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  1. Hello and thank you for admitting me. My name is Tim, I'm 66 years old, and I live in Oregon. I am retired from a pretty colorful life. I have only recently started thinking about fossils again. Years ago I had a few wonderful specimens, but time swept on and I'm starting over. My main reason for collecting fossils now is my two granddaughters. They are 4 and 6, and over the past few months I have succeeded in getting them interested in fossils. They've gone from playing with toy dinosaurs to reading books with me about fossils and different periods. They are really into it, and I want to do all I can to spark their interest in becoming scientists of some sort. This year, instead of buying them toys, I got them a few good books on fossils. Also, a friend from twitter was kind enough to send me a few small fossils for them. I got a Riker Case (?) and I am planning to set them up and label them and give them as christmas gifts. They're going to be thrilled. I'm not good with printers and all that, so making the labels might be by hand. We'll see. Anyway, I am always wanting to learn, and I am interested in reading all of your posts while I try and understand. If any of you have questions, ask away.
  2. EEC

    PDX, Hello

    Hi from Portland, OR! This website has been a helpful tool for me as a non member but I'm finally getting a little deeper into prep work (Green River fossil fish specifically) and...I HAVE QUESTIONS. Lol, I figured I would finally sign up and say hello before I officially start attempting to understand what I'm doing. Thanks!
  3. bdevey

    Stain or soft body fossil?

    Thanks for looking.... I have put this piece in the junk pile twice, But I keep pulling it out. Found in SW Oregon, Western Cascades, Miocene, Little Buttes Volcanics. Measures about 30mm by 25mm, Here is a link to the site it was found, in fossil hunting trips. The piece was already split open on the ground and I did not look for other pieces, Because it looked like a stain?
  4. Feedboy

    Tooth fossil? Help identifying

    Hello I was wondering if anyone could help identifying this fossil. It was found around Eugene Oregon. Thanks
  5. Volksburgs

    Oregon Coast trip finds.

    We got back recently from a trip to the Oregon coast. We went fossil hunting a bit north of Newport. Here are a few of our finds. We have never hunted on the coast for fossils. It was in very soft matrix and they were loaded with small concretions. We brought a bunch home and cracked them open and found many had shells.
  6. The Long-Lost Tale of an 18th-Century Tsunami, as Told by Trees Local evidence of the cataclysm has literally washed away over the years. But Oregon’s Douglas firs may have recorded clues deep in their tree rings. Max G. Levy, Wired Magazine, September 29, 2021 the paper is: Dziak, R. P., Black, B. A., Wei, Y., and Merle, S. G., 2021, Assessing local impacts of the 1700 CE Cascadia earthquake and tsunami using tree-ring growth histories: a case study in South Beach, Oregon, USA, Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 21, 1971-1982. Related paper is; Patton, J. R., Goldfinger, C., Morey, A. E., Romsos, C., Black, B., Djadjadihardja, Y., and Udrekh: Seismoturbidite record as preserved at core sites at the Cascadia and Sumatra-Andaman subduction zones, Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci., 13, 833-867. Yours, Paul H.
  7. Hi everyone. I've lived in the Willamette Valley all my life. Been a rockhound all my life love fossils, rocks and anything geology! I LOVE petrified wood and Amber.. I love finding the imprint of leaves on rock but I don't know what this is all called.. I am not sure what ANY of my finds are called. All my life when my family and friends and I would go camping or on outdoor events when the rest of the crowd was socializing or swimming in the creeks and rivers, I would be digging around some hillside scratching away for rocks and fossils.. I don't even keep them all. Or I'd be overtaken. Well, I give most of them away to kids, hoping it will spark an interest in something more than video games and Facebook. I'm not educated and I don't hunt for so much as I just come across interesting things. But I would like to know of some interesting places to go to find fossils and the like. Or Amber. And I AM curious about their nature and as I said I have no formal education on these things so I thought it might be interesting to find out what some of these things are or if their fossils at all. Thank you.
  8. Salutations FF! Sometime next week I'm planning to come down to the Central Oregon Coast (Sort of around the Newport area). I'm planning on hitting Beverly Beach, Agate Beach, and South Beach in hopes of finding some shells and with the blessing of the fossil gods, maybe an aturia. Was wondering what kind of experience people have had at these beaches, and if there are any other places worth hitting in the area.
  9. My wife found this fossil while we were digging for ammonites up by Delintment Lake in Oregon. I believe this area is from the Jurassic period. Thanks for any help. I will post other pictures of the ammonites we found. Also, maybe someone can tell me if there are ammonites under these raised round pieces that we brought home. Figured I would give it a shot at trying to uncover them.
  10. We went camping last weekend out at Delintment Lake in eastern Oregon. We went to check out the ammonite fossils. It was a great place! Kids loved it. Here are some of our finds. Interesting area because you could dig in one area and it was really loose compacted clay and in another area less than a mile away it was hard slate type material that really needed some work to get it to split. Naturally the slate material had the more robust ammonites.
  11. Neilhayden

