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  1. Yesterday I was invited from the "Geologengruppe Ostalb e.v." (Geo-Gruppe Ostalb e.V. (geo-ostalb.de)) to give a lesson about the fantastic Green River Formation. We visited the fossil butte monument some years ago and had the opportunity to dig there a day with our friend Adam Lindgren. As I had a lot of great pics from the fossils and landscape, but not from perfect prep, Kris Howe (@ptychodus64) supported me with pics from the preparation of his fantastic Annaeavis. Thanks, Kris, the pics impressed the visitors, was a great evening! Impression of the Museum (Limesmuseum Aalen) Group leader and former director, Ulrich Sauerborn, and the author Green River! Some impressed visitors some pics from his prep, I am always impressed about this fantastic work! (sorry for the not-perfect pics, baaaaad light) thanks
  2. Dave2244

    Palm?

    Seeking help on yesterday's find. My wife found this one while surface hunting on a hilltop near where we found our first fossils (Horsetail Reeds). The closest I find is calamite, but that looks to be from the carboniferous period which would be too early for the Green River area? Thanks, Dave
  3. Dave2244

    Coral fossil?

    Trying to ID these. Found around Cedar Mountain/Green River, WY. A local guy said they are rugose coral fossils. The pictures I find for rugose coral on Google don't really look like what we have. Anyway, they are usually found in groups on the surface. Many times turtle fossil fragments are in the same area. Any info would be appreciated.
  4. Wrangellian

    Green River Fm fish

    I received this piece without any data. Can anyone please confirm that this is from the Green River Formation in Wyoming, and maybe add more specific location/strat detail to that if it's possible to tell? Should I assume it is from the usual place in Kemmerer... and which layer? Or could it be from a different spot entirely? The ID of the fish would be appreciated too. Sorry about the crummy indoor pic... I tried to get the color balance close to reality.
  5. Hello, My wife and I recently returned from the Green River Formation in SW Wyoming and have about 20 decent fish fossils. The limestone was wet from snow melt and is currently drying out on a table. My question is, what is the best medium to use to seal them forever? I have read about using Elmers-Glue All, Butvar and other resins, and clear lacquer. I read through some posts on this but they seemed more focused on cleaning/detailing the fossils which I have done as much as I am willing to risk already with an air blower and dental pick. Once they are dry, what is the best method to seal them completely with a clear finish so I can give some as gifts and not worry about how fragile they are?
  6. roxolania

    Worland basin, Wyoming bone

    More from my previously mentioned, fossil box these are two sections of bone fragments, reassembled, and re-glued. Thanks for any clues as to what they might be from.
  7. Locals work on 52-million-year-old crocodile fossil Kemmerer Gazette, Kemperer, Wyoming Yours, Paul H.
  8. Hello all- A friend of mine had a bunch of fossils stolen from his family's house on the outskirts of Cheyenne, Wyoming this past week. These were fossils collected 20 years ago when he started collecting and include petrified wood, Miocene mammal bones and teeth, and others. The wood was a six foot long trunk that was in about 6 one-foot long sections that all fit together. It is almost a foot in diameter and faded to orange-ish in color. A police report has been filed. I will see if my friend can send me more info on the fossils. Please help out as much as you can... if anyone out there sees any fossils show up online that fit these descriptions, please let me or the Cheyenne Police know. And for folks in Wyoming, Nebraska and especially the Front Range, let the cops know if you see anything like these in a local pawn shop. https://www.cheyennepd.org/Home
  9. klj222

    Bison skull ID

    Hi there! I am new to this site and woefully uneducated on fossils/bones/skulls but my friend felt like this skull was a bit large to be bison bison so I'd love to hear what anyone on here thinks! The largest diameter around the horn base is 8.5 inches. Item was found in NW Wyoming in the Wyoming range mountains south of Bondurant, WY. It was unearthed in an area that was burned over by the Roosevelt fire in '18. I don't really know what happens to bone when it burns so totally possible its a recent burned skull and not even a fossil but I figured I'd ask. Thanks so much.
  10. tonno.tethys

    Dromaeosaur and allosaur teeth id

    Hello everyone i recovered some dakota sediment in which i think i found an allosaur type tooth and wyoming sediment with what looks like a dromaeosaur tooth. What do you think ? I tried to do my best for the photos. that of allosaurus is 2.5 cm and the other 0.8 cm
  11. PaleoZorryn

