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  2. @MarcoSr Some fantastic Agate from Indonesia
  3. Today
  4. I would say yes! I think we need a land owner, a small group and a few loads of fun. Plenty to share!
  5. Honeymayoon

    Possible Vertebra in Upstate NY

    Found this on the shore of the Hudson River near Albany, NY. Hoping this is a fossil protruding out and not just a rock! Thanks🙂 IMG_1056.MOV
  6. I think I've figured it out. It's called Bank Run Shell Roadbase. Sold by the truck load.
  7. Wow, there is some beautiful stuff in here for sure! Do you know where it comes from? Sometimes these spoil piles really produce the goods.
  8. Well that is much cooler than I imagined. Thank you for the help.
  9. pterosaur_nerd

    Mixosaurus I bought.

    nice fossil I remember seeing this one and considering buying it . nice to know it was a real one . terry
  10. Thoughts on this vertebra? Found in a box of bison bones from Sherburne County Minnesota. Anoka Sand Plain materials - roughly 6k years old.
  11. Hello, I recently went to Savannah, Georgia to fossil hunt on an island on the Savannah river. I found a very diverse assemblage of fossil vertebrate material which included shark and ray teeth, fossil dolphin material, bone fragments, and even a baby Megalodon tooth, the last thing I found before we were to head back. I found at least 61 fossils but here are my best examples:
  12. dbrake40

    Needs ID Possible Tusk Outer Bark Fragment.

    @Shellseeker - Thank you so much for the detailed answer! I also sent some photos of this to Dick Mol (Sir Mammoth) or the Netherlands. He indicated that it does seem to be a piece of the outer layer, and stated that "visible in the cross-section, is cementum and not dentin (ivory)" So to me this indicates that the outside of a tusk has cementum layers. I am going to e-mail him back and see if anyone has ever published on the topic. I think the photo you provided, below, shows these layers best.
  13. Your mystery item is an orthocone. You can see the septa and siphuncle.
  14. M3gal0don_M4n

    I. retroflexus 4.12.24

    Actually one of the coolest teeth I have seen! Great find.
  15. M3gal0don_M4n

    Hello from S. Carolina

    Welcome to the forum!
  16. M3gal0don_M4n

    Suchomimus Tooth?

    Definitely a suchomimus. Great quality!
  17. Thank you ! I stumbled into the pot of gold. It was crazy luck. Who knew a truck load of dirt would be hiding so many treasures.
  18. Thank you ! I stumbled into the pot of gold. It was crazy luck. Who knew a truck load of dirt would be hiding so many treasures.
  19. I'm also very impressed. Quite the awesome collection. A number of those fossil shells are truly magnificent. Love the crystals too. Big congrats and thanks for sharing.
  20. Harry Pristis

    Fossil Geode

    I think these geodes continue to grow in size as long as depositional conditions are right. That is, as long as SiO2 continues to be available and the limey matrix remains soft. Quartz crystals are incidental, forming in any void in the geode.
  21. Hi everyone. Here is a trip report from a recent visit to the Liberty formation in Indiana. I almost exclusively hunted the "butter shale". I made a 3.5 hour drive from Illinois and hunted for approximately five hours. Feel free to drop some IDs if you know them offhand. this is my first time hunting this area so im relatively unfamiliar with the flora. Here is a picture of most of my finds before cleaning: I'll start with the trilobites. I did not do as well as I had hoped in this department, but I did manage to get a few. My best trilobite was about 75% complete and only about half an inch long. I somehow managed to lose that little guy along the way, as he wasnt in my bag when I got home. As for the trilobites that made it home, here are some pieces: Next are some brachiopods. I just want to say how happy I am to have found this first one. It is in such good condition and I love the shape of it: Here are some more images of a few brachiopods I cleaned up. This does not reflect all the brachiopods I found, but shows a good representation of what is present in this formation. Here is one of many horn corals just because: And here is something I do not have an ID on. Anyone have any thoughts on this? Thanks for looking. If I return back the this site, my fingers are still crossed for rolled trilobite!
  22. Is this a Horn Shark heterodontus anterior tooth? The tooth has the main cusp and two lateral cusplets with circular base. Small in size – 2mm across. Found in the Upper Eocene – Ocala Limestone Formation – location in Sumter County, Florida. Thank you.
  23. fossil35

    fossil help

    I found a few more pieces of what I thought was crocodile at first but now I'm not so sure. Then started thinking could be drum fish part but the photos I seen looked a bit different. So thought I'd ask. They are from north carolina. #1 (top) #2 (bottom)
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