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Showing results for tags 'tree'.
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From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
Weighs in at 435 g I am using my phone to take these pics. Please let me know if this is any better? -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
Weighs in at 435 g I am using my phone to take these pics. Please let me know if this is any better? -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
Weighs in at 435 g I am using my phone to take these pics. Please let me know if this is any better? -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This weighs in at 635 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This weighs in at 635 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This weighs in at 635 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This weighs in at 635 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This weighs in at 635 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
From the album: 1925 Body & Trace Fossil Collection - Vegitation
This specimen is the largest piece of the wood samples weighing in at 702 g -
While digging a new pond this fell out of the bucket. It is 15 in long, 8 in wide, 3 in thick. Very heavy. Will try to get good pics. Thanks Hope
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again another plant fossil from the creek today
matthew textor posted a topic in Fossil Hunting Trips
Hi everyone today again I found another plant fossil in the creek it use to be 2 feet long but I could not get it out in one piece because it seemed to fall apart when when I tried to remove it but I did get one piece out with good detail here are some photos -
Hi, I found these in the Carbonado Formation Washington State. 42 - 47 million years ago. Eocene under a coal seam. I found this bark of some mysterious looking tree. Around the same rock were tons of leaves, all similar to one species (except one leaf which I will also include). I am hoping people can identify the family of tree for me. I also am posting some strange "cattail" / "horsetail" like stem / leaf because this could possibly be a branch from this tree. disclaimer: I am still trying to figure out my phone. The last photo is more clear, larger and detailed. The only difference was, I held my phone sideways. Maybe this is what I will do in the future. First I will post the bark
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I needed help identifying this tree bark. Its about 38 million years old from the Renton Formation in Western Washington State. I can see insect burrow marks but they could also be the details in the tree itself. Its about 12 inches long and 5 ish inches wide
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Here’s the first fossils I’ve ever found! Found in Webster County, West Virginia. Where they hollow out a road. The stone is shale from my knowledge..... I’d love to know it’s age and name? And, how to prep them.
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Good evening to everyone, I am really very new to fossils and petrified items so I am at a loss as to what I may have and I need your help. My grandfather left me this piece when he passed away a few months ago and it was marked "Petrified Mushroom". I have included some photos for your review and if you have any questions please let me know. The mushroom, for lack of a better word, is about 22" long by 14" deep by about 3/8" in height. It weighs just about 74 grams and has a spot in the middle that looks like wood, it looks like it was cut or removed from a piece of wood maybe a tree. Any help anyone could provide would be extremely appreciated. If this is the wrong forum to ask about my item I deeply apologize, just let me know and I will remove the post right away. Thank you again and I hope everyone has a great week.
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This is an assortment of what I've been told by Devonian fossil experts are "mangal shoots" - tubular shoots growing in an ancient Devonian mud swamp, similar to mangrove shoots. I am told these are most likely shoots of the Wattiezza fern tree, which has been found in Devonian strata in New York. I discovered these in central New York at a construction site where I asked permission to collect some fossils a few years ago. I also collected several Devonian plant stems as well as several of these "mangal shoots". They were found vertically situated from 1 to 3 meters apart, in a layer of fossilized mud. Several stems or roots were also revealed in situ but too fragile to recover intact. The "mangal shoots" are tube shaped, rounded on the top, some have evidence of root structures (similar to swamp tree roots like Cypress, that spread out at the base) and there is a small circular tube structure running down the center. One photo shows the bottom where "root" appendages are shown. None are solid, all are broken into segments. Here are a couple of photos. Any insights and comments would be welcome.
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Nice day to all here ! Could anyone tell a tree? Location Czech Republic, limestone board. Because it has fallen in the limestone, the crust is quite cruel. It would probably break apart. Can you advise me to have a tip for conservation?
- 9 replies
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- fossil wood
- limestone
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I have a couple of rocks that look like seeds. What do you think? Do those look like bite marks on the one on the left? Let's hear your thoughts. The one on the right was in pea gravel at a playground in Iowa, I find fossil shell fossils in pea gravel sometimes. I'm not sure where I got the other one, in central Iowa.
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Juvenile Australopithecus afarensis foot Points to a life in the trees
Miocene_Mason posted a topic in Fossil News
This study recently came out, and added another piece of evidence for Australopithecus afarensis living most of its life in the trees (which doesn’t mean it couldn’t or didn’t walk upright when it needed to).- 2 replies
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- afarensis
- australopithecus
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