    Lance Formation Bone Id

    Hello fellow fossil hunters, I have a bit of a problematic guess here. I have a bone from the Lance Formation of Wyoming and need some help IDing it. It seems to resemble something like a crocodile coracoid, but not as spot on as I hoped it would. If you have any suggestions I would be glad to here them. Appreciate the help and if you have identified my mystery bone, please send sources to how you know what bone it is. Never will pass an opportunity to learn. Thank you.
  12. svcgoat

    Lance Formation Sediment #5

    1. Looks like frill possibly?
  13. Dino Dad 81

    Tiny vertebra

    Hi all, This tiny vert comes from the Lance formation in Weston co, Wyoming. It's about 0.25"x0.25"x0.25". I'm wondering if the relatively large pleurocoel suggests that it's a tiny dromie. For all I know, it's not even dinosaur.
  14. tperry

    Fossilized Pine Cone?

    I found this a few years back and never looked into what it might be and thought this was the perfect group of folks to share it with for a possible ID. My best guess is a pine cone but I'd love to hear what everyone thinks here. I found this in the Ferris Mountain Range, south central Wyoming
  15. Fullux

    Camarasaurus

    Hi, these are two pieces of a femur of a Camarasaur. It was found in the bone cabin quarry in Wyoming. The first piece is 16 × 9 × 7 and the second piece is 13 × 5 × 7, measured in centimeters. The femur was found in September 2020. I just wanted a second opinion on this one as I've made poor judgement in the past.
  16. I have a question on "restoration". I have a limestone slab from the Green River fm with a palm leaf imprint. I say imprint, because the leaves have no coloration remaining. I have been trying to decide on the best way to add color back so that you can actually see the leaves without needing some oblique lighting. Because of the porosity of the stone, I worry that trying to paint them will leach the paint outward and make very blurry looking leaves. I was thinking that using a very thin consolidate should seal the stone without obscuring the detail and allowing it to be painted over the top without leaching. Has anyone used a technique like this in the past? Any tips? Just as a note, this isnt a fossil for sale, so I'm not trying to deceive anyone as to quality, this is going on display in my home when complete.
  17. hey! I would like to work on some fossil fish from the green river formation, does anyone know where I can find some that ship internationally. Please PM me any suggestions Cheers Leon.
  18. Hello, I have what was traded to me as an ornithischian jaw from the Morrison Formation of Wyoming. It measures 5 cm high and has 2 teeth sockets. I believe it may be a Camptosaurus (due to being the only large ornithischian there) partial jaw, but I cannot exclude the possibility of it being a partial theropod jaw. May I have your thoughts? Thank you.
  19. Hello all, As a belemnite collector, I am looking for the American Jurassic species Pachyteuthis densus (Meek & Hayden, 1858). Does someone have this species and is willing to trade some examples of this particular species? Kind regards, Ruben The Netherlands
  20. Picture heavy and pretty darn wordy heavy as well. You have been warned. The photos are by both caterpillar and me. In 2013 my wife and I went to France for a fossiling holiday. There, we met some great folks (allo coco, herve, capt nemo), one of whom came to visit us for some fossiling in 2016. Known here on TFF as ‘caterpillar’, Dominique was here again at the end of Sept into Oct for a two week Wyoming fossiling extravaganza. I took some vacation from work and did some organizing and called a few folks… and off we went. (Ok, it took a little more organizing than that, but you get the idea). Twas a whirlwind non-stop fossil-finding (or not) extravaganza. Dominique arrived in Casper at 11PM on Day zero and I was there to meet him at the airport. (Compare to the 2016 adventure, where I expected him 24 hours later than he actually got here). Day 1: Our first day our was a two-stops day starting at a Cenomanian/Turonian ammonite site north of Casper in the Frontier Fm. Last time Dominique was here he found an unusual ammonite, Calycoceras, at this site, and this time it was my turn. The one I found on this trip is still unprepared and not much to look at, so here is one I found here earlier this summer. Then off to an Eocene mammal site nearby. Jaws can be found here but primarily isolated teeth. Somewhere down in the valleys behind my Toyota is an area full of little fossils. There are also reworked shark teeth from the late Cretaceous which we found a few of, as well as less common Cretaceous reworked baculite and dinosaur pieces, which we did not find. I found a beat up little jaw fragment and this beauty… a multituberculate "blade". This is the lower 4th premolar and is just simply a cool tooth. No modern mammal has teeth like these, although there are some Australian marsupials that come close. This is my second multi tooth from this site...among hundreds of teeth, and my first Eocene mutlituberculate blade, although it could be reworked Paleocene or Cretaceous. To be determined later. I had warned caterpillar that we may get snowed on and delayed in late Sept slash early Oct, but this afternoon we both took a nap on the shady side of the hill. The sun was intense at about 85 degrees. Little chance of snow today. Day 2: We packed for a multi-day camping trip and drove about 3 ½ hours away to southwestern Wyoming into other early Eocene deposits. There is an old oil well pad here where I have collected many small bones and teeth from limestone blocks. And there are many limestone blocks waiting to be busted with ye ole Estwing. The goal was mammal jaws. I was here earlier this year and found a nice piece with two large upper molars (still unpepped), but in a half dozen outings to this site, that is the only mammal material I have found. Turtle shell pieces are very common. Crocodile and lizards less common. Mammals... rare. Dominique pulled this one out of thin air (or a block of limestone) within our first hour. Not sure what it is but look at those beautiful teeth. This mammal jaw is maybe an inch (2.5 cm) long. The yellow thing near the end of the jaw is a snail. Lots of freshwater snails (Physa, mostly) in this limestone. Was I jealous?