Ammonite
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250px The ammonite in the museum in Animal Crossing: New Horizons. | ||||||
Scientific name | ||||||
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Arietites bucklandi | ||||||
Type | Standalone | |||||
Main appearances | ||||||
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Name in other languages
アンモナイト
암모나이트 Ammonite Ammonit
菊石
Ammonite Amonites Ammoniet
菊石 Ammonite Amonites Аммонит |
The ammonite is a standalone fossil in the Animal Crossing series introduced in Doubutsu no Mori that appears in all subsequent games to date.
At the museum
In Animal Crossing
In Wild World
In City Folk
In New Leaf
After donating the fossil in New Leaf, its plaque in the museum will read:
"Ammonites were sea creatures with shells ranging from a few inches to a few feet in diameter. However, theories speculate that giant varieties existed as well, with shells six feet in diameter. Oddly, the ammonite is a closer relative to the squid or octopus than to the chambered nautilus."
In New Horizons
As an item
In Animal Crossing
Ammonite | |
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Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Size |
In Wild World
Ammonite | |
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Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
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HRA genre | Old-school |
Size |
In City Folk
Ammonite | |
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Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
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HRA genre | Retro |
Size |
In New Leaf
Ammonite | |
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Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
|
Style | Historical |
HHA theme challenge | Quirky |
Size |
In New Horizons
Ammonite | |
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Interactable | No |
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Beige
Brown
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Size |
In Gekijōban Doubutsu no Mori
Alfonso and Yū manage to dig up an ammonite fossil in 🎬 Gekijōban Doubutsu no Mori during the summertime. Later, they, along with Ai, Margie, and Rosie, go into a cave to hunt for more ammonite fossils. After going through a waterfall, they stumble upon a mountain of ammonite fossils. Later in the wintertime, when searching for the Gulliver's spaceship part, Yū and the others see the same mountain of ammonite fossils.
Real-world information
Ammonites were a group of cephalopods which lived from the Devonian to the Cretaceous period. Despite their appearance, they are more closely related to the coleoids (shell-less cephalopods like squids, cuttlefish, and octopuses) than nautiluses (which have shells). They were extremely abundant during the Mesozoic - with some species used as index fossils to mark the beginnings of geologic stages - and remain the most common fossils on beaches. They went extinct at the same time as the non-avian dinosaurs.
More information on this topic is available at Wikipedia.
Names in other languages
アンモナイト Anmonaito |
Ammonite | |
암모나이트 Ammonaiteu |
Ammonite | |
菊石 (iQue) Jú shí |
Ammonite | |
Аммонит Ammonit |
Ammonite | |
Ammoniet | Ammonite | |
Ammonit | Ammonite | |
Amonites | Ammonite | |
Ammonite | Ammonite | |
Ammonite | Ammonite |
Fossils | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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