Uses of Foram Models

The study of Forams has a variety of uses -- they are ideally suited to serve as environmental quality indicators in coastal bays and marshes, as index fossils in locating oil and gas reserves, as paleoclimate indicators, and as evidence of evolution.

The usefulness of forams for a broad spectrum of scientific observation and analysis is based on their diversity (about 1000 genera and 50,000 species); their correlated ocean habitats (shallow, deep, warm, cold, brackish, hypersaline, planktonic, benthonic); the consistency with which they have been preserved in both rocks and sediments; and the availability of trillions of their shells through dredging or drilling.

Foram Models, which are enlarged from 100 - 200 x, are invaluable teaching aids in Geology, Biology, Oceanography, Environment, Marine Biology, Oil Geology, and Earth Science courses. In Geology courses, for example, Forams can be used to identify specific ancient marine rock and sediment layers in the earth. In Ecology or Paleo-ecology classes, Forams are useful in determining oceanic environmental zones, ancient climate patterns, ancient ocean environmental conditions such as temperature, depth, salinity, and pH (acidity or alkalinity), and pollution influences in coastal waters. The study of Forams also prepares students to identify more complex higher organism shell elements such as sponges, corals, echinoderms, bryozoa, pelecypods, gastropods, and cephalopods.

Teaching and laboratory materials are provided with your order free of charge. These materials include: (1) Basic and detailed information and explanations of living and fossil forams; (2) Comprehensive lesson plans; (3) Identification keys for all specimens; (4) Morphological diagrams and definitions; (5) Illustrated generic descriptions; and (6) Bibliography. To view a sample lesson, click here.

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