… not a bit, (he says lying through his teeth). This little beauty was enough to keep us going at this site for the rest of the day. Other sites planned in the area could wait until tomorrow. Dominique eventually found a very small insectivore or marsupial jaw as well. I found a series of three upper molars in the rock, whose maxilla had eroded away and a nice little lizard jaw, both of which I have since prepped (note my thumbnail for scale; these things are small). Then we set up camp and had dinner and hit the sack, with visions of sugarplums, or mammal fossils, in our heads. Day 3: Earlier this summer I found a site in the same area where I managed to dig up a few mammal teeth and a rodent jaw within a few minutes of exploring. This was the next site on the agenda with high hopes for more mammal material. We dug for a while and got roundly skunked. You can almost see Dominique in the shady quarry there to the left of my backpack. Bones, we did find, yes, but very few mammals. I did find this nice baby croc dentary… which I have since prepped. There is also a fish vert (near my thumb) and a snail in this block. We did some exploring on the same ridge and I stumbled upon a pile of blue crocodile bones and this beauty. Years ago, I found my first Eocene bird bone in this area, and here is the second one… a broken distal tibiotarsus… preserved in blue! This may be the best fossil I found in our two-week adventure. A beautiful blue bird bone. I will be sleeping all winter with dreams of pursuing the blue crocodile bones I found here. At this point rain was threatening. We had one more day planned out here, but the rain came and the pocket computer said more for tomorrow. So we ran away. Six miles down a two track and 6 more miles down a gravel road is not where I like to be when a full day of rain is scheduled. Back to Casper we went. Day 4: Off to eastern WY. In 2016 Dominique found a fabulous double skull piece in the White River Fm (VFOTM June 2017) here and so we checked out that area. Nothing nearly as exciting. I found a small rodent/rabbit skull; that was about it. Then we explored some new areas on the ranch… more White River Fm. Nothing. Then off to the Pierre Shale where there are ammonites to be found. Dominique found an amazing specimen… not an ammonite, but the biggest Pierre Shale Nautiloid I have ever seen. And it was too heavy to bring home, so he gifted it to me. Merci, Dominique. Oh, there were some ammonites as well but I did not take any pictures. Back home for a night’s rest. Day 5: Today was shark teeth day (and more Cretaceous ammonites). Off to the area around Medicine Bow, south of Casper. We gazed at the famous dinosaur graveyard known as Como Bluff and the cabin mode of dino bones nearby. Como Bluff is private property… no trespassing, no collecting. Our goal was a site that I found decades ago in the Cenomanian/Turonian Frontier Fm, and that I haven’t been to in 20 years. (I had north and south reversed in my field notes… darn it). We eventually found a lot of little Cretaceous shark teeth, including Scapanorhynchus, Squalicorax and Ptychodus. Here is one Dominique found. Not sure the genus. Then off to another ammonite site, this time Campanian in the Mesa Verde Fm. This site has, in the past produced some nice ammonites with colorful nacre, and we were hoping for some. I had not done too well here the past few times I came. Dominique did well in 2016. This time, we both did quite well. Someone else had been here recently and did a lot of hard work with bigger tools than we had to break open huge concretions. And they had found goodies, based on the impressions we found. They must have run out of daylight or got caught in bad weather because the good layer still had ammonites to be found. D is seen here sitting on the concretion chipping away at it. We each found a nice colorful Placenticeras in this concretion. Dominique did some serious hard work to get this one out. It has a coil of a Didymoceras glommed to it. I decided not to prep that off. Day 6: Heading west from Casper we went to a ranch that has Eocene Wind River Fm badlands to explore. Earlier this summer I found a site in the area where I managed to dig up a nice mammal jaw (with bonus croc scute) within a few minutes of exploring. As with the site mentioned above, we were hoping for more mammal material. As with the hopeful mammal site above, we got skunked. Lots of turtle pieces, and a few crocodilian bits, but no mammals. Darn it. Two new sites this year where I found the only mammal to be found in the first hour. So, we explored. This area has a lot of turtle pieces strewn about the badlands. On previous visits, I had dug at a few to find the source, finding occasional accumulations of turtle plates and the aforementioned cool mammal jaw. In an hour or so of walking around, Dominique found a complete (or darn near) turtle shell! Great find. It was getting late in the day so we marked it and planned a return trip. In the first photo, see if you can spot the turtle. Dom has already exposed enough to say “Yup, looks pretty complete, By Gum!”