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  1. Jazzrocks

    Whose tooth?

    Hello from Mississippi! I've never posted on here before but I need some experienced eyes to help out with this ID. I found this tooth fragment at the w.m. browning cretaceous fossil park near frankstown last time I went sifting down there. It's been bugging me that I dont know what it is. Def not like the shark teeth you find there so that leaves croc? or mosasaur? Or something else? Its hollow and looks like it would have had a slightly curved cone shape if whole. Any insight would be helpful. Thanks!
  2. Hello all, Last Saturday I took my 7-year-old boy on a fossil hunt along the River Road (Hwy 100), NW of Alton IL. He found the item in the attached images somewhere near here: Google Map Location The longest dimension of the smooth "bit of whatever" with the porous / speckled texture is about 9 cm. I've tried various keyword combinations with google images, and haven't been able to find anything similar. I imagine it's something common and I'm just not describing it correctly. Does anyone recognize what this is? Thank you very much for any help. My kid will be very excited to find out what this is. James
  3. Nashoba2019

    New Member

    Hi. My name is Rebecca Harris I'm from Ripley Mississippi and I have just recently been introduced into the fossil world by the shark teeth, fossils, shells, and petrified wood I found while digging at a fossil park in prentiss county Mississippi
  4. Sasquatch1112

    Need ID. From W.M. Browning

    Could I get some help with this please?
  5. Need help identifying this tooth which was found in the Mississippi river near the confluence of the Mississippi and Illinois rivers. The river bed is constantly dredged to pull sand from the bottom of the river to the river bank. Area is near Saint Louis, Missouri, USA.
  6. ced0015

    Worn mosasaur vert?

    Hello all, A friend of mine sent me these photos of a piece she found at the WM Browning fossil park in NE Mississippi. Without seeing the item, my best guess was a worn mosasaur vertebra. Any ideas? Thanks in advance! -Caleb
  7. These fossils were found recently in NE Mississippi at the WM Browning Cretaceous Fossil Park. Please help to identify. The far left appears to be a mosasaur. The rest are different from other items I have found down there. The far right fossil literally looks like something that has been broken and fused back together. On the two darker, pointed items, the right is more flat. Thanks
  8. MaximusTN

    Mosasaurus or Something Else?

    Please help identity. Is this a mosasaur or something else? This tooth was found of the WM Browning Cretaceous Fossil park. This is shaped somewhat different than other mosasaur that I have found at the park (more slender and recurved). For example, this looks much different than the pterygoid tooth in my collection. Thanks for your insight.
  9. The shark teeth shown in the pics were recently found at the WM Browning Cretaceous Fossil Park in Frankstown, MS. They appear to be different than some of the more common teeth found there (i.e. goblin shark). In the publication that was produced for the park, the closet match appears to be Otodus appendiculatus, but I am not finding exact matches online. Of the four teeth, 1 (more triangle) and 4 (recurved, more pointed cuspids) stand out. Any thoughts?
  10. Phelsuma

    Illinois fossil ids

    The first one was found in randolph county outside of Sparta.
  11. Ccolvin968

    My First Trip Plan!

    Hi everyone! I just researched and planned my very first hunt ever tonight. I'm from Minnesota, but am currently living in Mississippi for work. It took some time to find the information needed in order to pick a few possible locations without driving five or more hours. Here's what I've come up with for my trip plan. All of this will be river/stream sifting, or outcroppings from the rivers/streams. All three are options, but Merrill, MS is likely my first trip due to the fact two rivers from the North converge there possibly depositing older Cretaceous fossils as well. -Waynesboro, MS (2hr) Chickasawhay River — Catahoula Formation — Oligocene — 23my - 34.9my -Merrill, MS (1.25hr) Pascagoula River — Pascagoula and Hattiesburg Formation — Miocene — 5.3my - 22.3my -McLain, MS (1.25hr) Leaf River — Pascagoula and Hattiesburg Formation — Miocene — 5.3my - 22.3my Potential Recoveries Expected: Shark/Fish Teeth Shell Fragments Inverts Snake Vertebra Echinoids Others washed downstream from Cretaceous period Thanks for reading! -C
  12. Peytonjane

