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Hi everyone. I'm Jeffrey. I'm from Ontario, Canada. And I joined this forum because I love collecting fossils and I'd love to have them identified. I'm super eager to share my finds with everyone as well as meet new people here who share my interest in fossils as well as chatting and making new friends. Thank you for reading this and can't wait to meet you all!
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Hello everyone, Newbie here with a new found passion for rock collecting etc. I recently found this while out in my back garden. Does anyone have any idea what this possibility could be? Any information is appreciated.
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Well, probably not, but it looks like it. And forget the 'Point Pelee' tag, that's only where the rock was, definitely not the original location. After a lot of severe storms and erosion at the tip of the point, the shoreline has been buttressed with large limestone blocks from elswhere. In one of them we saw this protruding fossil, And took the normal crappy cel phone picture, which has been cropped and sharpened.
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From the album: Trilobites
Known by some as Nanillaenus, this robust example from Ontario was purchased. -
I've been out a number of times already this year, mostly revisiting local spots until the semester is done and I can commit to more exciting locations. Some of my previous trips this month even netted another fragment of Terataspis that will need some patient prep to reveal as anything halfway decent. The snow is gone, and today saw temperatures soar to 20 degrees. A site with about a few acres of dumped mid-Devonian rock just north of me in town seemed a natural fit for the day. I had prospected it before, and generally knew what to expect: a miserable, dense, mostly blank, occasionally reworked limestone with intervals of high energy "beds" (more like chaotic jumbles that split wherever), filled with small horn coral, brachs galore, some gastropods, occasional giant rostroconch, a few tentaculitids, and of course my focus: trilobites. The trilobites will never appear complete in these environments, of course. Although their pygidia occur frequently, other parts do not, and the diversity is fairly low -- mostly proetids. A few representative Pseudodechenella sp.
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Well it has finally opened to the public on December 4rth. "The new Dawn of Life Gallery" at The ROM is perhaps the best gallery on the planet covering the earliest life to the emergence of land dwelling creatures. I was fortunate to have a tiny part in the new gallery having prepared a number of the museums specimens and also having donated and sold them some pieces . Here is a tiny taste of what you can see in the new gallery. It will not disappoint.
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Canada/Ontario/Ordovician/Upper Ordovician
MarcusFossils posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: My Collection
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Canada/Ontario/Ordovician/Upper Ordovician
MarcusFossils posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: My Collection
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Canada/Ontario/Ordovician/Upper Ordovician
MarcusFossils posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: My Collection
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Canada/Ontario/Ordovician/Upper Ordovician
MarcusFossils posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: My Collection
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From the album: My Collection
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Canada/Ontario/Ordovician/Upper Ordovician
MarcusFossils posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: My Collection
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From the album: My Collection
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From the album: My Collection
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Hi everyone, I am very new to fossil hunting and am hoping to find some trilobites. I am located in along Lake Huron in Ontario, Canada on a rock formation from the middle Devonian period. I broke open a rock on my second trip and found this but I am not positive what it is. I think it could be a fossilized pygidium from a trilobite but i am really just guessing. I have attached to photos of the fossil, if anybody could help me identify it or steer me in the right direction that would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
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Hey everyone, I've been a member here for a little while but haven't properly said hi yet! I am an amateur fossil collector and aspiring preparator from Ontario. My earliest fossil memories are of walking through housing construction sites as a three year old with my parents and finding large pieces of intricate Devonian corals scattered around. Even then I was moved by what they were and the timescale they represented. Hope to get to know all of you better!
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Found this along the shores of Lake Ontario in Canada. Measures about 2" x 1.5". Any ideas what it is/was? Thanks!
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I purchased this from a woman in Ontario, Canada with no other information as to what it may be. Does anyone have any ideas?
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From the album: Nautiloid’s Trilobite Collection
Failleana indeterminata Middle Ordovician Simcoe Group Verulam Formation James Dick Quarry Gamebridge, Ontario© Owen Yonkin 2021
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I was walking my dogs this afternoon (EST) and I noticed a rock that was kind of rusty looking but spherical from the angle I was looking. I picked it up for some reason and when I flipped it over I saw some fossils I've seen before and a couple I haven't. The more I looked at it I thought this maybe part of a skull that sea life made a home in possibly? There is one fossil that almost loos like it still has color but that maybe the hue off the marbleized fossil I guess too. The fossil is very heavy and round almost oval shape aside from one section that is maybe missing? Also looks like a very small piece broke off or was scrapped off. You can see the white spot where this may have happened in the side view pics. I couldn't find my tape measure sorry. I used a AAA battery in a bunch of pics since I'm pretty sure that's a world wide standard. You can also refer to a 500ml Round bottom Pyrex flask. It's not a perfect fit but it would be very close to filling the bottom half of the flask.
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This was found in SW Ontario along the coast of Lake Huron. It looks trilobite-like, but I’m new to the area and am unaware of fossils in area. I would appreciate any assistance in identifying this. Thank you!
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EDIT (Updated August 19): Current 2020 Running Tally of Ontario Bugs. New species for this year in bold Acanthopyge contusa Anchiopsis anchiops Bathyurus (Raymondites) longispinus Bufoceraurus bispinosus Bumastoides milleri Burtonops cristata Calymene platys Calyptaulax callicephalus Ceraurinella trentonensis (?) Ceraurinus marginatus Ceraurus sp. Coronura aspectans Crassiproetus crassimarginatus Crassiproetus canadensis Dolichoharpes dentoni Echinolichas sp. cf. eriopis Echinolichas sp. cf. hispidus Ectenaspis homalonotoides Eldredgeops iowensis southworthi Eldredgeops rana Eomonarachus intermedius Failleana indeterminata Flexicalymene croneisi Flexicalymene granulosa Flexicalymene senaria Gabriceraurus dentatus Greenops widderensis Isotelus "mafritzae" Isotelus maximus Mannopyge halli Mystrocephala stummi Odontocephalus n. sp. Physemataspis pernododusus (?) Pseudodechenella sp. Pseudogygites latimarginatus Sceptaspis lincolnensis Terataspis grandis Thaleops sp. Trypaulites calpyso Trypaulites erinus Total: 40 New: 17 I'll be parking all my trilobite hunts for the year in this thread. With winter ending much sooner than we are accustomed to up here, it's about time to get back into the hammer-swing of things. This year is an ambitious one, no less on account of having spent some quality time with old literature, maps (new and old), to plot out a series of areas to prospect all across the province. A significant amount of fieldwork is planned as part of a broader research project. This past weekend was the season opener for me, with temperatures hitting about 4 Celsius on Saturday, and near 12 Celsius on the Sunday. By now, almost all the snow has burned off, with just a few shadier spots remaining. This is the view as I set out through the bush around sunrise. The ground was still frozen, which was fine as it made trekking over mud much easier.
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Two more that stump me! The first is from Humber River, and the second was found on the beach of Lake Ontario, in Toronto. 1. I see iron deposits, I assume. Judging from the staining and the smell it leaves on my fingers! But the little whorls are confusing. As are the little flat edges that sparkle and that serrated? Indentation. I suppose 'serrated' isn't the word, but I can't quite describe it! Seems like a weird conglomerate of different things. (Fear not. The needle is used for depositing water into my ant colonies but I figured it was a good way to measure as it doubles as a tiny ruler.) 2. I'm fairly certain this is a just a rock, but I'm not sure what's going on with the shining bits. Pyrite perhaps? Though pyrite isn't a fossil, of course. Hopefully this isn't an irritating ask! If it is, I'll happily refrain from any further rock shenanigans.
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- humber river
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