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  • andreas

    The Columbianus Zone/alaunium 2/ Norium/upper Triassic, In The So Called “Hallstatt Limestone” Of The Northern Calcareous Alps In Austria

    By andreas

    The columbianus Zone/Alaunium 2/ Norium/Upper Triassic in the so called "Hallstatt Limestone" of the Northern Calcareous Alps in Austria Dear Fossil Forum members! This pictured report about the ammonite bearing Triassic Hallstatt limestone will be the first one of a continuous series of reports. Since the beginning of the geological research in the Northern Calcareous Alps of Austria in the 19th century, about 500 species of Triassic ammonites have been described from the Hallstatt limestone
    • 14 comments
    • 12,842 views
  • MikeR

    The End Of My Pliocene Project

    By MikeR

    When I began this blog late in 2010, my intention was to report on recent field trips however, with the exception of one excursion each into the Upper Miocene, Lower Pliocene and the Calabrian Pleistocene, all of my posts have concentrated on the Upper Pliocene of the US Atlantic and Gulf coastal plains. I already had an extensive collection of Florida Upper Pliocene invertebrates that I had collected while a resident of the state in the late 80s and early 90s. The fossils from these beds are
    • 9 comments
    • 9,335 views
  • JohnJ

    Ancient Hunters

    By JohnJ

    June 5, 2010 Barry held his camera barely two feet away from the back of an Agkistrodon piscivorus. Although a small snake, it was still very dangerous and he positioned his camera based on years of experience with these reptiles. Known more commonly as a Cottonmouth or Water Moccasin, the twelve inch juvenile snake had coloration similar to the closely related Copperhead. However, its patterns were muted by late afternoon shadows in a remote location that was not favorable to an easy medic
    • 26 comments
    • 9,146 views
  • MikeR

    The Problem with Siphocypraea

    By MikeR

    For millennia, humankind has been fascinated by the hard-external shell of the organisms classified within the Phylum Mollusca.   Consumed first as food, their empty shells have served multiple functions in the past; as tools in many ancient cultures, in religious ceremonies by the Aztecs, and money by Pacific Islanders. During the Age of Discovery, sailors could supplement their meager incomes by selling exotic seashells to wealthy gentlemen for their Cabinets of Curiosity.  Today many people f
    • 3 comments
    • 3,961 views

Vegas!

well, i finally got to fabolus las vegas. sunday im gonna hike red rock canyon. my "aunt" good friend says her students (teacher) said they found fossils there. wish me luck!

fossilman7

fossilman7

What I Found Sunday

I went to my sunday spot that is in the back of an industrial park. I found a trilo fragment and I think a few flint nodulesand more. I'm sorry about the pics i had to use my iphone

Ameenah

Ameenah

Paleo Poems

Charles Darwin with his elegant theory, Met the burden of proof with those sneery, One-hundred-fifty years later, There is no idea greater, In advance he would have felt cheery !!   Trilobites appeared with complexity, Still viewed to this day with perplexity, They are fun at this forum, And deserve our decorum, Tens of thousands of species collectively !!   Tiktaalik arose from the sea, Stood so tall spectacularly, Fins like

piranha

piranha

Stream Cleanup

Well at the begining of the week I saw large yellow signs at our road entrance saying "Stream Clean up Saturday 9:00 am" So I made plans to take part after I got off work. Well Lastnight was a bad night at work. I barley got a break, by morning I was oh so ready for bed. On the way home I saw the signs. I went home, changed and went back out as fast as I could, avioding my bedroom at all costs. So to make a long story short I made it and stayed 2 hours. I was the 2nd person there and after

Ameenah

Ameenah

Hello Wurld :)

hello wurld. it be fossilman7, or as concreationman7(to toothpuller). i will be doing a blog for my trips to big brook, green mill run, and other eastern coast sites. i would love to go to other places, but i dont have de money. who wants to give me advice for my blog. thanks and plllz keep comments positive. expect a new big brook blog between may to june. (my dad decides the date.) p.s. i go on a father/son trip with dad each summer. they consist of usually goin on the mlb field durin pra

fossilman7

fossilman7

8 Hours Spent In Three Locations

I guess I had a bug that day. I just wouldnt go home and It was such a nice day. I didnt take lots of pics but here are a few. I also found a tooth not sure what kind, I'm thinking it may be a horse tooth.