    Fossil Polypore

    I found this specimen digging in the Hampton Butte area of Oregon. It was found with typical pieces of petrified wood from the area. It looks very much like a polypore/conch. I know fossilized mushrooms are very rare but I’m stumped as to what else it could be. Thanks for the help!
  12. My daughter found this seed pod Sunday at the John Day Fossil beds in Oregon. Pretty cool. Found a lot of seeds by themselves but this one is the actual pod. Just thought I would share it.
  13. I found this fossil on our ranch near Plush Oregon a few weeks ago. It is the 2nd complete bone fossil I have ever found. The first was allegedly a camel cannon bone. I would like to make a post on it later but this one really grabs my attention. The length is 1 3/8" (34.925 mm) and the larger width is 1/2" (12.7 mm) and the smaller width is 3/8" (9.525 mm). I found it in a small dry alkaline lakebed. I have found fragments from there for a long time. People just call them camel bones but there has never been anything identifiable. The last picture is of the fragments you usually find. I found this right before sunset about 3/4's of the way up the old dune that makes up the north edge of the small dry lake. The geological map I got off of the app rockd says it is in a quaternary surficial deposit; pluvial lake valley deposits. 2.588-0ma. I have a friend who knows a little about fossils and he thought it might be a toe bone off of a Mesohippus. I was wondering if anybody has any other guesses? I dont know much about fossils but I am trying to learn! Any thoughts would be welcomed. Thank you
  14. ErikAndere

    Clarno Wood Dig

    While out wandering with friends in Clarno vicinity (the town, but probably also the formation; well away from the Palisades and on public land open to rockhounding and collection,) we came across some really vibrant, bright petrified wood, quite unusual for the area. The source tree looks like it's encased in a coarse ash or tuff, with a "shell" of harder material. The wood looks agatized but is still very brittle, too brittle for lapidary application but gorgeous for display; lot of opalized areas and mineralization. I tried to get back far enough to get a solid round but was unsuccessful (read: it was windy and I got lazy!) There was a scattering of other wood in the area, of varying levels of preservation; the formation wasn't rich with it by any means. No observed leaf fragments. Most of petrified wood we get out here is carbon-black, poorly preserved or just little brown float fragments, so finding something this bright made for an exciting day.
  15. ErikAndere

    Hi from Eastern Oregon

    Hi! New member from eastern Oregon, where the ground is paved in agate, jasper, petrified wood, fossils and thunder eggs! Am trying to turn the lifelong hobby and front-deck rock collection into a learning opportunity and move past "I don't know but it looks neat" into "this is what this is" level of rockhounding. I am running around on my boss's enormous chunk of under-studied John Day / Clarno formation overlap, digging up 60-year-old student papers for information and collecting anything that looks interesting. My usual venue for learning things from hand specimens is our local rock powwows in town but those are hit and miss right now, and they quickly turn from a "what is this?" inquiry to a game of "how many different answers can I collect for the same rock?" Which, while highly entertaining, doesn't always tell me if I'm holding a fossil or not!
  16. This was located approximately 20 miles from Lost Forest, Fossil lake area in SE Oregon on some property my folks own. Sorry the ruler isn't lined up better but you can get a good idea of the size. Any help identifying is appreciated. Thanks!
  17. Just saying hello and letting folks know I am new to the forum.
  18. RockSpongeTaco

    Moolack Beach, OR - Possible Bone?

