Ammonite
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[edit]
In Animal Crossing[edit]
When the player donates to Blathers in Animal Crossing, he will provide the following information about the Ammonite:
In Wild World[edit]
When donating to Blathers in Wild World, he will provide the following information about the Ammonite:
In City Folk[edit]
When donating to Blathers in City Folk, he will provide the following information about the Ammonite:
In New Leaf[edit]
After donating the final part of the fossil in New Leaf, its plaque in the museum will read:
In New Horizons[edit]
When the player donates to Blathers or selects "Tell me about this!" in New Horizons, he will provide the following information about the fossil:
The Ammonite can be found in the first room of the fossil exhibit in the museum.
As an item[edit]
In Animal Crossing[edit]
Ammonite | |
---|---|
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Size |
In Wild World[edit]
Ammonite | |
---|---|
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
|
HRA genre | Old-school |
Size |
In City Folk[edit]
Ammonite | |
---|---|
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
|
HRA genre | Retro |
Size |
In New Leaf[edit]
Ammonite | |
---|---|
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Gray
Brown
|
Style | Historical |
Size |
In New Horizons[edit]
Ammonite | |
---|---|
Interactable | No |
Sell price | 1,100 Bells |
Colors | Beige
Brown
|
Size |
In Gekijōban Doubutsu no Mori[edit]
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[edit]
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[edit]
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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