Good morning, it was an early shelling adventure this time! I found wentletraps and cowries as well; I found several uncommon cowries in absolutely lovely condition! Limpets, moon snails, microshells, wentletraps, and of course the top favourite for the day; a Red-lined Bubble shell, how exciting! Looking back at this, I think my mouth hadn't woken up to my brains thoughts... sorry if I sound a little off on this one. Thanks for watching~
Let me know which ones were your favourites ;D and if you enjoyed this and want to see more shell finding videos, I'd appreciate a like or a comment. I read all of them and try to reply when I can. You have no idea how much of a smile you guys put on my face. Thanks everyone!
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Want to become a shell nerd too, or found something you want to ID?
Here's some useful links for local shellers:
Shells of SE Queensland: www.seqshells....
(Some listings have multiple variations of a single shell species)
Shells of NSW: seashellsofnsw...
(Check out the illustrations or "plates" to try and match your finds)
Links for less local folks...
Check out the shell families on Femorale, it's a wonderful resource:
www.femorale.co...
(but doesn't include location information, so might lead to mis-identifications)
You can join this Facebook group for ID advice, just snap a photo and post it:
/ 1490883467609774
(Always take the advice/ID with some scepticism... these people are not experts)
You can also try the Conchology website, but it's a little harder to use:
conchology.be/...
Oh no, they're all scientific names? No worries, just type the scientific name
into the Queensland Museum Network database. It might have a common name listed!
collections.qm...
(This works for non Australian shells too! Just check/click on the result to see limited info)
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