Ameenah

Ameenah

Ammonites From The Zone Of Cyrtopleurites Bicrenatus

Ammonites from the Zone of Cyrtopleurites bicrenatus, Nor/Alaunium1 of the Hallstatt limestone Written by Andreas Spatzenegger Fig. 0 The „Hohe Dachstein" mountain with fresh fallen snow in spring; The Dachstein is the highest mountain in the Salzkammergut area and the so called Dachstein limestone is named after this mountain. Below the glacier, the partly forest covered mountain is named „Hirlatz". This is the type locality of the liassic „Hirlatz limestone". Down below the Hirlatz

andreas

andreas

The Columbianus Zone/alaunium 2/ Norium/upper Triassic, In The So Called “Hallstatt Limestone” Of The Northern Calcareous Alps In Austria

The columbianus Zone/Alaunium 2/ Norium/Upper Triassic in the so called "Hallstatt Limestone" of the Northern Calcareous Alps in Austria Dear Fossil Forum members! This pictured report about the ammonite bearing Triassic Hallstatt limestone will be the first one of a continuous series of reports. Since the beginning of the geological research in the Northern Calcareous Alps of Austria in the 19th century, about 500 species of Triassic ammonites have been described from the Hallstatt limestone

andreas

andreas

My Triassic Blog

Dear Visitors of my blog! Welcome to this blog. I hope you enjoy it and have a good time staying here. About me and my collecting area: I am a fossil collector living in Austria. My favourite fossil collecting field are the ammonoids of the middle to upper Triassic "Hallstatt" limestone in the Northerrn Calcerous Alps. Hallstatt limestone represent a type of condensed triassic "ammonitico rosso" facies which do also occur in several other parts of the world. Greece, Hungary, Romania, Bosnia

andreas

andreas

Out For A Ride

I went out for a ride this morning to take some pics and see if I could find anything. I drove up toward Springfield, TN to take photos of a beautiful stata. I also found a few things:

Ameenah

Ameenah

Chowan River Formation

At the end of the Pliocene, two sea level pulses occurred. With the first of these, temperatures cooled and sea level dropped as much as 25 ft, and in the process caused the extinction of approximately 80 percent of the cool-temperate Yorktown molluscan fauna including famed genera such as Chesapecten and Ecphora. When the sea rose once more during the latest Pliocene, temperate conditions returned and a mix of survivors, sub-tropical emigrants, and a few new molluscan species repopulated the

MikeR

MikeR

Waccamaw Formation

In 2009 and 2010, I visited a couple of exposures of the Lower Pleistocene (Calabrian) Waccamaw Formation in North Carolina. The Waccamaw is 1.5-2.0 million years in age and is contemporaneous with the Caloosahatchee Formation in south Florida, the Nashua Formation of central/northern Florida and the James City Formation in northern North Carolina and Virginia. Its geographical range is even more restricted than the Duplin and found mostly in Bladen, Columbus and Brunswick Counties in North Ca

MikeR

MikeR

Duplin Formation: Correction

In researching for my next entry about the Waccamaw Formation, I found a mistake in my gastropod identification which exposed an error in reasoning in my post about the Duplin Formation. I stated that Fulguropsis carolinensis (Tuomey & Holmes, 1856) was a valid species based on a comparison with Busycon excavatum Conrad, 1840 from the APAC Pit in Sarasota. The shell that I pictured however, is not B. excavatum, but Busycon spiratum floridanum Olsson & Harbison, 1953. Looking in my cop

MikeR

MikeR

I'm Back!

