A Superb Museum Quality example of Dominican Amber.
An Uber rare truie iconic inclusion of a female ant
carrying an ant larva,
along with an ant pupae in authentic Dominican Amber
this specimen have been examined by paleoentomologists at the
American Museum of Natural History in New York City
DR8668AnyCarryingLarva
$1,300.00 No Reserve
Description A101
DR8668 An uber rare true iconic inclusion of a
female ant carrying an ant larva, along with ant
pupae in an Authentic
Dominican Amber Gemstone. This is the first one
we've seen in person after looking at Dominican
amber for more than 25 years - an uber rare iconic
inclusion!
A really fabulous authentic Dominican Amber
Gemstone. |
Dominican Amber From Iturralde-Vincent and Macphee “The age and depositional history of Dominican amber-bearing deposits have not been well constrained. Resinites of different ages exist in Hispaniola, but all of the main amberiferous deposits in the Dominican Republic (including those famous for yielding biological inclusions) were formed in a single sedimentary basin during the late Early Miocene through early Middle Miocene (15 to 20 million years ago), according to available biostratigraphic and paleogeographic data. There is little evidence for extensive reworking or redeposition, in either time or space. The brevity of the depositional interval (less than 5 million years) provides a temporal benchmark that can be used to calibrate rates of molecular evolution in amber taxa.” In the Dominican Republic, Hymenaea trees are called Algorrobo. The Hymenaea tree exudes vast amounts of resin which over millions of years of pressure hardens into amber. Generally amber is found because a landslide along a steep slope in the mountains exposes veins of black lignite. If the lignite contains amber it is gradually extracted by digging along the vein with picks and shovels. After the amber is found it is chiseled by hand out of the shaft walls, put into burlap sacks and passed out of the mine where it is separated from the rock by machete. Larger chunks of amber make it possible to view inclusions almost immediately by holding the amber up to sunlight to determine if a large inclusion has been discovered. Fossil bearing amber is polished locally. |
Shipping and Insurance Within
the
USA
- $8.00 shipping and insurance - we ship all specimens US
Postal Service Priority Mail. |
Payment Payment is required within 7 days of the end of the auction. We Accept Pay Pal. Multiple items can of course be combined for one shipping cost. We ship all specimens upon receipt of payment. Pay us Instantly and Securely with Pay Pal - fast, easy, and secure payments for all of your purchases! |
About Us We
have been collecting amber in the field and prepping rough
fossil amber specimens since 1993. Photographs of our
specimens have appeared in National Geographic, Nature,
Science, Scientific American, Discover, Time, Newsweek,
The New York Times and others. We have been featured in
BBC’s production, PaleoWorld's The Amber Hunters. We offer
authentic museum quality Dominican and Burmese (Burmite)
Amber display specimens of rare insects in amber and also
authentic rare rough unprepared amber for sale. We have
traveled many times to the Dominican Republic where we
have chiseled beautiful amber gemstones out of the lignite
layers deep in the amber mines north of Santiago. We have
excavated in the Palo Quemado and Los CaCaos blue amber
mines and also in La Nueva Toca and the world famous La
Toca amber mines way up in the mountains north of
Santiago. For many years we have extensively collected mid
Cretaceous New Jersey amber in the Raritan formation of
central New Jersey and have traveled many times to collect
late Cretaceous and early Paleocene amber in the Hanna
formation of eastern Wyoming. We have collected mid
Cretaceous amber in the Black Creek formation of eastern
North Carolina and we have spent weeks collecting mid
Cretaceous amber in the northern most Tundra of Alaska.