. The turtle is outlined in the second photo and the third photo is D’s picture where the darn thing is more obvious, laying there on its back. Day 7: Begin a multi-day camping trip to Lusk in eastern Wyoming. It is a three-hour drive and then some to get to the first fossil area. Stop one: ammonite exploration. For a while I had wanted to explore the area for some of the irregular ammonites in the Exiteloceras jennyi zone in which one can find Exiteloceras, Oxybeloceras, Placenticeras and some scaphitids, and of course Baculites. We each found nice Placenticeras a few days ago so I was hoping to find this zone and find some Exiteloceras. In a perfect world, a complete one would be amazing. Some exploring and navigating using ye ole topo maps. It took a while but we managed to find the zone… really we found one huge concretion full of ammonite pieces including my first decent pieces of Exiteloceras. This one has a baculite in the mix. Success! That evening, we went to the ranch where we’d be hunting the next day to camp out in the hills there. We met the hunters that we would be avoiding who were staying on the same ranch. A couple of nice guys (father and son) from Wisconsin who have been hunting deer on this ranch for some 20 years. It was a beautiful evening when we hit the sack but at some point in the night we were hit by a helluva storm. Much sleep was lost. We both our worried our respective tents would not hold. Dominque’s tent got quite wet inside. We both woke up cold and tired and a little wetter then we like, but we had a busy day ahead. Here is camp the night before the storm. Day 8: Into the White River Fm today. Dominique wanted to find a turtle… or two. That was his goal. My goal was… anything but turtles and oreodonts. We started out wearing several layers of. clothes as it was a cool morning but it soon warmed up quite nicely. It was a rather slow day, but we did both score. One of us found this with a Paleolagus skull and jaws with a few extra bones. This thing is about 2 inches (5 cm) long Dominique found a few turtles including a big one seen below just before getting a wrap of aluminum foil. We spent an hour or more digging it up and hauling it up the hill. I found a smallish turtle which I later gave to D. (see day 12). I found my first ever saber-toothed cat skull and jaws. I am pretty sure it is a Dinictis. The jaw to the right of the awl (above) was the first thing I saw. The skull is to the left of the awl and is less obvious. The darker color is because I had just exposed it. You can see the zygomatic arch running more or less parallel to the awl, and a tooth or two to the left of that. And if you can’t make it out, here is a close up. Freshly vinaced. Unfortunately all four fangs had been eroded away as that end was exposed to the elements. I can’t help but wonder how it would have been if I had found it yesterday, before last night’s storm. Dominique later found a Daphoenus skull and he collected an almost complete oreodont skull I found. That afternoon, the rancher and the two hunters staying here came by to see how we were doing. I was able to show them my cat and some other stuff. They were impressed and I gave them a few tidbits as souvenirs. The rancher and deer hunters said they had not had the storm last night down at his house, a mere 5 miles away. We moved our camp into town, in Lusk. Day 9: It was hunting season in much of WY. The campground in Lusk was full of hunters. I wore my day-glo orange hat for most of our outings. While driving, I had it on the dashboard. Even though I am not a hunter, I felt like one of the cool kids with my orange hat… so many other folks driving around with orange hats on the dashboard. Today’s plan was another area of White River Fm closer to Douglas, WY. The area is known for small skulls and skeletons in nodules. So, that is what we hoped for. We met Kent Sundell of Douglas Fossils in the morning. Two other seasoned fossil hunter friends, also joined us. It turned into a blindingly sunny day, not ideal for finding stuff here… too much light makes it hard to see the bones. Dominique found a beat up rabbit skull and a Hesperocyon (small dog) maxilla within the first hour, but after that, it was a long hot, almost unfossiliferous day. Of the five of us, I was the only one who found anything that passed my test for a good fossil (from this area). I saw a small vertebra on the edge of a nodule and busted the nodule open to find a cross sectioned skull and some other bones. Not an articulated skeleton, but a good find nonetheless. Based on what little we could see of the teeth, we decided it was probably a Hesperocyon. I look forward to seeing this one in the CT scanner. We did all find turtle eggs. : ) We returned to Lusk for pizza. At the campground, one of the hunters (from Ohio) had gotten his deer. To give you folks an idea of the terrain and the challenge, here is a photo of the badlands in the Douglas area. The bones are almost always in nodules. This photo shows thousands of nodules to be examined. (That’s me in the upper center of the photo). In the photo below, my finger is pointing to one set of teeth and maxilla. About an inch to the right you can see the maxilla and a tooth form the other side of the skull. The top of the skull is barley visible as a thin sheet of bone above both of these maxillae. Just to the right of my finger is a leg bone cross sectioned. Despite this looking like not much, I guarantee this will be a nice piece. There us an almost orange-ish streak running vertically just to the right of the right tooth. That is my chisel mark from splitting the rock open. There is another one running diagonally up to the left from my finger. I missed the skull by fractions of an inch. Phew! Day 10: Cold morning in Lusk. Frost on our tents. We actually left Wyoming this morning to go check out an ammonite site I found many years ago in South Dakota. As we entered the Black Hills in SoDak, it got foggy. Fog here usually lifts pretty quickly, but not today. By the time we got to the site on the east side of the Black Hills, it was drizzly and still somewhat foggy. We had to bundle up for this one. And then we found very few fossils. Here I am failing to find fossils, but staying mostly warm and dry. This picture should make you feel cold. Two or three hours