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December 2011 Finds Of The Month


JohnJ

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While looking at some Arkona mud for some microfossils, came across an interesting Vertebrate

Microtooth

Dec. Entry:

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Approx 300 microns in length

Middle Devonian

Hamilton Group

Find Dec 24,2011

Imaged with a Bellows system , Panasonic G1 camera + Konica Hexanon F1.7/50mm lens + extension tubes.

Edited by pleecan
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Wow! So many great finds this month. It's going to be very hard to choose.

In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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I usually don't enter this competition, but that VFOTM badge next to winner's profiles sure looks nice!

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Jaguar Canine

Panthera onca

Pleistocene

Gilchrist County, FL

Found Dec. 23rd

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Man oh man. This has been a great month for finding fossils. Now if'n I could only find something like many of these things...

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Nice find Peter!

Collecting Microfossils - a hobby concerning much about many of the little

paraphrased from Dr. Robert Kesling's book

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Okay folks, I had a change of heart on which find I wanted to enter, so here it is:

an ultra rare Carcharocles auriculatus upper jaw parasymphyseal tooth; not all individuals bore this tooth position and was lost entirely by the Miocene

Found 16 Dec 2011

Martin Maritta quarry in Onslow County NC

Castle Hayne Formation

Eocene

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Bulldozers and dirt Bulldozers and dirt
behind the trailer, my desert
Them red clay piles are heaven on earth
I get my rocks off, bulldozers and dirt

Patterson Hood; Drive-By Truckers

 

image.png.0c956e87cee523facebb6947cb34e842.png May 2016  MOTM.png.61350469b02f439fd4d5d77c2c69da85.png.a47e14d65deb3f8b242019b3a81d8160.png.b42a25e3438348310ba19ce6852f50c1.png May 2012 IPFOTM5.png.fb4f2a268e315c58c5980ed865b39e1f.png.1721b8912c45105152ac70b0ae8303c3.png.2b6263683ee32421d97e7fa481bd418a.pngAug 2013, May 2016, Apr 2020 VFOTM.png.f1b09c78bf88298b009b0da14ef44cf0.png.af5065d0585e85f4accd8b291bf0cc2e.png.72a83362710033c9bdc8510be7454b66.png.9171036128e7f95de57b6a0f03c491da.png Oct 2022

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Good grief how is one to choose! Looks like everyone is getting great finds this month. Congrats everyone. :)

In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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I just took a look at all of the entries this month and can't believe how many shark teeth have been entered. So I decided to add one more. I found this tooth yesterday. Upon cleaning all of the river grime and life off of it, I was suprised to find it was a bit pathological. I have found pathological angys, but never one approaching the 4" mark.

3.81" Pathological C. Angustidens

Oligocene

12/26/11

Lowcountry of SC

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I just took a look at all of the entries this month and can't believe how many shark teeth have been entered. So I decided to add one more. I found this tooth yesterday. Upon cleaning all of the river grime and life off of it, I was suprised to find it was a bit pathological. I have found pathological angys, but never one approaching the 4" mark.

3.81" Pathological C. Angustidens

Oligocene

12/26/11

Lowcountry of SC

:drool: :Drool: :drool: :Drool: !!!! Wowzer.

In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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Here is my invertebrate entry Dec:

Micro Fossil ostracode:

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Approx 200 microns in length

Middle Devonian

Hamilton Group

Find Dec 24,2011

Imaged with a Bellows system , Panasonic G1 camera + Konica Hexanon F1.7/50mm lens + extension tubes.

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Few, just managed to get in before it closed! :D

My fossil!

Fossil: Brachiopod: gibbithyris ellipsoidali

Size: See picture for scale

Age: Cretaceous age, (70 - 90 myo)

Location: Totternhoe, Bedfordshire

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Edited by Odinofthenorth
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Here is my little broyzoan, from the Mississippian, Pitkin Limestone, NW Arkansas, found 12/4/2011. It is approx 3cm, and just popped out of the rock the way you see it.

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Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen, and thinking what nobody has thought.

Albert Szent-Gyorgyi

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My Vertebrate entry for December

Cladodus Tooth, 2.9 cm tall

Upper Mississippian, Chesterian, upper Bangor Limestone

Marshall Co., Al

Found 12/14/11

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Edited by Archimedes
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how cool to see a bryo on here tatter! Nice! :)

"Your serpent of Egypt is bred now of your mud by the operation of your sun; so is your crocodile." Lepidus

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My Invertebrate entry for December is an enrolled 3-D Trilobite, 1.28 cm wide

Kaskia chesterensis

Upper Mississippian, Chesterian, lower Bangor Limestone

Colbert Co., Al

Found 12/30/11

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I have been going around in circles trying to determine the Kaskia-Paladin synonymy for the Bangor Limestone. Although Paladin was redefined (Cisne, 1967), and Kaskia at the time considered to be its junior synonym, you will be happy to know that Kaskia chesterensis is the valid genus / species by the most recent description (Brezinski, 2008).

Congrats on your beautiful bug Archimedes! :D

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