3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
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not seen them for a while, where did they all go to? 
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Ojc
Member
Registered: 14th Nov 00
Location: Reading: Drives : Clio 197
User status: Offline
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What are they
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3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
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you've not heard
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gianluigi
Member
Registered: 9th Mar 05
Location: Ipswich, Suffolk
User status: Offline
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3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
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ffs 
i suggest you go back to school and go on some more field trips
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3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
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Devil's Toenails
The oyster Gryphaea is one of the commonest fossils found in the British Jurassic. The calcite shell is thick and survives well after weathering and erosion of the clays and shales in which it is fossilized. It is also sufficiently resilient to have endured transportation by rivers and Ice Age glaciers - eroded specimens of Gryphaea are often found in river gravels and glacially-deposited boulder clays in regions of England, such as Suffolk and Gloucestershire.
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gianluigi
Member
Registered: 9th Mar 05
Location: Ipswich, Suffolk
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by 3CorsaMeal
Suffolk
oopps
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3CorsaMeal
Member
Registered: 11th Apr 02
User status: Offline
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ask your mum and dad, i bet 80% of people already got one in their house somewhere
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Tommy
Member
Registered: 24th Aug 00
Location: Essex, Colchester
User status: Offline
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I dont
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