    Fossil ID

    Had a load of rocks put in driveway about a month ago and have discovered some really cool rocks and fossils. Found this one am would love to know what it is. Is beautiful in the sun sparkles in every open cavity.Thanks in advance. This is my first time so hope I am doing this right.
  13. Hello everyone, this is my first post so I’m hope Im posting this in the right place. I’ve been hunting Indian artifacts here in MIssissippi for a few years now. Mostly in creeks. Just started hunting a creek on my friend’s property in Yazoo Co, MS. It is a gigantic gravel creek, it’s a little overwhelming for artifact hunting. But the creek is a treasure trove of petrified wood of all sizes. Lots of agates also. That is one rock I can identify. I go in looking for artifacts and I come out with 40 pounds of wood in my backpack. I need some suggestions on how to polish this piece of wood I found a few days ago. I know nothing about polishing or petrified wood. In the picture below, the wood is wet but of course when it dries out it’s a lot lighter. If possible, I would like it to look how it looks when it is wet, color wise. I don’t want it to be to glossy. Just want it to be a little darker and bring out the details better. Any help would be greatly appreciated. I’m sure I will be asking more questions in the future, I’m finding a lot of rocks and other things that may be fossils but I am just not sure.
  14. ced0015

    Osteoderm fragment?

    Hey all, This piece was found in Frankstown, MS in Cretaceous sediment. It appears (at least to me) to be a fragment of an osteoderm, maybe crocodilian. Any thoughts? thanks!
  15. Hey thank you for allowing me to be a member of your group I recently took a trip to WM browning fossil Park which is in Northeast Mississippi near Tupelo and I found many sharks teeth a few shell molds but one of the fossils that I found is really baffling me into the come not really sure it’s a fossil at all. Can someone identify this? (Mostly curious about the one with the two sides and one line in the middle - but these are the ones I wasn’t sure about) Thanks!
  16. Hello! I found a mysterious fossil bone while looking for shark teeth in NE Mississippi this past weekend. I believe it is from the Eutaw Formation which is Late Cretaceous. This bone appears to be complete, although maybe a bit creek-worn. It is as hard as a chert creek rock with visible minerals present in the pores. Size is 2.75" long, by 2" wide, and around 1.5" thick (including the arches on the other side). I have not studied vertebrates, and have no idea how to technically describe bones, but it looks like the largest surface is a ball (like a ball/socket) and there are two areas on either side that look like contact points. If you turn it over, it is almost heart-shaped with another ball-type surface at the bottom of the "heart shape" and two concave areas on the sides (lots of mineral "stripes" in this area). At the top of the heart shape, there is a dovetail-shaped notch. I am more than happy to take additional photos if requested! I've scoured Google and can't find much to go by, but I am guessing that it is probably some kind of marine reptile or less likely, a dino that had washed out to sea. I know it is a stretch to be able to identify one lonely little bone, but I would love to know anything I can about it, no matter how general. Thanks everyone!!!
  17. slagmouf

    Large fossil identification help

    These were found in a North MS creek. The cut of the creek is down to the hardpan and fifteen feet below ground level. There were numerous fractures on and beyond the exposed portions of the fossils. To accommodate for this and to maintain their integrity, both of them were removed along with hard pan, as a shelf. The smaller of the two fossils was found less than an inch away from the main body. As with the larger fossil, it was fractured and fell into four pieces--the nub, the main body, a shoot, and a tip--and these can be seen in the lower right and the upper left corners, respectively. Any help would be greatly appreciated and thank you in advance.
  18. From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Scapanorhynchus tenaxus Shark Tooth SITE LOCATION: 30 miles north of Tupelo, Mississippi TIME PERIOD: Upper Cretaceous Period (ca 90,000,000 yrs ago) Data: Scapanorhynchus ("Spade Snout") is an extinct genus of shark that lived from the early Cretaceous until possibly the Miocene if S. subulatus is a mitsukurinid and not a sand shark. Their extreme similarities to the living goblin shark, Mitsukurina owstoni, lead some experts to consider reclassifying it as Scapanorhynchus owstoni. However, most shark specialists regard the goblin shark to be distinct enough from its prehistoric relatives to merit placement in its own genus. Scapanorhynchus had an elongated, albeit flattened snout and sharp awl-shaped teeth ideal for seizing fish, or tearing chunks of flesh from its prey. It was a small shark normally measuring about 65 cm, though the largest species, S. texanus, is thought to have reached up to 3 m (10 ft) in length, about the size of a modern goblin shark. The largest tooth ever found is 7 cm near Atlantic Ocean. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Chondrichthyes Order: Lamniformes Family: Mitsukurinidae Genus: †Scapanorhynchus Species: †tenaxus
  19. From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7

