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Post Oak Creek

Post Oak Creek

Fossils found in Post Oak Creek, and in nearby creeks in Sherman, TX. 

 

The Cretaceous fossils are washed out of the Eagle Ford Group (~ 90 Ma), and mammal material from the Pleistocene or younger.

 

Vertebrate Faunal List (work in progress):

 

Rarity (purely subjective):

Abundant, Common, Uncommon, Rare, Ultra-Rare

Sharks:

Cantioscyllium sp. ('bamboo shark')*

  • Cantioscyllium decipiens

Chiloscyllium sp. ('bamboo shark')*

  • Chiloscyllium greeni

Cretodus sp.

Cretorectolobus sp. ('carpet shark)*

Cretalamna sp.

Cretoxyrhina sp. ('ginsu shark')

  • Cretoxyrhina mantelli

?Galeorhinus sp. ('tope shark')*

cf. Ginglymostoma sp. ('nurse shark')*

Lonchidion sp. ('Hybodont shark')*

Meristodonoides sp. ('Hybodont shark')*

Pseudocorax sp. ('False-crow shark')

Ptychodus spp. ('crusher shark')

  • Ptychodus anonymus
  • Ptychodus atcoensis
  • Ptychodus mortoni 
  • Ptychodus whipplei

Scapanorhynchus spp. ('goblin shark')

  • Scapanorhynchus raphiodon
  • Scapanorhynchus texanus

Squalicorax spp. ('crow shark')

  • Squalicorax falcatus
  • Squalicorax kaupi

Fish:

Amiidae indet.*

Enchodus sp. ('saber-toothed herring')*

Ischyrhiza sp. ('sawskate')*

Pseudohypolophus sp. ('guitarfish')*

  • Pseudohypolophus mcnultyi

Ptychotrygon spp. ('sawskate')*

  • Ptychotrygon slaughteri
  • Ptychotrygon texana
  • Ptychotrygon triangularis

Pyncodontiformes

Rhinobatos spp. ('guitarfish')*

  • Rhinobatos caseiri
  • Rhinobatos incertus

Reptile:

?Coniasaurus crassidens*

Mosasauridae

 

* micro-vertebrate - should use/need magnification to find

 

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Jealous. Been far too long since I have been in a north Texas creek...

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How exciting! I brought home a bucket of about 5 lbs of gravel matrix from POC just before the Covid-19 “lock-down” here in Dallas. Been going thru a few scoops full every evening. (So relaxing to “hunt fossils” from the ease & comfort of one’s own patio! lol) After sifting it by size, I search thru each subset. But, I’ve been saving the bag of “super-fines” (particles under about 1 mm) to inspect more closely once I get a decent magnifying glass. (A loupe is just too small to use for so many particles!) Already found some really neat tiny sharks teeth looking ones just searching with my 3.50-power reading glasses. FWIW, I average about 10-15 whole teeth (under 1 cm) per half pound of matrix I’d say. Add in 3-4 “large” teeth (over 1 cm) per pound for the “first sift” layer (stuff not making it thru the 1/2” mesh). Those have tended to be rather hefty / chunky ones too. I probably should start keeping better (well, any) records of the finds by layer & wt of each layer, but I’ve been lazy plus I can’t imagine what I’d do with the resultant data anyhow. Maybe post it here? Best part is the number of tiny fish vertebrae I’ve found this way. Anyhow, cheap thrills while socially distant, I guess.

Happy hunting, stay safe, everyone! 

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