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Showing results for tags 'olympic peninsula'.
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I found this on the beach of the puget sound near a very high eroding bluff. It’s about 2 inches in diameter, with a distinct center and spiral shape. Does anyone have any ideas about what it might be?
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- spiral
- olympic peninsula
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A few odds and ends I picked up on Sunday from Twin Beach, Washington. The Burke Museum Paleontology Database is still down (PLEASE BURKE, GET IT BACK ONLINE!!!), so I can't really ID the snails right now, but one of them is clearly a moon snail, and if I had to hazard a guess, the big one is maybe some sort of spindle snail? Prepping it was very easy and zen. And of course a Callianopsis clallamensis ghost shrimp that the beach is so well known for. Till' next time!
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- pysht formation
- oligocene
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Hello all! In my hunt to find crab concretions I started out at the beaches of the Olympic Peninsula. I wanted to share what I have found! I have gone three times so far and the close to six hour round trip was a bit rough, but very well worth it and I can't wait to learn and discover more. I am struggling to find crabs, but I am continuing my research and hope to figure something out soon. If there is anyone that could point me in the right direction that would be greatly appriciated as well! The first concretion I opened, It took no effort to crack. I speculate it cou
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Can anyone recommend sources for identifying fossils we find on Murdock Beach on the Olympic Peninsula, Washington? Thank you.
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- murdock beach
- olympic peninsula
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This fossil was found yesterday on Murdock Beach, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. It is about 1" x 2". We've been there many times but never found anything like this before. Actually, my kids found many fossils that weren't typical of what we 'usually' find. Any help with identifying it would be much appreciated. Thank you.
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- unidentified fossil
- murdock beach
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Weather was pretty decent Monday-Tuesday, so I thought a trip back out to the Peninsula would be nice. Twin Beach is good place to find marine Oligocene fossils. I read a paper recently that proposes that the fossils here may have been part of a 300+ meter deep sea shelf community that was slowly uplifted. Callianopsis clallamensis ghost shrimp claws, extremely common here. Regret cracking this one, would have looked really good prepped. Many of the shrimp fossils have calcite crystals that have formed inside them.
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- oligocene
- washington state
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Hello, I am a newbie here and hoping to get some help IDing some what I believe to be fossils I found at Murdock and the Twin Rivers beaches (both are along the strait of Juan de Fuca coastline). These beaches are well known for having lots of concretion fossils. From what I’ve heard lot of sand shrimp, clams, and sometimes even whale or other mammal bones. Pic 1 &2:I think this giant rock is a fossilized whale vertebrae... I had one other person who is a fossil expert say that but looking for second opinions. Pic 3: Smaller fossilized bone? Pic 4 &6:
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- marine
- washington
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Hi all! I am completely new to fossil collection, and have started it only because I had an assignment for a class. Now, however,after visiting couple of fossil sites and getting pictures of what I found, I got excited and curious. I searched internet but only get lost. So my main question is whether at least one of my finds is a fossil, or all of them are rocks? Pictures and information about location below. 1. Alki Point, Seattle. Found it in a shale. About 3 cm long 2. Alki Point, Seattle. Found it in shale. White rings in shale about 3 mm in diameter:
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