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  1. Heading over to SE Asia in December for some diving. I wanted to see where I could possibly go personally and try and find some teeth. I've read about Sarawak, Bruit Island in Malaysian Borneo. I've read about West Java and the cities that produce amazing fossils. I need more information on exactly where? What other areas may produce teeth? Where could I go myself? Are there any guide? Does anyone have any friends that would take me? Anywhere that's easy to access? Again, I know about the sites in West Java but those seem a little harder to access. Any instagram pages of people that find fossils over there, I'll message them myself lol. I am really just trying to find someone that lives over there to talk to. I've messaged the account that posted about Bruit Island, but that was years ago and doubt they're still active on this forum. I wouldn't even mind a few small teeth on a beach somewhere, just to say I found some over there would be awesome. Any information anyone could offer will be greatly appreciated! Thanks again, Indy
  2. I'm curious about what I believe are charybdis fossils from Indonesia. I'm slightly suspicious of the matrix, but also know that most of these fossils are in clay and could dry like that. Any feedback is appreciated! Thank you and have a good day.
  3. Below are some of the slabs/slices/limb casts of petrified wood from my collection. I'll post more pieces in latter replies. I especially like very colorful pieces and unusual pieces like Teredo bored pieces or pieces with fungus. I have hundreds of close-up pictures. If you would like to see close-up pictures of a particular piece, reply to this post with the number/numbers. If you want to see close-up pictures of some of the petrified wood pieces from this thread, check out my TFF thread at the below link: 1 Petrified Wood botryoidal agate golden calcite insect borings ostracods Eocene 50 MYA Green River Fm Blue Forest along Lake Gosiute Sweetwater County Wyoming 1.2 lbs 8.25 x6x.38 inches 2 Petrified Wood conifer Araucarioxylon arizonicum fungus Polyporites wardii early Permian late Triassic 295 to 201 MYA Chinle Fm northern Arizona 3.60 lbs 10.25x8.75x.5 inches 3 Petrified Wood Triassic 225 MYA Chinle Formation near Holbrook Arizona 745g 160 x200x12mm 4 Petrified Wood Seed Fern Rhexoxylon Triassic 220 MYA Ambilobe Madagascar 136g 3.75x2.50x.375 to .5 inches 5 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Acondromen Madagascar 575g 145mmx95mmx18mm 6 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Acondromen Madagascar 182g 4.25x3.5x.31 inches 7 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Acondromen Madagascar 201g 4.25x3.5x.375 inches 8 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Acondromen Madagascar155g 4.25x3x.375 inches 9 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Acondromen Madagascar157g 4.25x3.25x.375 inches 10 Teredo Bored Petrified Wood Slab Paleocene Epoch Canon Ball Formation North Dakota 2,150g 10.25x9x.625 inches 11 Petrified tree fern Tietea singularis Permian 275MYA Motuca Formation Parnaíba Basin in Filadélfia Tocantins Brazil 340 g 8 x 4.75 x.25 inches 12 Petrified Wood encased In Algae-Laurel Eocene Bridger Formation Blue Forest WY 1802g 9.5x7.75x.625 to .75 inches 13 Petrified Replacement Wood Eocene 34 to 40 MYA Clarno Formation Hampton Butte central Oregon 484g 7 x 5 x .44 inches 14 Petrified Wood Slab Woodworthia Triassic Chinle Formation Winslow AZ 408 g 5.5x4.25x.43 to.5 inches 15 Agate Petrified Wood Turkey 253g 6.25 X 3.25 X .31 inches 16 Petrified Wood Slab Cedar Miocene 15.5 MYA Wanapum Basalt Formation Saddle Mountain Washington 228g 5.5x4.25x.25 inches 17 Petrified Wood Slab Miocene 15.5 MYA Wanapum Basalt Formation Saddle Mountain Washington 361g 5.75x5x.44 inches 18 Petrified Shrinkwood Miocene Fleming Formation Live Oak County, Texas 176g 4.25x3.5x.375 inches 19 Yew Taxus sp. in Stromatolitic Algae Miocene Tonopah Nevada 3.25 x 2.5x.19 inches 20 Teredo Bored Petrified Driftwood Middle Miocene Saltos Shale Member Monterey Formation Santa Barbara Canyon near Cuyama CA 6 x 4x.625 inches 21 Petrified Wood Araucaria conifer Monkey Puzzle Tree Triassic Age 200 to 250 MYA Madagascar 572g 5.75x4x.7 inches 22 Hematite Replaced Teredo Bored Petrified Wood Eocene Yegua Formation or Cretaceous 40 to 50 MYA Lake Bryan TX 288g 7.25 x3x.44 inches 23 Petrified Wood Log Miocene Jarbridge Ryolite Formation Hubbard Basin Elko County Nevada 1061g 4.25x4x1.75 to 2.75 inches 24 Petrified Wood Triassic 225 MYA Chinle Formation Arizona 1186g 8.25x6.75x.625 inches 25 Petrified Wood Sycamore Platanus sp. Miocene Bopesta Formation Horse Canyon near Tehachapi Kern County California 271g 4x3.5x.75 inches Marco Sr.
  4. I haven’t posted a stromatolite in a while. I’ve been preoccupied with biominerals and petrified wood. To see an old thread on stromatolites in my collection, check out the below link. The below stromatolite slab is one of my favorites in my collection because of its composition and formation story. This slab is a breccia created during a Mississippian time-period Impact (large meteor or asteroid) in Missouri that blended Cambrian aged laminar stromatolites with Precambrian aged iron. The close-up pictures below show the EDIT: agatized interdigital spaces of a stromatolite embedded in the iron. The last 5 pictures are at the highest magnification and show the stromatolite patterns and breccia patterns. Mississippian Impact Breccia Slab, Agatized Cambrian Laminar Stromatolite blended with Precambrian Iron, Crooked Creek Structure, Crawford Co., Missouri (264 grams 6.125x3.5x.375 inches): This slab was sold as fossilized coral. I could tell from the pictures that it was actually a stromatolite which I’ve confirmed with two stromatolite experts. The interesting thing is that it is from the Miocene of Indonesia. Both the time period and location make the specimen rare. Stromatolite Slab, Miocene, Indonesia (109 grams 3x2.75x.125 to .5 inches): Marco Sr.
  5. oilshale

