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  1. collectorkevin

    New member... old fossils

    Hello, New member who is discovering a love of fossil hunting. All of my collection comes from a large creek on our property in NE Ohio. Please check out the star fish, and possible bird track.....and comment if anyone can identify the last rib looking fossil I attached. Thanks!!
  2. Hello everyone, this is my first post so I hope I'm doing this properly. Some months ago I was visiting family in Ohio and we went fossil hunting, which is a popular activity there. Here are the details: Location found: Lebanon, Ohio (in a small riverbed) Dimensions: Height: 3.8cm Width: 2.6cm I don't have a scale to weigh it, but it is heavy the way a stone of its size would be. (I know that's a terrible way to describe the weight but I can't think of what to compare it to) It also passed the "tongue test" which I read about during my research about fossil identification. At first I thought perhaps it was a mastodon tusk segment. I read online ice age era fossils have been found in the area I was at due to it being glaciated. Thank you all so much for reading and for helping. I am completely inexperienced and uneducated in paleontology, but I am very interested. Cheers!
  3. dank

    Help identify please

    I found this in the same creekbed as my other rock. This looks like a snake head of some sort. You can even see what looks like a forked tongue coming out the mouth on both sides. If you guys could just take a look. You guys crushed me on the last one,. 1st pic is looking straight at head , 2nd it's right side face , 3rd left side.notice the tongue .it looks like it had horns on top of head
  4. Hello, I wanted to see if anyone would be able to identify this fossil I found in Clarington Ohio. I know it's a coral and I know it's a bryozoan and I'm suspecting it's a Rhombopora however I'm willing to look into any of the species you guys can offer! Thanks for your help. (The fossil in question is roughly an inch long if you're wondering)
  5. Hello, I know the photo is lacking. Going to look for a camera tonight. Nonetheless, here is a fossil from the Dundee of Ohio. Wondering if anyone has any thoughts on this being a Cyclocystoid, and if you have found similar in the Dundee anywhere. Thanks (And if so, what was your identification)
  6. Hi all! At last Friday’s Dry Dredgers meeting, I handed over the two Ordovician fossils below to Dr. Carl Brett for the Cincinnati Museum Center! Standard business card for scale. This coral, which I have wrongly been identifying as Favosites sp., is from the campus of Hanover College in Indiana, in their Dr. Daryl Karns trail system. This was donated with permission from the Hanover College Geology Faculty. This Treptoceras sp. comes from the US-68 road cut in Maysville, KY, Kope Formation.
  7. HeatherChase

    What is this?is it a turtle?

    I found this years ago and don't know what it is?
  8. JDKC

    Quarry stone fossil

    Saw this fishing yesterday. It’s inset in a large boulder laid down as erosion control at the lower end of a dam spillway. I’m very tempted to call it a turtle shell but I have no idea what it is. It’s about 8-9” across and 3-4” deep.
  9. Hi, I recently found this mussel in a gravel pit. Looking online it seems to match the profile of Cincinntennia meeki, but the measurements seem quite larger than what people say it should generally be. Thanks for the help.
  10. trilobites_are_awesome

    Isotelus maximus

    From the album: My trilobites

    this is an Isotelus maximus From Mt Orab, Ohio Arnheim Fm. Part of the head shield has been restored.
  11. I found this rock hiking along side a small creek in northern Ohio in Erie county, only a few miles from Lake Erie. The brown piece is not magnetic. The rock seems to be limestone which this area has a lot. Does anyone have any ideas? Thanks, Michael
  12. trilobites_are_awesome

    Stacked Eldredgeops milleri.

    From the album: My trilobites

    A stacked Eldredgeops milleri from Sylvania Ohio. This one was prepped with RockQuat as well as normal means which made the rock softer and that's why it looks different.
  13. trilobites_are_awesome

    Eldredgeops crassituberculata.

    From the album: My trilobites

    A near perfect Eldredgeops crassituberculata. From Paulding Ohio. This is the nicest roller from Ohio I own.
  14. trilobites_are_awesome

    Eldredgeops crassituberculata

    From the album: My trilobites

    Eldredgeops crassituberculata From Paulding fossil park Ohio.
  15. trilobites_are_awesome

    Eldredgeops crassituberculata

    From the album: My trilobites

    Eldredgeops crassituberculata From Paulding fossil park Ohio.
  16. I have been collecting for about three years now in various parts of West Virginia. I was thinking it might be nice to meet some others in the area that are interested in fossils and maybe do a couple trips to different localities. I would be happy to travel anywhere in WV and locations in neighboring states as well. I have included a picture of a nice Archimedes I recently found in Mercer County because we all love fossil pictures!
  17. Hi, here are pics of my various gastropods from the NW Ohio Dundee. I have tried to assign names based primarily on old literature (Stauffer Bassett), combined with google images. Soo, the names may be out of date or wrong. Interestingly neither Turbinatus or Mastigospira seem to appear in the old faunal lists; interesting because although not abundant, I have found multiple examples. All depends on the layer, I suppose. Anyway, please chime in if you have better names, and comment on how these finds line up with Dundee elsewhere (aka, Ontario).
  18. trilobites_are_awesome

