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Showing results for tags 'unidentified fossil'.
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Hi all, I have been seeking an isopod fossil for a while. I came across these unidentified Cretaceous marine fossils from Lebanon I know the isopod, Cirolana garassinoi, has been found in that region but these look nothing like that species. Could this be a yet-unidentified isopod?
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I have been revisiting some of my fossils from my collection I gathered during a two year period where I had the privilege of exclusively exploring hundreds of acres of land in NW Arkansas in and around the town of Eureka Springs. During that time, I was able to collect on friends private land that had never before been surveyed by the outside world. 99.99% of what I came across was of oceanic and inland sea origin when it came to fossils but a couple of fossils perplexed me and this is one of them. I came across this fossil, or pseudo fossil, or weird anomalous permineralized erosion, or “I have no idea,” in a Mississippian Deposit known as the St. Joe and Boone Formations. I found this early in my collecting and had little background or research study under my belt at the time of discovery. I thought it was interesting and set it aside and moved on. I know that the area it comes from isn't known for bone, but it really does appear to be permineralized shoulder bone and upon magnification it has the hallmark of having been biological in origin, but I AM NO EXPERT, and I don't like to give into to fantastical thinking especially when there isn't other supportive evidence to suggest that Arkansas has fossil bones of any kind. What else could it be? Under magnification the flip side of the fossilized bone shape has detailed scale or skin pores and textures that have been preserved through the amazing process of permineralization…but again, there could always be a more plausible explanation that is outside my own understanding, simply because Arkansas doesn’t have bone fossils, historically speaking, aside from the Arkansaurus toe bone that was found some 160 miles south of where this fossil was found. I bring this to the forum because I would love to be able to get feedback and answers. And for future notation, I have many more fossils to present to the group and am looking forward to all of your thoughts, suggestions, expertise, and recommendations! Sincerely, PESEBECHE
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- arkansas
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This fossil was found yesterday on Murdock Beach, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. It is about 1" x 2". We've been there many times but never found anything like this before. Actually, my kids found many fossils that weren't typical of what we 'usually' find. Any help with identifying it would be much appreciated. Thank you.
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- murdock beach
- olympic peninsula
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This fossil was found in Petoskey, Michigan at a beach I'd rather not identify while I was looking for petoskey stones with my family, it caught my eye as looking like a shell of some kind. Since I couldn't come to a conclusion as to what it was I consulted a michigan based rockhounding youtuber who advised me to post here. I cannot, for the life of me, come to a conclusion on what it is with any certainty, please help.
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- fossil
- marine fossil
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I need help identifying these sauropod teeth from Yixian Formation
-Andy- posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hi all, I have several sauropod teeth from the Yixian Formation of Liaoning that I need help identifying. This is Tooth 1 - White Length: 44 mm Formation: Jianshangou Beds of Yixian Formation Locality: Chaomidianzi, Sihetun, Beipiao, Liaoning Province I believe this is a Dongbeititan dongi tooth as this tooth has the morphology of titanosauriform teeth, and Dongbeititan is the only titanosauriform from that locality as far as I know. The formation is based off the locality of Chaomidianzi (my source was confident of that locality) --- This is Tooth 2 - Red Formation: Lujiatun Bed of Yixian Formation Locality: Yanzigou, Shangyuan, Beipiao, Liaoning I believe this is a cf. Euhelops sp. tooth as this tooth has the morphology of titanosauriform teeth, and cf. Euhelops sp. is the only titanosauriform from that locality as far as I know. The formation is based off the locality of Yanzigou and the red matrix. I've compared this matrix to multiple Yanzigou locality fossils of the Lujiatun Beds and they are identical My ID is based off this paper "Basal titanosauriform (Dinosauria, Sauropoda) teeth from the Lower Cretaceous Yixian Formation of Liaoning Province, China" --- This is Tooth 3 - Partial Formation: Lujiatun