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Showing results for tags 'savannah river'.
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Carcharhinus sp. Savannah, Georgia© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- bull shark
- carcharhinus
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Carcharodon carcharias Savannah, Georgia© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- carcharodon carcharias
- great white shark
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- 2 replies
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- beach
- dredge spoils
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- 12 replies
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- gerogia
- river dredge spoils
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- 3 replies
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- dredge spoils
- georgia usa
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Hi everyone, I found this in January of 2017 on Shark tooth island on the Savannah River in Georgia. Always have been curious what it is. The area has dredged material and contains fossils from the Miocene, Pliocene, and Pleistocene. It is slightly conical and symmetrical, uniform, and ovalish in cross section - straight in profile with no discernible curvature. In profile, one side is smoother and striated, the other coarser, dimpled, with elevated black speckles. It is not porous inside like other bones from the area. It appears to have schreger lines. I'm not sure if it is some sort of tusk, but I havn't seen other tusks without some degree of curvature. Overcast day here in Seattle. If photos aren't clear enough I'll upload some others on a sunny day. Thanks!
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- georgia
- savannah river
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Hemipristis serra Savannah, Georgia© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- hemipristis
- hemipristis serra
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Hemipristis serra Savannah, Georgia© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- hemipristis
- hemipristis serra
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- carcharias taurus
- matthew brett rutland
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- hemipristis serra
- hemiprstis
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- galeocerdo
- matthew brett rutland
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Matthew Brett Rutland-
- bull shark
- carcharhinus
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Hello all! I am very new to fossil finding but it truly fascinates me. Most online pictures are tricky for me to properly indentify my finds. The large fossil in the first photos, I found in a dredge spoil off the Savannah River. I have many more I would love to share and learn more about. Thanks, Emmy
- 2 replies
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- brunswick river
- dredge
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Wondering what the shark teeth experts think of these. Found on man-made dredge island in Savannah River. I'm thinking A is great white and. B might be a bull shark, but am not positive and don't have guesses about the others. Thanks!
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- bull shark
- dredge
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Found this buried in the sand on a man-made dredge island in the middle of the Savannah River. Guy I was with said it was a partial megalodon... what say you all?
- 21 replies
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Tooth? Bone? Please help the curious but ignorant finder
All Things Ocean posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hi all! Found this while hunting for shark teeth (posting later) - looks like either a tooth or tusk or....? It bears noting this was found on a man-made island from dredge from the savannah river.- 7 replies
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- dredge man made island
- savannah georgia
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From the album: Sharks and their prey ....
Holmesina sp. Pampathere Osteoderm Savannah, GA© Matthew Brett Rutland
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- holmesina
- matthew brett rutland
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Crassostrea Gigantissima, the giant oyster
MeargleSchmeargl posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
On Wednesday, relatives have invited me to accompany them to Shell Bluff along the Savannah River, home to the Dry Branch formation which is late Eocene (approx. 38 MYA) in age. This formation is home of an oyster bed, but not just any old oysters: Enter Crassostrea Gigantissima, a YUGE prehistoric Oyster that can grow a whopping 20 inches long. That's almost as long as my forearm! So how much do you guys know about these behemoths?- 11 replies
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- eocene
- giant oyster
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