    Scapanorhynchus tenaxus Shark Tooth SITE LOCATION: 30 miles north of Tupelo, Mississippi TIME PERIOD: Upper Cretaceous Period (ca 90,000,000 yrs ago) Data: Scapanorhynchus ("Spade Snout") is an extinct genus of shark that lived from the early Cretaceous until possibly the Miocene if S. subulatus is a mitsukurinid and not a sand shark. Their extreme similarities to the living goblin shark, Mitsukurina owstoni, lead some experts to consider reclassifying it as Scapanorhynchus owstoni. However, most shark specialists regard the goblin shark to be distinct enough from its prehistoric relatives to merit placement in its own genus. Scapanorhynchus had an elongated, albeit flattened snout and sharp awl-shaped teeth ideal for seizing fish, or tearing chunks of flesh from its prey. It was a small shark normally measuring about 65 cm, though the largest species, S. texanus, is thought to have reached up to 3 m (10 ft) in length, about the size of a modern goblin shark. The largest tooth ever found is 7 cm near Atlantic Ocean. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Chondrichthyes Order: Lamniformes Family: Mitsukurinidae Genus: †Scapanorhynchus Species: †tenaxus
  20. bayoubengal

    marine fossils from Woodville, MS

    I found these near Woodville MS, which is near the tunica hills region. Two of the fossils appear to be pretty common around here and I suspect they are marine fossils (a crinoid, perhaps?). If anyone recognizes them I'd love to know precisely what they are. The remaining fossil is more perplexing. I've found lots of coral in the area but nothing that looks quite like this. It reminds me of the pulp of a fern tree or something but I'm wondering if it's not just a different species of coral. Thanks for your help!
  21. I'm hoping someone will have a pdf of some fossil shark papers by Gerald Case. I'm finding that many of his papers are in journals that my university does not have a subscription to. In particular I am trying to identify sharks/rays/fish that I picked from a bucket of Bashi Formation matrix (early Eocene) so the first paper is most useful to me. However there are others that cover other sites I have collected so I'll go for broke and hope someone has some of these they are willing to share. Case, G. R. 1994. Fossil fish remains from the late Paleocene Tuscahoma and early Eocene Bashi Formations of Meridian, Lauderdale County, Mississippi. Palaeontographica Abteilung A, 230:97-138. CAPPETTA, H. & CASE, G.R. (2016)A Selachian Fauna from the Middle Eocene (Lutetian, Lisbon Formation) of Andalusia, Covington County, Alabama, USA. Palaeontographica, Abt. A, 307 (1–6): 43 – 103 CASE, G.R. & BORODIN, P.D. (2000)Late Eocene selachians from Irwinton Sand Member of the Barnwell Formation (Jacksonian), WKA mines, Gordon, Wilkinson Country, Georgia. Münchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen, (A), 39: 5–16, 5 pl., 3 fig., 1 tabl. CASE, G.R. & BORODIN, P.D. (2000)A Middle Eocene Selachian Fauna from the Castle Hayne Limestone Formation of Duplin County, North Carolina. Münchner Geowissenschaftliche Abhandlungen, (A), 39: 17–32, 7 pl., 1 fig. CASE, G.R. (1987)Borodinopristis schwimmeri, a new ganopristine sawfish from the Upper Blufftown Formation (Campanian) of the Upper Cretaceous of Georgia. Bulletin of the New Jersey Academy of Sciences, 32 (1): 25–33, 6 fig. Thanks! Don
  22. TNCollector

    Cretaceous Tooth

    Here is a tooth that I recently found at a Late Cretaceous site in North Mississippi, in the Coon Creek Formation. I really don't know what to think of it, except that it appears to have some sort of enamel. I haven't seen anything similar before, so I am asking for some extra opinions! Most material at this site is marine, but the occasional terrestrial botanicals and fragmentary dinosaur remains do poke up around North Mississippi. The tooth is roughly 3/4 cm. Of course, I am always hoping for dinosaur! @Troodon And teeth are his namesake! @Al Dente Front of tooth (my reference point is kind of arbitrary). I apologize for the matrix still on it, it is very tough and I don't want to damage the tooth. Back of Tooth Chewing surface
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