Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'glendive'.
-
Coming up pretty soon, I'll find myself traveling through Glendive and would absolutely love to get my hands dirty looking for some good fossils. Nothing too crazy: ammos, baculites, belemnites and the like (although I certainly wouldn't turn down legal dino bits, if anyone is really willing to give a spot like that up ). I have a secret spot closer to Great Falls, lots of ammos and belemnites, that I'm willing to trade for some insider knowledge out near Glendive! Thanks all, happy hunting!
-
Hoploscaphites constrictus crassus (Lopuski 1911)
Ludwigia posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Cephalopods Worldwide
11cm. Pierre Shale Formation Campanian Late Cretaceous Found near Glendive, Montana, USA Thanks to Ron (RJB) for the raw material.- 1 comment
-
- 1
-
- glendive
- hoploscaphites
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
I won't get to do much posting from the road, but since Mike opened the door showing off some of the wisconsin ordovician finds he found and helped my wife and I collect, I figured I would add a teaser from Glendive, Montana where I finally found my first ammonites in the Pierre shale south of town. This little guy was one of my favorite singles because its exposed on one side and completely encrusted with yellow selenite crystals on the other. I will take some clearer pics once we get home and get pieces cleaned up a little
-
Hello gang. I received this tooth as a gift years ago and believe the label is wrong. I believe the label reflects the location purchased (Glendive, Montana) and not the location the tooth was found. It looks to me like a Mosasaur tooth, likely from Morocco. Am I wrong?
-
Specimen was collected on Oct 13, 2018. The location is Cedar Creek. It is 7 miles south of Glendive. The area is Pierre Shale. The specimen was in a concretion.
- 7 comments
-
I was seven miles south of Glendive; Montana on October 12, 2018; time 1400; exploring a drainage cut into the Pierre Shale Formation while looking for concretions. This scaphites was partly exposed on the surface of a concretion. Later, I removed most of the surrounding matrix.
- 6 comments
-
- 5
-
- ammonitida
- campanion
- (and 8 more)
-
I planned a trip with my daughter to head out to Glendive Montana as her birthday present to go collect fossils. As I've posted in the past, fossil hunting was something we started together as we both loved everything to do with the local museum here. I thought what would be better than to go hunt in the badlands for real dinosaur bones. After doing lots of research on here, reading books, and government literature we planned our trip out to legally collect fossils at Baisch's Dinosaur Digs. We planned a trip out for a week, booked 2 half days and 2 full days. This gave us 3 days to hunt for invertebrates(part 2 when I get around to it, probably not until at least next week) and chill. We arrived at the ranch at 8am last Tuesday, and met Shana, who would be running our tours. Marge used to run the tours, but about 2 years back she decided to hang up her boots. Shana gives you a tour of the stuff they've collected over the years, much of which is pretty cool. I wish I had decent pictures of inside there, but my daughter took those ones, and they are a bit blurry. After getting a tour of all the things you can find out there, of which there is a lot, we headed out to the badlands. You can drive with her or take your own vehicle and follow. We chose to follow as I wanted to bring along a portable toilet for my daughter as needed. Shana provides you with a screwdriver, paintbrush, and bags to put your fossils in. For most of the stuff you're finding, that should be sufficient. If you need more stuff, like casting material, hardener, etc, she carries that stuff with her as well when you find something good. I would do it day by day, but really the process is very similar, just the spots are different in what you are looking for. We drive out to a spot and park. From there, we'd hike out a little or lot depending on the site. You start scouring the ground for anything that looks like fossils. At the micro sites, you're pretty much just scouring the ground for chunks of bone, gar scales, teeth, turtle shell, and the like. Other spots we went to, you would check the ground and cliffs. If you found bone, you'd start moving up the wall to see if you could figure out where it was coming from and hope you find something nice. For me, we mostly stayed with the micro stuff, as my daughter just turned 7, is not graceful and was scared about travelling up to higher ground. Most of the bigger and more articulated bones they find are found higher up. We found tons of chunkosaurus and turtle pieces. There's also an unlimited supply of agatized wood if you like that. Overall we had a great time and I'd recommend Baisch's to anyone looking to experience hunting for fossils and actually getting to keep what you find. They keep anything carnivore to help pay for the ranch, but most of what you find is herbivore material. Here are some pics from our trip.