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  1. Valerie44

    Need help ID

    Hello, thank you in advance for any help identifying. I found these on the cherokee lake bed in Northeast Tennessee Hawkins county they are extremely hard and after washing don't change in appearance. Are they fossils?
  2. bigGinthegarden

    Ordovician ID help

    Hello. New member here. Would appreciate some help with an ID, please. Found in Williamson County, Tennessee, USA. Rock formation is Nashville Group (Ordovician). Exposed fossil length is about 1/4" or 6mm. Thank you!
  3. Fullux

    Coon Creek Gastropod

    Howdy all, Here's another find I had in the Coon Creek Formation. Been trying to place it but I simply have no idea. Possibly Fasciolariidae?
  4. GlitzyDino

    WhatTheFossil?

    I found this in Tennessee in a "rock wall" in a root cellar about 3 days ago. The house was built in the 20s but the cellar wasn't dug until the 60s. If that helps at all. And it sits right beside a creek.
  5. GlitzyDino

    Hello from Tennessee!

    Hello, everyone! I am a 34 year old married female that loves everything about rocks, fossils, and gemstones! My husband and I have an extensive collection of all varieties of just anything we thought looked neat or different. My husband recently started working on a house his mom bought and under it is a root cellar with a rock "wall" that I've been allowed to dig in .. y'all, I can't wait to show my finds off. I am certain (although I'm definitely also not sure 😃) that we have stumbled upon something amazing! Hint* dinos and gold/silver!
  6. Samty27

    ID this Tennessee Fossil

    Help! So we found this in our backyard and we’re pretty sure it’s a fossil. Any help identifying what it could be ? Found in Middle Tennessee, Dekalb County Husband did the “lick test” he found online and it is sticky 🤣
  7. Jessicapine02

    Identification Near the Ross Formation

    The locality of this fossil was 5 minutes from the Ross Formation in Tennessee. My professors believe that this is a trilobite that has undergone replacement. Specifically the Shepard's Hook Trilobite.
  8. nathead

    ID help on two finds

    Hello, I have a few specimens my kids and I have found and need help identifying, if they are indeed fossils. I included a dime for size reference, but will try to include a measurement also for each: The first two images are a swirl shape in rock (I was hoping it was a shell) about 4 centimeters across The next images are of two round things (1.5 and 2 cm across) embedded in a rock, there are crinoid stems embedded near them All were found in Hamilton county Tennessee. Thank you for any info
  9. nathead

    Another creekbed find

    I have a find from a dry creekbed in Apison, Tennessee (Hamilton county). It appears like little segments of columns but doesn't look like the crinoid fossils from the area. The segments are 1-2 centimeters long but some (if connected would be 6-7+ centimeters).
  10. nathead

