This listing is for the earrings that you see in these photos. The Ammonite is 2 x 2.5 cm. Total length is 4.1 cm or 1 1/2 inches.
You will love it :)

Ammonite Fossils are 6,000,000 Year Old. This listing is for beautiful Ammonite that you see in the photos. 

Ammonite is a fossil and existed in nature about 400 million years ago. Egyptians named this fossil after their God, Ammon. Named after it’s similar shalpe to a ram’s horns, it was prized by Egyptian and Roman societies because it was seen as a deity symbol. Fossils represent time, eternity and evolution. In general they are used as protective objects. They can be worn in jewelry to increase your natural defenses. Fossils of all kinds are worn as amulets to increase life span, due to their lineage.

Ammonites have a strong positive Earth energy to it, and is used in finding your way down the “spiritual spiral path” to the center where the God and Goddess await. It is also used in past life regression. In healing, ammonite will assist with general good health, stamina and high energy. It can help transmute negativity to smoothly flowing energy. It will also assist during childbirth and will be helpful for general survival skills. Ammonite can help release karmic debris and harmful thought patterns, while helping to attain and enhance personal power within the Self. This fossil is also helpful in releasing depression and finding purpose.

General Gemstone Details

Not a gemstone but a fossil, ammonite has held an important place in history.

The name ammonite, from which the scientific term is derived, was inspired by the spiral shape of their fossilized shells, which somewhat resemble tightly coiled rams' horns. Pliny the Elder (d. 79 AD. near Pompeii) called fossils of these animals ammonis cornua ("horns of Ammon") because the Egyptian god Ammon (Amun) was typically depicted wearing ram's horns.

The words ammonite and ammonoid are both used quite loosely in common parlance to refer to any member of subclass Ammonoidea. However, in stricter usage the term ammonite is reserved for members of suborder Ammonitina (or sometimes even order Ammonitida).