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  1. Ammonite is a 2020 romantic drama film written and directed by Francis Lee. The film is loosely inspired by the life of British palaeontologist Mary Anning, played by Kate Winslet. The film centres on a speculative romantic relationship between Anning and Charlotte Murchison, played by Saoirse Ronan.

  2. Nov 13, 2020 · Ammonite: Directed by Francis Lee. With Sarah White, Liam Thomas, Sam Parks, Kate Winslet. 1840s England, acclaimed but overlooked fossil hunter Mary Anning and a young woman sent to convalesce by the sea develop an intense relationship, altering both of their lives forever.

  3. Phylum Mollusca. Class Cephalopoda. Sub-Class Ammonoidea. Ammonites are a distinctive class of extinct invertebrates within the Phylum Mollusca. These spectacular looking marine animals thrived in the Paleozoic and Mesozoic Eras, which equates to approximately 408 to 65 million years ago.

  4. Mar 22, 2024 · The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica. Last Updated: Mar 22, 2024 • Article History. Ammonite, any member of an ancient Semitic people whose principal city was Rabbath Ammon, in Palestine. The “sons of Ammon” were in perennial, though sporadic, conflict with the Israelites.

  5. May 30, 2019 · Title: Fossil Ammonites. Air Date: May 30, 2019. Series: Smithsonian Science How webcasts, which are designed to connect natural history science and research to upper-elementary and middle-school students. In this video, go behind the scenes at the Smithsonian to meet Dr. Lucy Chang, Paleobiologist at the National Museum of Natural History.

  6. Ammonites were marine animals belonging to the phylum Mollusca and the class Cephalopoda. They had a coiled external shell similar to that of the modern nautilus. In other living cephalopods, e.g. octopus, squid and cuttlefish, the shells are small and internal, or absent.

  7. Mar 22, 2024 · ammonoid, any of a group of extinct cephalopods (of the phylum Mollusca), forms related to the modern pearly nautilus ( Nautilus ), that are frequently found as fossils in marine rocks dating from the Devonian Period (began 419 million years ago) to the Cretaceous Period (ended 66 million years ago).

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