later, cold, wet, and skunked, we left for the sunnier skies of Wyoming. Indeed, the rain/sun line was still very close to the state line. I called a rancher who has ammonites on his place and he gave us permission to poke around this afternoon. Lots of ammonites. Dominique was looking for really good ones, having to limit his baggage weight, but I collected way too many. He did give me a small but beautiful nautilus, which I had never found in my half dozen visits to this site. Merci, Dominique. I may even be able to tell you what species these are, but I need to look it up. Day11: Along WY highway 270, there is an area of White River badlands I have wanted to explore for, oh, roughly 30 years. I finally had the chance to stop and visit with the landowner (whom I met when he was still in high school) and he allowed us to have a look. And, again, we got skunked. We did see a few poorly preserved turtles, but really nothing worth putting in our pockets or luggage. I won’t be going there for another 30 years. End of camping trip. Back to my house and my lovely wife for the night. Day 12: The goal for today was a return to D’s turtle he found in the Wind River Fm… (remember from Day 6, the area where I have never found a complete turtle, and he finds one on his first time out there). After so many days of full-on fossiling, we slept in this morning. Then off to the site. On Day 6 when we came here, a two track that would have gotten us much closer to the site was un-runnable. It crossed a creek that was a bit high. On this day we tried it again as it hadn’t rained all week. The creek was still there, but much lower, and full of muddy cow prints about 6 inches deep, and stinky of bovine urine. That was some quality mud in there. We pondered the best place to cross and put the old rig into 4WD low and off I went while D cheered me on. Front wheels in and out the other side, back wheels in and… not out the other side. Slipping in the slick mud and the rear bumper was hung up on the edge of the creek. We were stuck. It took us a short hour to dig ourselves out and off we went. This road did indeed bring us much closer so we did not have to walk far. We re-found Dominique’s turtle quickly enough. On the way up to it, D found a second potentially complete turtle. It took us a few hours to collect the target turtle and during a break we uncovered the second one and it was indeed complete but crushed. He offered me this second one for a trade for the smaller one I collected in the White River. Sounds good. We did not have time to collect the second one, so it got buried. Here I am exposing the squashed turtle. The outline is almost clearly visible between me and the hammer. (I did return after Dominique git home and collected this one. The crek was even drier and not a threat this time). I also found an area with an abundance of bird eggshell pieces. I dug a bit but only found one in situ piece. My first eggshells from the Wind River Fm. Cool. Meanwhile, Dominique found a little mammal lower molar. We returned home in time for me to participate in my family’s weekly zoom session. Two complete turtles in an area where I would have said it would be unlikely… good job, Dominique. Day 13: Our last day out… in search of Jurassic dinosaur bones... something new for Dominique. Nothing too big, of course, to bring back to France, so we went to a site north of Casper where I had found a very nice Nanosaurus jaw last year that some of you may recall seeing on this very forum. It was a bit of a hike. Note the smallness of my truck out there. The bone layer is only a foot or so thick and it is at the base of a ten-foot wall of sandstone. You can’t tunnel under the sandstone cuz the layer does not come loose, so you have to find areas where the layer is more exposed than just as a vertical outcrop. Here I am working an accessible area. And here is Dominique looking for more bones in a fallen chunk of sandstone showing a rib fragment. Dominique eventually found a small enough centrum from a sauropod. Small enough for a suitcase. Not to be outdone, I went and found a dinosaur skeleton in the same layer. In a slumped section of the cliff there were dozens of blocks of sandstone with weathered bones in and on them. I also found where they were coming from; there were several more bones going into the sandstone at the base of the cliff. These bones will probably never be excavated as they are at the bottom of a ten-foot cliff of hard sandstone and very tough to get to, and half of the animal is lying in bits in the talus pile. Many of the blocks of rock behind and in front of my back pack have dinosaur bones on their surfaces. Here are some visible as blackish things just above my glasses. The black ones are freshly exposed. The rock under my glasses and its neighbor to the left have bones that are more bleached… white-ish. Some were identifiable as vertebral pieces, but mostly they were just bone pieces. You can’t see it here, but the rock just behind the little grass in the center bottom has a leg bone cross-sectioned in it. I saw other bones going into the cliff behind the bigger grass clump. Note the sandstone layer here. Not a project I want to tackle. Not even for work. Too big for my suitcase. And thus ended Dominique's and mine's great adventure. Before Dominique left we looked into getting his big White River turtle back to France. It weighs more than the airlines will allow in checked luggage and all the shipping outfits we looked into wanted upwards of 1000 USD. With the help of some folks here on the forum, we found some less expensive shipping options. The turtle is still at my place, but over the winter I will build a little crate for it and send it to Dominque. All in all, a great fossil vacation for the both of us. And now I have to excuse myself; I have a ton of fossils in the garage awaiting my attention. Happy Fossilicious New Year, y’all. jpc
  21. Jurassicbro238