    Creek find

    Hello, I found this in a dry creekbed where I have found crinoid stem fossils, and initially thought this might be two stacked crinoid segments or a brachiopod imprint. I thought it slightly resembles a trilobite. What does this look like to you? Found in a creekbed in Apison, Tennessee (Hamilton county).
  11. Hello! A friend of mine found this hash plate in his yard today. I'm hoping someone can identify one of the fossils in it for us. (Tennessee/Ordovician) Thanks!
  12. Crowdsourcing / help request! I'm putting together a review article for the fossil collector community on the Devonian rocks of the American midcontinent, which I've defined as the gray area on the map below plus southwest Ontario. I'm hoping to include a section in which I highlight the midcontinent fossils of greatest renown for each of a number of taxa (list below). (I purposely leave "renown" as a somewhat squishy quality open to multiple interpretations.) I would appreciate (1) your nominations of any midcontinent Devonian fossils of great renown that I have failed to capture in the list below and (2) your assistance in filling in the blanks marked with "????" Thank you! List is below. Microbes: ???? Marine algae: ???? Sponges: Formosa Reef Limestone, SW Ontario Rockport Quarry Limestone, NE Michigan ???? Corals: Widder Formation, SW Ontario Jeffersonville Limestone, S. Indiana Petoskey Limestone, NW lower Michigan Hyolithids: Arkona Formation, SW Ontario Tentaculitids: Arkona Formation, SW Ontario Conulariids: ???? Bryozoans: ???? Brachiopods: Silica Formation, NW Ohio ???? Pelecypods: Arkona Formation, SW Ontario ???? Gastropods: Rogers City Limestone, NE Michigan ???? Non-ammonoid cephalopods: ???? Ammonoid cephalopods: Arkona Formation, SW Ontario Pelecypods: Dundee Limestone, NW Ohio Arkona Formation, SW Ontario Rostroconchs: Dundee Limestone, NW Ohio Trilobites: Silica Formation, NW Ohio Arkona Formation and Widder Formation, SW Ontario Haragan and Bois d'Arc Formations, SE Oklahoma Non-ostracode crustaceans: Chagrin Shale, NE Ohio Arkona Formation and Widder Formation, SW Ontario Silica Formation, NW Ohio Echinoderms: Arkona Formation, SW Ontario Silica Formation, NW Ohio Thunder Bay Limestone, NE Michigan Graptolites: ???? Fish: Rockport Quarry Limestone, NE Michigan Columbus Limestone, central Ohio Cleveland Shale, NE Ohio Woody plants: Ohio Shale, Ohio Herbaceous plants: Grassy Creek Shale, E Missouri
  13. I think these are fossils but need someone to verify and possibly identify. I found these in a creek bed along the Little Harpeth River in Brentwood, TN. They were all within a 30’ area in the creek bed. Some may not even be fossils but figured I’d post pictures just in case they were. I’ve taken close ups of the first row and if I need to take some of the other rows I can. “A” and “B” are the ones I’m most curious about because to me they look like actual fossils. ”C”-“E” feel like a shell of some sort, like a turtle. “G” & “H” are cylindrical looking and sound like porcelain when you tap them against something. “T” looks like a finger and has ripples in the sides and is fairly heavy. Not light like a regular fossil would be. “U” almost feels and sounds like porcelain and I found it in the same area as these others. The last one is what I think is a turtle shell that doesn’t look to be a fossil but I’ll leave that up to you all to decide.
  14. pcott

    Baffled

    This one had a complicated life. It appears to be metamorphic with quartz veins. Wrapped around it are leaves that resemble cat tail leaves or some sort of water plant. . I first thought they were dried or baked on the core rock. No these Leaves are not being scraped off the core rock. They are rock. Limestone leaves that appear to wrap around a core metamorphic rock that somehow fell into perhap a bog or marsh. Was it buried in a peat or some sort of bog ? I’m just baffled. The area where it was found is Watts Bar Lake near Nashville Tennessee. That corner of the lake was at one time dynamited. So it is not like adjacent rock walls. There was more than one. I was sure I could scrape the leaves off but they have become rock. Looking forward to your thoughts on this.
  15. pcott

    Fossil Tapioca

    Rock is 7 inches long. Little balls the size of black peppercorns. Was able to remove a ball with a nail. Look the same from all angles. Reminded me of frog eggs. No other shapes.
  16. Absurdly Curious

    What is this

    Woo-hoo! Here goes my first one! I never knew taking photos of tiny, inanimate objects would be so hard!! These are awful and I'm not pleased. I will get better ones if I need to, but I'm curious to see if this is an easy one and no further photos are needed. Ok so these were found roughly a year apart (early 2000s) in the same creek in north-central Tennessee. Not a clue as to the layers or geology. They feel sand-stony, the larger one is rougher. The larger one also has a glob of matrix on (what I'm calling) the bottom with tiny crinoid segments stuck in it. I've been searching online for over a month to find something similar, initially thought crinoid parts, because of the crinoid-looking center in the small one, but I don't find any tri-radial crinoids, only 5-radial (however you say that, haha). The closest I can find to its shape is a pollen spore... oh my, imagine the size of the bees!
  17. Hey folks, this is my second post attempting to identify a potential fossil. The last time members confirmed I had found a 350 million year old horn, coral fossil. Thrilling!potential fossil #2 is a very interesting looking rock. I recently picked up in Sequatchie Valley Tennessee. The more I looked at it the more I started to see a potential mandible, fossil or possibly teeth. Please review the pictures and let me know what you think probably seen one two mini PBS documentaries. Lol
  18. Hello all, My girlfriend and I will be driving from Atlanta, GA up to the Chattanooga, TN area for a day trip in a few weeks. I am aware of some spots in the Chat area, and have had success there. I am now looking for new spots, and possibly permission from anyone here on the forums who may live in the area to search their property. Any locations, tips, or pointers would be greatly appreciated! Feel free to PM/inbox me if its something you'd like kept private. I never disclose peoples personal spots, so I understand. As I said, we are going to be driving through northwest GA, passing through Dalton. If anyone knows any spots in northwest GA we could stop at, please let me know!
  19. Fawn