That's right, I'm back. I'm sorry I didn't update as much as I should have. I was very busy with exams and essays (but it paid off, I made the Dean's List woo!) and then on break I just wanted to chillax and never write again. So... where did we leave off? I went on a field trip with my class to Portland Point. It was very rewarding. I found tons of brachiopods and some crinoid and trilobite material. My finds include a small, orange colored crinoid, and a near complete trilobite that's pa

emmytee

emmytee

Just Got Back From A Walk

Well I just got back from a walk with Maximus. I had no idea that it was 33 outside but it had rained and as I metioned once before thats when I like to go out, when everything is washed off and stands out. My friend who lives close saw me down near the stream, and thought she needed to pull over to say "you'll never find a husband doing stuff like that" . I told her I wasn't looking for a husband I was looking for fossils and she needed to go to work and leave me to enjoy my day off, befor

Ameenah

Ameenah

Killing Time

Well today while waiting for my sister at her doctor appointment I thought I would kill some time by checking out a lot next door. I had my dog Maximus with me which I so brilliantly used as a front so I woulndt look like a crazy lady stuffing rocks in her pocket Instead I was just the lady walking her dog stuffing rocks in her pocket any who... the lot is huge and littered with stuff. Amazingly I was able to find a few things despite Maximus pulling me in every direction. so here is

Ameenah

Ameenah

My 30 Min Hunt

I went out yesterday for about 30 minutes just to check on one of my spots and it looked good. The gravel beds we're turned over a bit so that was cool. I was tired after work, but I did take pics as I found stuff. It is getting old finding the same kind of stuff I must admit. I found one thing I need help with the ID I think it maybe coral. I'll go back on my day off if the weather is good, or better yet take a day trip somewhere.

Ameenah

Ameenah

Duplin Formation

The Duplin Formation is composed of unconsolidated sand and mud representing Late Pliocene (3 to 3.2 million years) brackish to open marine sediments. It has a limited surface exposure, ranging from Southeastern North Carolina to Northeastern South Carolina. The major macrofossil component is mollusks with some crustacean, echinoderm and vertebrate representatives. Biostratigraphically, its fauna is equivalent to Zone 2 Yorktown to the north, the Jackson Bluff Formation in the Florida Panhand

MikeR

MikeR

Pliocene-Pleistocene Molluscan Species Identification

The Plio-Pleistocene molluscan fauna in the Southeastern US is extremely rich and extends for the most part from South Florida along the eastern seaboard to Virginia. Although the most popular reference for this material is Ed Petuch’s Atlas of Florida Fossil Shells (1994) and several follow-ups (Petuch, 2004, 2007) my primary reference is Lyle Campbells’s Pliocene Molluscs from the Yorktown and Chowan River Formations in Virginia (1993). I have stated my reasons before My link so I will not d

MikeR

MikeR

Introduction

Hello and welcome to my blog, Southern Comfort—Fossil collecting in the southern states. For several years I have wanted to start a website about my love of fossil shells, but never seemed to have the time. After discovering the Fossil Forum and its blog hosting services, I decided I could do the same in a blog without exerting the energy in designing a webpage. I have been collecting fossils for 30 years. An interest in fossils as a child led me to take a paleontology elective course while

MikeR

MikeR

The Rescue Of The Cephalopod

last week I went back one morning to find that some areas of the strata had fallen. Even as I stood there rocks continued to fall. I made sure I was careful but I wanted to see if the fossils I saw before had crumbled but I found them intact. I did notice that one was about to go and I was able to save it

Ameenah

Ameenah

The Flood Damage Destroyed One Of My Favorite Spots

For those who didnt know, last May Nashville, TN was underwater. Here is a video that give you some idea of how bad it was. Nashville Tennessee Flood 2010 From: ExpressionsByMisti | May 04, 2010 | 1,534,735 views NOTE: Quotes are from an article entitled "We Are Nashville" by Patten Fuqua. To read the complete article, you can visit www.section303.com (Note- I have no affiliation with that site, nor do I know the author personally). Well after seeing that you can imagine that my fos

Ameenah

Ameenah

Cool Strata - Geologist Needed

ok this is my thrid time trying to type is entry. so im going to keep it short and sweet. Overnight it rained while I was at work. When I got off I went to a site next to a home Depo of all places. I like going after it rains because the layers are defined and the fossils stand out after being washed clean. This Strata is like no other i have found in the area. It has what appears to be a layer of ash. with round rosette shaped patterns in it. No signs of any fossils in this layer. the ban

Ameenah

Ameenah

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