Ammonite

From Nookipedia, the Animal Crossing wiki
Revision as of 13:52, July 8, 2020 by Vmario97 (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "Donating to the Museum" to "Donating to the museum")

Template:Infobox Alone The Ammonite is a stand-alone fossil that can be donated to the museum in all Animal Crossing series games to date.

Donating to the museum

In Animal Crossing

"Well! Hoo and hoo again! An ammonite! My stars! A very impressive find! Ah yes, wonderful. This fossil is of exceedingly superior quality, wot wot. Now then, I know a thing or two about these creatures. Yes, indeed. Ammonites... Though ammonites lived in shells, they were not shellfish, but rather mollusks, like octopi[sic] and squid. The closest living relative to the ammonite is the chambered nautilus. Fascinating, no? Ammonites existed from the Devonian period, some 400 million years ago, to the end of the Cretaceous period. Their extinction coincided with that of the dinosaurs. Time and tide wait for neither man nor beast, wot! Oh, hoo. Blathers, you ninny! I've gone and done it again. Spewing out more information than necessary. So sorry."

In Animal Crossing: Wild World

"Hoo! Indeed, WOO hoo! Amazing! This fossil is an almost flawless specimen! The ammonite looks like it would be related to spiral-shelled creatures. But have I got a whopper of a surprise for you! They are actually part of the same family as squid and octopi[sic]! Just imagine! All that remains of these enigmatic creatures are their shells... Despite extensive research, we're still not sure what their bodies looked like. Oh! I'm terribly sorry. I went on rather long, didn't I? Forgive me!"

In Animal Crossing: City Folk

"Hoo my, simply wonderful! A truly rare fossil! An ammonite, you see, is not what it seems, eh wot? At first glance, you'd think it was related to the conch. But it isn't a member of that family at all. Hoo no! Actually, it's closer to the squid and octopus! Sadly, the only fossils we can find are mere shells, so we know not what sort of bodies they had. HOO! I... beg your pardon! I was so enthralled, I... I spouted hot air like a teapot, eh wot?"

In Animal Crossing: New Leaf

"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 Animal Crossing: New Horizons

"Ammonites were creatures that lived before and all the way through the age of dinosaurs! Because different species lived at different times, their shells are sometimes used as "index fossils." In other words, these creatures act as markers in time, helping to identify the age of other formations! Who knows what other secrets lie hidden in those spiral shells?"

In Real Life

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.

As a furniture item

Name HRA Points Feng Shui Genre Size (sq)
Ammonite 300 Gray/Brown Old School (WW)
Retro (CF)
Quirky (NL)
1

In 🎬 Gekijōban Doubutsu no Mori

Yu with an ammonite fossil
A mountain of ammonite fossils

Halberd and Yu manage to dig up an ammonite fossil in 🎬 Gekijōban Doubutsu no Mori during the summertime. Later, they, along with Ai, Sally, and Bouquet, go into a cave to hunt for more ammonite fossils. After going through a tough waterfall, they stumble upon a mountain of ammonite fossils. Later in the wintertime, when searching for the UFO part, Yu and the others see the same mountain of ammonite fossils.


Names in other languages

Japanese アンモナイト
Anmonaito
Ammonite

Korean 암모나이트
Ammonaiteu
Ammonite

Simplified Chinese 菊石 (iQue)
Jú shí
Ammonite

Russian Аммонит
Ammonit
Ammonite

Dutch Ammoniet Ammonite

German Ammonit -

European Spanish Amonites Ammonite

European French Ammonite -

Italian Ammonite -

Gallery