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Found 14 results

  1. TXAngel

    Dino fetus

    Found this round rock amongst other fossil rocks, but it was so round that it stood out to me. I was hoping to cut it open and find it was a geode. At first I made one small cut and could see that the inside was chalk-like, so I tossed it to the side and wasnt going to bother with it anymore. But I noticed the very center was a different color. It looked pink, so I knocked out one quarter of the thick outer layer of that chalky stuff, and then some more, and this is what was inside. Does anybody else think this could be an egg with a baby dinosaur inside?
  2. Guest

    Unidentified Texas Fossil

    This came from a box of Texas fossils I purchased. I have no other information.
  3. clintk

    Fossil ID

    Can anyone help me identify this fossil. Thanks.
  4. Looking for some access points to texoma. Generally near the dam is so over collected. Looking to find some ammonites but it’s just not worth the drive anymore to go to the well known site.
  5. Guest

    Texas Mosasaur Tooth

    A nice mosasaur tooth I recently added to my collection
  6. I found this near the Nueces River outside of Uvalde, Tx and it really looks like a tooth with some enamel still on it. Hope these pictures will help identify it. The 4th picture is the bottom side and it has that dark center core. The parts with enamel have patterns in it which is what has me confused. What do you guys think?
  7. Hi, I’ve recently been searching through some sifted gravel from a creek. I’ve been looking for microfossils, which I’ve had plenty of luck finding. All sorts of marine Cretaceous invertebrate micros are abundant in the creek gravel, as well as the occasional micro shark/fish tooth, scale, and bone fragment. I encountered a tooth that stood out from anything I’ve found so far. It has a conical shape, and is recurved. Something about this tooth seems very reptile-like. Almost looks like a tiny version of a crocodile or mosasaur tooth. The tooth measures 1 millimeter in length. I tried searching the internet for something similar, and have been unable to find something like this. The closest thing that I found was teeth from a jaw of a Coniasaurus that was found in North Texas. Here is the tooth that I found. It’s 1 millimeter from base to tip. The creek is located in Central Texas close to Austin, and passes through sediments spanning the whole Cretaceous geological column of Texas. From the Glen Rose Limestone to the Navarro Group. (~110-66 myrs). What do y’all think of this little tooth. Could it be from a small reptile like Coniasaurus and other dolichosaurs?
  8. Found what I suspect is a worn piece of ceraptopsid tooth in the Grayson formation in Denton County Texas about a month ago, What do yo think?
  9. Trilokris

    Please share some wisdom

    Hello everyone. I am new to the site so please let me slide if this is incomplete. I found this fossil in a small Creek in the west part of Dallas county in Texas. This area is upper Cretaceous but this bone is in amazing condition in my opinion so maybe more recent?? It is currently in storage so these are the only pictures I have right now. Any info or suggestions would be awesome and appreciated
  10. TxMark

    What is this?

    I am a contractor and found this in 2004 in Austin, TX on an empty house lot. Probably boring to yall but was just curious as to what it was. I'm thinking a snail but would like to know the real name of it as I have no knowledge about this kind of thing. Currently being used as a paper weight. The dimensions are 168mm wide 127mm deep 99mm tall. 2.63 kg Thank you for your help! Mark
  11. lilw

    Please help ID further

    I am new to the fossil finding world. Please help me ID my find. A Facebook group says it Looks like it could be Temnocidaris (Stereocidaris) hudspethensis or ? Found among white rocks in a developing subdivision in Granbury, TX.
  12. From the album: Goniopygus echinoids

    New image of my rare Goniopygus budaensis with associated spines found in the Georgetown formation of the Washita Group in south Central Texas.

    © John Jackson

  13. From the album: Goniopygus echinoids

    New image of my rare Goniopygus budaensis with associated spines found in the Georgetown formation of the Washita Group in south Central Texas.

    © John Jackson

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