    Whiteia oishii Yabumoto & Brito 2016

    Picture number 3 shows a close up of the scales. Taxonomy according to Yabumoto & Brito, 2016. Yabumoto & Brito 2016, p. 234: "The locality and horizon of the type specimens are not precisely known. Available information is that the locality lies in the area of Noe Bihati, West Timor, Indonesia." Diagnosis in Yabumoto & Brito 2016, p 234: "Whiteia with the following combination of characters: with five to ten sparse long ridges on scales, nine rays (seven anterior long and two posterior short) on the first dorsal fin, pointed denticles on the anterior fin rays of the first dorsal fin, operculum with many tubercles, postparietal with many pits and short radial grooves, angular with radial grooves and other bones of the head smooth, without tubercles." Line drawing of the holotype by Yabumoto & Brito, p. 235: A.b = basal plate of anal fin; D1.b = basal plate of first dorsal fin; D2.b = basal plate of second dorsal fin; L = lung; P.b = pelvic bone. Identified by oilshale using Yabumoto & Brito, 2016. Reference: YABUMOTO, YOSHITAKA AND BRITO, PAULO M. (2016) A new Triassic coelacanth, Whiteia oishii (Sarcopterygii, Actinistia) from West Timor, Indonesia. Paleontological Research, vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 233–246.
  6. billyt9292

    Tiger tooth?

    Hi everyone, This tooth has been sold as a tiger tooth from Java, Indonesia, dated at around 1,000,000 years old. Of course cat fossils are very rare. I trust the seller as they also sell composites that are labelled and sold as such, so I think they know their stuff. What are your views on this? The only real question I have about it is the dip in the bone on the left side underneath the tooth; what is this? Is this indeed a tiger/cat tooth?
  7. A brief description of the situation. It looks nice on the front, very structured. Over five inches long on each side, beautiful V-shaped. The disadvantage is that one side of the serration is damaged, and the root of the back tooth is slightly corroded? There are fossilized shells on the tooth roots? …..🥺
  8. My grandmother was a world traveler before she died and purchased this in Indonesia (I think) sometime in the 90's and 00's. She knew I was interested in fossils, but they did not come with any information. I can't even be sure its from Indonesia. Its a little over 1 inch (2.54 cm) square. I can only assume this was common in the tourist/fossil trade at that time, so I'm hoping someone here will know what it is.
  9. Here's another purchase from my grandmother from the 90's and 00's from Indonesia, I think. No information, its maximum length is about 2.5 inches, (6.35 cm).
  10. Fossilized Cicada Entombed In Opal Reveals Precious Gems Can Contain Ancient Life Rachael Funnell, IFL_Science, October 7, 2023 https://www.iflscience.com/fossilized-cicada-entombed-in-opal-reveals-precious-gems-can-contain-ancient-life-57413 Rare Fossil Reveals Cicada Entombed in Opal An insect trapped in a precious gem points to new places to search for ancient life Carolyn Wilke, Scientific American https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/rare-fossil-reveals-cicada-entombed-in-opal1/ The open accesspaper is: Chauviré, B., Houadria, M., Donini, A. et al. Arthropod entombment in weathering-formed opal: new horizons for recording life in rocks. Sci Rep 10, 10575 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-67412-9 Yours, Paul H.
  11. Hello! I run a ladies fossil hunting fb group here in Florida, USA but am traveling to Singapore October 6- 13 and would like to know: 1. Are there any excursions I can go on to find fossils in Singapore? What can be found there? 2. Are there any paid excursions in Java or elsewhere in Indonesia? 2a. Would it be safe to travel alone? (American female in her 50's if it makes a difference). I would need to fly in from Singapore and preferably meet with a reputable group. Thank you!
  12. Hi there! I have a chance to purchase Indonesian Megalodon teeth wholesale, but I want to make sure they are real first. Of course the seller says they are. The teeth are 10-13cm and seem to be in excellent condition, which is what draws my skepticism. Pictures are attached. Any info/informed opinions are greatly appreciated. Let me know if you need any other info. Thank you!
  13. Marco90