    Lance Formation Fossil ID

    I was able to dig in the Lance Formation last summer and finally got the chance to look at this find more closely. I don't think this is a dinosaur fossil and I'm not familiar with the skeletal anatomy of the other vertebrates at the site. Anyone know what it is? I tried taking all the relevant angles. This one came from Niobrara County in Wyoming if that helps.
  22. Still_human

    Sauropod process?

    Hi there everyone, I just wanted to get some opinions on something. This is supposedly a sauropod transverse process. Can anyone confirm or reject that claim, or just give me your thoughts? It just says “a Jurassic site in Wyoming”, so that could narrow down the potential family/species. I’m sure you can tell it’s apparently the top and bottom of the same bone, just broken and missing a bit in between. Thanks for any and all help!
  23. Dino Dad 81

    Egg Shell take 2

    How about these? They're also from Weston co Wyoming (granted I bought these two, whereas I dug the previous-posted tooth and non-eggshell). Since we don't have anything from Lance to compare to, I suppose I'm really asking: (1) is it egg shell? (2) is it dino? (3) have you seen anything like it from JRf or HCf?
  24. Hello, I am making a great of in-situ pictures of my fossil hunting trips for this year. We now have a foot of snow in the ground so fossil hunting season is over. ☹️ These pictures occur in Wyoming, Montana, South Dakota and North Dakota. Mostly Cretaceous aged sites but some Eocene from ND. They are mostly tooth related. I hope everyone likes in-situ pics as much as I do!
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