Some of our collecting trips have been in October of 2003
to the western Aleutian Islands some 1000 miles west of
Anchorage to explore and collect Miocene amber,
August of 2004 and April of 2006 we were back in the
Dominican Republic to collect Miocene amber from the Palo
Quemado amber mines which have recently closed due to the
miners finding little amber, we were back to the Dominican
Republic in April of 2006 to video in the La Toca amber
mines, and in August of 2007 we excavated in La Toca and
La Bucara. We’ve collected Eocene amber in western Indian
in the Cambay amber formation. We've done excavations in
the Dominican Republic in 2012, 2014, and 2016. We
did 2 collecting trips to a Eocene amber deposit in the
southern United States in 2017 and in late summer 2018 we
revisited a historic amber site in the south east that
we've collected at in the 1990's. |
Some photos of our amber excavations in the Southern US in 2017 and the Dominican Republic June 2014 and March 2016
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Some photos of our amber excavations in the Dominican Republic March 2014
Some photos of our last amber excavations in the Dominican Republic September 2012
Some photos of our last amber excavations in Asia January 2010 (new top secret location for now)
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Some photos of our amber excavations in August 2007 at La Toca and La Bucara amber mines![]()
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Description A
superb example of a microcosm of the Dominican
Republic rain forest, a large 205 gram amber
gemstone with 2 Hymenaea leaves, blooming flowers,
leptomyrmex spider ants, spiders, beetles, flies,
polydesmid millipedes, nasute termites, crickets,
phorid flies, dolichopodid flies, tipulid flies
and others. A really fabulous authentic Dominican
Amber Gemstone. |
Dominican Amber From
Iturralde-Vincent
and Macphee “The age and depositional history of
Dominican amber-bearing deposits have not been well
constrained. Resinites of different ages exist in
Hispaniola, but all of the main amberiferous
deposits in the Dominican Republic (including those
famous for yielding biological inclusions) were
formed in a single sedimentary basin during the late
Early Miocene through early Middle Miocene (15 to 20
million years ago), according to available
biostratigraphic and paleogeographic data. There is
little evidence for extensive reworking or
redeposition, in either time or space. The brevity
of the depositional interval (less than 5 million
years) provides a temporal benchmark that can be
used to calibrate rates of molecular evolution in
amber taxa.” In
the Dominican Republic, Hymenaea trees are called
Algorrobo. The Hymenaea tree exudes vast amounts of
resin which over millions of years of pressure
hardens into amber. Generally amber is found because
a landslide along a steep slope in the mountains
exposes veins of black lignite. If the lignite
contains amber it is gradually extracted by digging
along the vein with picks and shovels. After the
amber is found it is chiseled by hand out of the
shaft walls, put into burlap sacks and passed out of
the mine where it is separated from the rock by
machete. Larger chunks of amber make it possible to
view inclusions almost immediately by holding the
amber up to sunlight to determine if a large
inclusion has been discovered. Fossil bearing amber
is polished locally. |
Shipping and Insurance Within
the
USA
- $8.00 shipping and insurance - we ship all
specimens US Postal Service Priority Mail. |
Payment Payment
is required within 7 days of the end of the auction.
We Accept Pay Pal. Multiple items can of course be
combined for one shipping cost. We ship all
specimens upon receipt of payment. Pay us Instantly
and Securely with Pay Pal - fast, easy, and secure
payments for all of your purchases! |
About
Us
We
have been collecting amber in the field and prepping
rough fossil amber specimens since 1993. Photographs
of our specimens have appeared in National
Geographic, Nature, Science, Scientific American,
Discover, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times and
others. We have been featured in BBC’s production,
PaleoWorld's The Amber Hunters. We offer authentic
museum quality Dominican and Burmese (Burmite) Amber
display specimens of rare insects in amber and also
authentic rare rough unprepared amber for sale. We
have traveled many times to the Dominican Republic
where we have chiseled beautiful amber gemstones out
of the lignite layers deep in the amber mines north
of Santiago. We have excavated in the Palo Quemado
and Los CaCaos blue amber mines and also in La Nueva
Toca and the world famous La Toca amber mines way up
in the mountains north of Santiago. For many years
we have extensively collected mid Cretaceous New
Jersey amber in the Raritan formation of central New
Jersey and have traveled many times to collect late
Cretaceous and early Paleocene amber in the Hanna
formation of eastern Wyoming. We have collected mid
Cretaceous amber in the Black Creek formation of
eastern North Carolina and we have spent weeks
collecting mid Cretaceous amber in the northern most
Tundra of Alaska. Some of our collecting trips have
been in October of 2003 to the western Aleutian
Islands some 1000 miles west of Anchorage
to explore and collect Miocene amber, August of
2004 and April of 2006 we were back in the Dominican
Republic to collect Miocene amber from the Palo
Quemado amber mines which have recently closed due
to the miners finding little amber, we were back to
the Dominican Republic in April of 2006 to video in
the La Toca amber mines, and in August of 2007 we
excavated in La Toca and La Bucara. We’ve collected
Eocene amber in western Indian in the Cambay amber
formation. We've done excavations in the Dominican
Republic in 2012, 2014, and 2016. We did 2
collecting trips to a Eocene amber deposit in the
southern United States in 2017 and in late summer
2018 we revisited a historic amber site in the south
east that we've collected at in the 1990's. |