Chesapecten jeffersonius
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chesapecten Jeffersonius | ||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chesapecten jeffersonius (inside)
|
||||||||||||||
Conservation status | ||||||||||||||
Fossil
|
||||||||||||||
Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Chesapecten Jeffersonius (Say, 1824) |
Chesapecten Jeffersonius is the state fossil of the U.S. state of Virginia. It is the fossilized form of an extinct scallop, which lived in the early Pliocene epoch between four and five million years ago on Virginia's coastal plain. In 1687, Martin Lister published a drawing of the fossil and then it became the first fossil to be described from North America.
In 1824, geologist John Finch gathered a large collection of mollusk fossils, including Chesapecten jeffersonius, from the vicinity of Yorktown, Virginia, and gave them to scientists at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANSP).
Scientist Thomas Say, at ANSP, described the species and named it Pecten jeffersonius to honor Thomas Jefferson.