    Help to Identify Big Shark Tooth

    Hi everyone! In an online auction I found this shark tooth. It is indicated as "Otodus megalodon tooth", found in West Java, Indonesia. Unfortunately there are no further details on the provenance. The shape looks very different than typical Megalodon teeth, but I admit I'm not an expert. Could it be another species of Otodus genus?
  14. Just received this rhino jaw piece from indonesia and would like to get some opinions if its real and do you seen any repair or resto?
  15. LSEng57

    Horn ID

    Hi there, I've collected a lot of unique fossils and pieces through the years but admittedly, by far an expert. I hope to get some help to ID this horn. Collected from Indonesia Apparently collected alongside stegodon, tiger and crocodiles. Apparently found in material dating to the Pleistocene era. Found a few feet away from a lower jaw belonging to a rhino (see pictures).
  16. I like buying polished jasper and agate slabs to take pictures of the colorful inclusions in them. Below is a plume agate slab from Indonesia with some really unusual inclusions. Can I get some help identifying the three numbered inclusions? Mineral, plant, algae, pollen, fungus, bacteria? Indonesian plume agate slab, Karang Jaya region in Northern Sumatra, Indonesia (76 grams 3.75x2.25x.25 inches) A couple of typical closeup pictures from the slab Item 1 for ID (these inclusions may be thick dendrites that I haven't seen before) Item 2 for ID (looks almost plant like) Item 3 (orange, round, bumpy inclusion) for ID (I've not seen an inclusion in agate like this before) Marco Sr.
  17. Microraptorfan

    What fish is this?

    I saw this fossil fish online but I cant seem to find any info on pleisotocene fish fossils from indonesia, (I assume its from pleistocene rocks?)
  18. Kikokuryu

    Crocodylus or Gavialis tooth?

    I had a question about the ID of croc teeth from the Solo River, Java, Indonesia. While the bigger tooth is more easily identifiable as Crocodylus siamensis (syn. Crocodylus ossifragus) just on the size and shape, I was unsure about the smaller one. Croc teeth from the Pleistocene deposits (not sure what formation it's called) are usually just sold as Crocodylus ossifragus, but Gavialis bengawanicus also appears to have been present. The smaller tooth does have prominent fluting, but I'm not sure if that's even a distinguishing feature. I haven't really seen a whole lot of Crocodylus teeth, fossil or extant. Not sure if smaller teeth from this region are even identifiable. If anyone has any knowledge of distinguishing gharial from crocodile, help would be appreciated. Measurement in centimeters. Last image here is just a comparison with a Thecachampsa americana (left) from Bone Valley, Florida.
  19. Hi, is this real? Recently I've bought a megalodon tooth but I didn't get a authenticity document and I have no experience in fossils. Can you help me please? 10-15 mil years, 12.1 cm, Miocene age
  20. Aquired a big megalodon tooth who seemed to have certain deformation/pathology to a certain extent. However, it looks like serrations has started to split off in two directions? I'm not familiar with this at all. Anyone who is more familiar with megalodon and shark teeth that can help?
  21. Stephen burge

    Tiger Tooth identification

    Hi everyone I’m looking for a ID on this tiger tooth bought from Indonesia, it comes from Java island Solo. Possibly from which extinct tiger.
  22. Hi just wondering what this shell might be that is in the matrix of my Indonesian (Java) Meg tooth. @IsaacTheFossilManmight have an idea?
  23. Hey guys! So I was thinking of possibly buying an Indo Meg - seller says it’s 5.6”, there’s some damage to one of the sides, which makes me think it’s legit, but the root also looks a little strange, so I wanted to ask here what you guys think!
  24. Recently bought a 14.25 cm tooth from Indonesia and it cost me half a month's salary. It has a strong smell of rust and a little bit of pyrite filling in bourlette, but I’m not sure if it is real because I never heard about it. Besides, the gap between root and bourlette seems to have been slightly polished. Check with UV light Split edge
  25. A friend has just shown me these and wanted to know if i could help on an id but i was stuck so have to ask you guys and girls. They were said to be found in marine deposits where sharks teeth are found but this is not 100% confirmed. he just tinks they are some kind of mammal claw but something does not look quite right has anyone else got any ideas ? there are 2 , photos are not great but hope you can help. Looking at the photos again they look a little like crab claw pincers but they are far bigger than any of the crabs found in the area....
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