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  1. Chippewa

    any ideas on this one?

    any thoughts on this would be appreciated. It is hard to capture with photos, but this fossil has a distinct transition around the circumference where it changes texture and shape. Kind of like you would see on the transition at the base of an antler. Thanks! Found: In a river in North Florida. Pleistocene.
  2. https://cosmosmagazine.com/palaeontology/revealed-at-last-australia-s-fearsome-marsupial-lion https://phys.org/news/2018-12-first-ever-skeleton-thylacoleo-australia-extinct.html https://www.cnet.com/news/scientists-reconstructed-the-skeleton-of-a-terrifying-prehistoric-marsupial-lion/
  3. Hi Everyone, I’m headed to Jacksonville FL for Christmas and was looking to get into some fossil hunting somehow some way. Looking for any recommendations within a 4 hour radius. Paid guided hunt? Popular creeks, beaches, or rivers? Would like to take my nieces out but if that’s not feasible then that’s ok. Any recommendations would be appreciated. Thanks!
  4. Hi people! I need help for identifying these two canine roots.They were found in some Cave in Southeastern Serbia,along with Cave Bear,Cave Hyena,Bison and Deer bones. I got this as a gift from my friend who has found them also this smaller partial tooth which i think also that is from a Cave Hyena. He thinks that the roots belongs to Cave Hyena canines.On the last picture u can see the scale with his teeth collection and with 3 teeth that he gave me. Thanks
  5. Dear TFF members, Could be Parastarte triquetra (Conrad, 1846) ? Merrit island Pleistocene Thanks, Ricardo
  6. I_gotta_rock

    Sunset Colors

    From the album: OBX

    It's hard to say just how much of the shells littering the beach at Cape Hatteras are really modern. These few are embedded in sandstone that makes up the Pleistocene shelf holding up the barrier islands. Their colors are more vibrant than some of the shells from animals that just died, and they are the same species, by and large, that live in the water here today.
  7. I_gotta_rock

    Gift from the Sea

    From the album: OBX

    It's amazing what washes up on the Outer Banks - modern sea shells, sea glass, bits of wrecked ships and fossils, too! These shells embedded in sandstone washed ashore on Hatteras Island, NC, from the Pleistocene sandstone shelf on which the island rests.
  8. I_gotta_rock

    Scallop Hash Plate

    From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbous hash plate Pleistocene Found washed ashore at Avon Pier, Hatteras Island, North Carolina
  9. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Sand Dollar

    From the album: OBX

    Echinoid (Sand dollar) Pleistocene Found washed ashore at Avon Pier, Hatteras Island, North Carolina
  10. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Tube Worms, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Tube worms Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  11. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Tube Worms, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Tube worms on the interior of a Mercenaria shell Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  12. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Scallop Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbus Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  13. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Mussel Shells, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Mytilus edulis Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch
  14. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Clam Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Family Venridae Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  15. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Clam Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Family Venridae Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  16. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Scallop Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbus Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  17. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Clam Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Family Venridae Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  18. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Clam Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Mercenaria sp. Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  19. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Scallop Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbus Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  20. I_gotta_rock

    Fossil Scallop Shell, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbus Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  21. From the album: OBX

    Agropecten gibbus Pleistocene Cape Hatteras, North Carolina 2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are metric-ly challenged.
  22. I_gotta_rock

    Pleistocne Coral, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are meric-ly challenged.
  23. I_gotta_rock

    Pleistocene Coral, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are meric-ly challenged.
  24. I_gotta_rock

    Plesitocene Corals, Cape Hatteras

    From the album: OBX

    2.5 cm = 1 inch for those who are meric-ly challenged.
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