    Eldregeops crassituberculata

    From the album: My trilobites

    My first complete trilobite. It's a Eldregeops crassituberculata. From Sylvania, Ohio.
  19. Cotyr8807

    Need help identifying fossil

    I found this fossil outside lodi ohio. Any clue what it is. Help is appreciated
  20. 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
  21. These came from the Silica Shale Formation near Sylvania Ohio, Middle Devonian. They seem far too small for the orthoconic cephalopods they resemble and I can see no evidence of septa or siphuncles on the ends. The scale is millimeters. This is the best image I can provide. The ratio of diameter to segment spacing ranges from 3:1 to 5.33:1.
  22. Greetings. Came across this Dipnoan tooth, (and presumed armor plate) deep in a rock we were searching through. Just wondering about the prevalence of Devonian Dipnoan evidence in our area; especially the Dundee or close by formations.
  23. I_gotta_rock

    Hello from the Road

    There are road trips and then there are road trips. I've planned many a family vacation without a single mistake. Sometimes we hit a hitch if the plane gets rerouted due to weather or something. As much as I love Chicago, I avoid it not because strange things happen when we get too close. (I'm a little concerned about what tomorrow may bring as we pass close by.) But, it was never due to my poor planning. The last two weeks have been crazy! I had it all planned out around being in the Black Hills on Monday and Tuesday of this week. Five days out from approximately Philadelphia, five days in South Dakota, and five days home with a day to sleep off the trip before Rick went back to work. I checked the itinerary twice. I asked my hubby, Rick, to double check it. We hit the road. The first few days went as planned. If this is Saturday, this must be Ohio kind of things. We spent the night in a castle and fossil hunted at a dam spillway in Ohio. We looked for more fossils along a waterfall in Indiana. We spent the night in a wacky, artic themed hotel room in Illinois. We visited a cave in Minnesota and looked for more fossils. We camped out in Buffalo Gap National Grasslands and looked for gemstones. It was all going swimmingly. The first goof was missing lodging for a night in South Dakota. No biggie. we'll just find a place for the night, although if I had figured it out, I would have opted to sleep under the stars in the free campground at the national park for an extra day. At least we had a nice shower. It also gave us extra time to admire the geology of Spearfish Canyon, complete with a run down the natural waterslide at "Devil's Bathtub." Two days later, we got to the field station for our Hell Creek dinosaur hunt, the whole reason for the trip. We got there 15 minutes early… and waited. Eventually we realized that people should be there by now and checked the reservations. It wasn’t Monday and Tuesday, it was Tuesday and Wednesday. Oops. This means that everything for the rest of the trip is now off by a day and the lodging for this leg of the trip dries up a night earlier than we need it. We decided to camp out in the Spearfish municipal campground the last night in SD. I rested a continuing migraine and Rick sat down to Google Maps and Expedia to figure out the rest of the trip. The Hell Creek Hunt was freaking awesome and will get its own trip report, but the highlights included unearthing a big fossil log along wit a triceratops tooth, a champsasaurus tooth, a 66-million-year-old turtle toe bone, and a rather large log that will probably take years to fully excavate. The next big thing on the agenda was hunting with a fellow fossil buff I’d met on The Fossil Forum. He lives on the Iowa/ Minnesota border. Somehow, when was copying and pasting Google maps told me that I needed to go to Indiana, not Minnesota. Well, that puts a monkey wrench in things! We rerouted everything and I sent my fossil friend a message about the change in plans. Then I forgot to hit send. I wondered for two days why he did not reply. Finally he asked if I was still coming. I said yes, we’d be out his way tomorrow; that we were on our way to DesMoines, a few hours away. Well, It IS a few hours away, but we were already EAST of him and had no buffer time before Rick had to be back to work on August 1st. So, this is the one thing we just had to skip. BOO! Crossing my fingers for our next trip west, @minnbuckeye SO, now we are playing the next few days by ear as we hop from DesMoines to somewhere to Cleveland and then home. Do I dare to try Mazon Creek in the heat of summer with a million ticks? Brave my Chicago jinx? Find crazy roadside attractions and just stop as we see signs? Only tomorrow will tell. Regardless, we’re having a ball. The roof rack on our minivan is loaded with fossils and pretty rocks. We got loads of sunshine. We have stories to tell. It’s all good.
  24. I picked this up thinking it looked vaguely like a fish scale, but I'm not entirely sure either way. Collected from the Cuyahoga Formation (Mississippian) in northern Ohio. Any thoughts?
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