    Hi, Was down beachcombing Oregon after the recent storms and stopped at Moolack to look for fossils. I'm generally familiar with the bivalves and other invertebrate fossils that are present. However this particular specimen has me scratching my head. It appears to be in the same hard mudstone that most of the invertebrate fossils are in, however there are many grey look-alike rocks on the beach and this one has obviously been tumbled for a while with the other beach cobbles. It is about 4 inches (long axis), and 2x2 inches (short axis, on end). I've seen toredo wood, which the center 'tubules' remind me of, however the toredo wood I've seen is usually a very dark grey, not the light grey. Some of the pits on the side remind me of the partial pits made by the piddock clams in the harder mud. It also vaguely resembles internal bone structure from whale bone and various slabs of "gem bone". Any thoughts as to what this might be? Thank you! -J
  19. Hi - New to fossil collecting, but have been rockhounding for a while after my girlfriend got me interested in it again. I got more interested in fossils after finding some on the beaches in Oregon. Petrified wood has fascinated me for a while, especially the pieces where cell structure and growth rings are still visible. Still learning locations for collecting, ID, and all the other fun outdoor stuff that goes along with the hobby. -J
  20. Camp, V.E., and Wells, R.E., 2021 The Case for a Long-Lived and Robust Yellowstone Hotspot. GSA Today. vo. 31, no. 1, pp. 4-10. Abstract of Paper PDF of paper Ciborowski, T.J.R., Phillips, B.A., Kerr, A.C., Barfod, D.N. and Mark, D.F., 2020. Petrogenesis of Siletzia: The World's youngest Oceanic Plateau. Results in Geochemistry, p.100004. Yours, Paul H.
  21. I think I've found my "home" here. I have well over 50 pieces (a couple are large - 10-25 pounds) of formation that I've collected over the last three months to "investigate". Mostly sandstone and what I think is deep water mudstone (thought it was shale at first but no layering). Will try the Hydrogen Peroxide to dissolve the sandstones but am at a loss for the mudstones. the mudstones are extremely hard but contain lots of micro deep water (>200 meters) fossils. Any advice? I've included an image in the what I think is a softer mudstone higher up in the Keasy. This is juvenile Dentalium agassizi (20mm in Length) I believe but after a 30 year break I've just gotten back into the game and may be erroneous in my ID. Interesting point is that specimens of Dentalium agassizi were used as the "wampum" of the North American Pacific Coast tribes (have a long PDF on it if any one is interested (Phd thesis I found).
  22. No images (yet, they are coming), yesterday in celebration of my Stereo Microscope (3.5 to 90x with camera port) shipping I decided to go fossil hunting. @71 I have to be careful when I go hunting (my wife it turns out is a fair weather digger) by myself. I have spent the last months working on my collections from the summer in two Keasey Formation locations (deep and shallow marine) with good manual tools and a dremel, but with sup-optimal hand optics (one is actually a very nice 8x optic but just to hard to use). So my wife said why don't you get a reasonable scope (would be my first since high school). So I ordered an AMscope and added a ring light to go with my video LED's I used for lighting. Not the best, but what I could afford and should work well with my camera capable of taking 80 MPX stills and being tethering to my PC showing the image on a 4K 50" screen. So being excited I went to the easiest of the two locations I've been "digging". Low 40's (F) and raining when I left in my Subaru Crosstrek (both of my cars are 4x4's to get me where I want go go here in Oregon) I was thinking "if I only find a couple of new things I will be happy". This location the actual out cropped is on an extremely steep hill, and I "dig" only in the talus at the bottom, what falls is where I find. As I approached the site I started to fill the anticipation. I parked at the base of the hill, and started my adventure. There are two layers at this location, one is a sandstone that is loosely consolidated (I think shallow water) and the a hard Shale (earlier deep water). First find in an unconsolidated sandstone that falls apart in my hand leaving a complete (top/bottom shells - one piece) in my hand. Big smile. Then I look a bit farther and I see the "mother-load" as the miners say. Apparently the heavy rains of the last couple of weeks have cause a large piece of shale to break off the formation and tumble the 70 or 80' down and break into about 15 rocks weighing between 5 and 30 pounds, fossils are abundant in every rock. I know the state will clear these because they are on the edge of the road and present a hazard. I move and leave 3 pieces for the next lucky person. I load what I think is about 100 pounds of large rocks in the car and then add a trash bag full of the unconsolidated sandstone, and a 10 gallon buck of small pieces that have the same matrix of shells. I now have my winter tasks all set. I've accumulated a lot of research and images from which work on the identifications this winter. If this find had not be a road hazard on this blind curve I would have left more but there was a road crew working not more than a couple of miles away and I could not risk that these precious finds would end up in the rock crusher or just dumped somewhere. I will be posting my finds here asking for ID help I am sure and with the new scope hopefully some great images. All and all a great way to start the New Year off. I've attached just a quick macro shoot of a snail. Haven't ID it yet, guess anyone? BTW its a cast and that is why some areas are Out of Focus (didn't have time to stack images).
  23. Neanderthal Shaman

    Nut Impression?

    Hi folks, I was looking through some of my older fossils (by which I mean the ones I've had the longest, not the oldest in terms of geologic time) and I was happy to see this guy again. This is Eocene shale from the John Day Fossil Beds in Oregon, acquired back in the day when they did guided tours of the Painted Hills and let you keep some stuff. I've long assumed it to be the impression of a nut of some kind. Was wondering if anyone else had some thoughts on it? The impression of interest is small, probably about 1 inch in diameter.
  24. TS927

    Neanderthal fetal skull

    What about a Neanderthal embryo fossil cast mineralized common opal? Would that be rare? I found this in central oregon and I know nothing about it. I thought it was a thunderegg until I started pealing it back and had a laugh with my girlfriend about how it looked like a skull inside. I do suffer from extremely vivid imagination that most people call paradolia. This is not that. After a bit more liberation I now can see a skull, spine a tail (I think ) and a tiny little foot that almost winds up in its mouth. Did some research of features and came up with the above description. I think its casted in common opal I'm not positive I'm still cleaning it. Thank you for any help and your time.
  25. I've been meaning to make this post for a while, finally getting around to it. Back in July I made a trip to John Day for my first ever fossil hunt. Before I get to our finds, of course when in the area you have to spend some time enjoying the scenery of the gorgeous painted hills also on the list was the visitor center, unfortunately I didn't get many pictures there but here are a few highlights: Continued...
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