in which the coil
sits). Note the gap between the external & internal molds - that's
where the original CaCO3 shell was.
Matrix:
weathered fossiliferous limestone
Stratigraphy: Galena Formation, upper Middle Ordovician to lower Upper Ordovician
Sthenarocalymene celebra (Arthropoda, Trilobita, Polymerida, Calymenidae) - this fossil calymenid trilobite specimen is a nice
example of dissolution. The trilobite is preserved as an internal mold
in Silurian dolostone from southwestern Ohio, USA. Most trilobites found
in dolostones are similarly preserved. This trilobite is Sthenarocalymene
celebra (Raymond, 1916). Over the years, trilobitologists haven’t
agreed on the proper generic assignment for celebra. The species
has been variously assigned to the genera Calymene, Gravicalymene,
Flexicalymene, and Sthenarocalymene.
Stratigraphy: Cedarville Dolomite, upper Lockport Group, upper Niagaran Series (=
upper Wenlockian Series), upper Middle Silurian
Bivalve internal mold (above & below; 4.9 cm across)
Above:
impression of interior of right valve. Anterior is to the right.
Below:
view of hingeline and umbo/beak. Anterior is to the right.
This fossil bivalve well displays the effects of
dissolution. The bivalve’s shell is gone, and all that’s left is an
internal mold, representing sediment that filled up the space between the
clam’s two valves. Note the absence of ornament or growth lines - a good
indicator of dissolution.