    What is this?

    This was found in the mountains on the Upper Cumberland Plateau in Tennessee. My research leads me to believe it is horn coral that lived over 400 million years ago when Tennessee was under the sea. What do you think?
  20. The Portal

    Backyard item #1 Mammal rib?

    I’ve been hanging around this forum for a while, and now that I’ve officially joined, I’m gonna start by going through my years’ fossil accumulations, particularly the ones that came from my backyard creek (The Portal) and see if I can’t get them them all correctly IDed. Maybe I’ll call it the Backyard Project, if anyone wants to follow along. So here’s the first item: I hope the picture quality is decent enough. It is about three cm long and one cm wide. I’m very sure it is a bone, and given the long thin shape of it I can only think rib. After a bit of searching the only close match I could find was that of a small mammal. The only thing is that that would seem like a very odd find for where we are, east Hickman, Tennessee, the edge of the Central Basin, which is almost exclusively early Paleozoic (in my fossil experience, specifically Ordovician period). A fish rib sounds more likely for our area, but I just haven’t seen any decent fish ribs yet to compare. Either way, this would be so far the only sign of a vertebrate I have ever seen in our area. According to our geological maps, the nearby waterways might bring in some Mesozoic and Cenozoic from westwards, which could make the chances of a vertebrate it a little more likely. Any information on identification and/or how to identify would be greatly appreciated, and if it is indeed a rib, mammal or fish, is it a lucky find? And how specifically can we classify it with what little we have?
  21. sarahbbgun

    Are these structures Stromatolites?

    I’ve been clearing out invasive vines from my neighborhood park/green space and came across these structures absolutely covered in fortunes spindle and green briar. I could see a little part poking out and wow I just had to uncover them. Could they be stromatolites? Or just layered ole weathered limestone boulders? My Google searches of stromatolites did turn up a few that resembled these structures. But only a few:) any thoughts are greatly welcomed!
  22. Cracked this open and found an interesting pattern. Is this evidence of a fossil within this limestone? If so what could it be? See the thin strands alongside the main “stem”. Why is the outer layer this color? Some pictures have had the contrast and saturation adjusted to aid with identification I’ve only been searching for and studying fossils and rocks for not even a year. Teach me all the things! The fossils that I’m familiar with in this area aren’t matching up. found near Beaman Park - north west Davidson County, Tennessee. This area has features of the western highland rim not so much of the central Basin (is what Google says) thanks! Sarah (This is my first post! I’ve been wanting to post many things for a long while but haven’t gotten up the nerve so be nice:)
  23. I have posted examples of this fossil before in ID, but this is a newly found specimen that is more complete, but still missing the same area that all my specimens are missing. Photos of the other examples and the resulting conversations can be found in the previous post in October. This example shows what appears to be hinge teeth, a muscle scar and the general form. The shell in all examples thins dramatically towards the muscle scar and the origin of the growth lines, and the missing features are always just past this point away from the margin side.
  24. Tales From the Shale

    Preserving Invertebrate Fossils

    Hey guys I have some fossils I collected from the Coon Creek of Tennessee. The resident paleontologist, and other trip goers told me to use floor wax to seal these delicate fossils. They aren't permineralized and therefore crumble and crack very easily. Is there a better alternative to floorwax? I read both yes and nos on its usage. I don't like modifying fossils if I don't have to, but I've had multiple fall apart already.
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