Bed of Yixian Formation Locality: Yanzigou, Shangyuan, Beipiao, Liaoning I believe this is a cf. Euhelops sp. tooth as this tooth has the morphology of titanosauriform teeth, and cf. Euhelops sp. is the only titanosauriform from that locality as far as I know. The formation and locality is based off the red matrix in the cross section. This tooth was resold from my source but he confirms it's definitely within Beipiao and either from Yanzigou or Sihetun. I've compared this matrix to multiple Yanzigou locality fossils of the Lujiatun Beds and they are identical --- This is Tooth 4 - Tiny Formation: Yixian Formation Locality: Sihetun, Beipiao, Liaoning This is the toughest tooth of all due to its size and incompleteness. It's the top half of a spoon-shaped crown. Again, the source admits being a reseller but he promises the locality is accurate. I believe this is a Titanosauriform indet. I showed this tooth to @hxmendoza and he agrees it's a tooth, not a claw. The closest match I can find to this tooth is MSNM V6214 from "Sauropod teeth from the Middle Jurassic of Madagascar, and the oldest record of Titanosauriformes" May I have your thoughts on these IDs please? Thank you. -
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Good morning! I was hiking along a park path when I inspected a large boulder and found these two fossils, the first of which is similar to modern day scallop. I didn't have anything to measure with -my apologies, but it was approximately 1 1/4" in height and 1" across. the other object has some faint lines/rays emanating from ~9:00 to 2:00, but not sure it is overlying the underside of another shell, or is part of the fossil. This one is approximately 1 1/2" x 3/4 " Any thoughts and suggestions on i.d.s welcome and encouraged!..... not sure I could remove the scallop intact but thoughts on how to do that as well? Bone
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- cephalopod
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Hi all, I recently got this crab as a gift from a Burmese friend. He said it came from the Rakhine State, western shore of Myanmar. He said his friend found it there. Unfortunately, neither of them kept any extra provenance detail about it. I can find no info whatsoever about this crab online. I don't think Myanmar fossils outside of amber have easily accessible documentation. This crab looks like it might be a Galene bispinosa. Does anyone know what species it is, and what age or formation it possibly came from? Thank you.
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- crab
- crustacean
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Hi all, I have fossils from Singapore's Jurong Formation, aged from late Triassic to early Jurassic (235 - 175 mya). Some were found over 10 years ago by a fossil-digger while others were dug up recently by the two of us. Several specimens have been handed over to our local museum. However, no one really knows what family or genus these bivalves belong to. I was hoping you guys could help. Specimen 0A Specimen 0B Specimen 0B alt view Specimen 0B alt view
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Hi all. I traded for this goniatite years ago from a friend, but there was neither a species nor locality info attached. Can anyone make an educated guess as to its ID and locality info? I am guessing Tornoceras or Agathiceras. Thank you.
- 1 reply
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- goniatite
- no locality
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I recently found this at Westmoreland State Park (Virginia) near the Potomac River. It just looked weird to me so I kept it. I'm fairly new to fossil hunting so I am unsure if it is a fossil. Thanks you in advance for any help!
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- potomac river
- tooth
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I found this strange fossil at Stratford Hall in Virginia. It has an odd, scale-like impression on the top face. If anyone can help, I'd greatly appreciate it. It's difficult to see and photograph, but if you look closely it will help. Thanks!
- 16 replies
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- stratford hall
- unidentified fossil
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- 18 replies
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- fossil
- kazakhstan
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Hi, I found this petrified/fossilised tooth thing and have had it for about three years it has always kept me wondering so I've posted pictures of it in the hope that someone may be able to identify exactly what it could be off. Its dimensions are around 7cm (2.75') long, between 5-6cm (2.2') wide at the base and 2.5cm (1') thick at the base tapering to a blunt end. I will appreciate all helpful input Cheers, Dan.
- 18 replies
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- Dinosaur
- Dont Know :)
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Found this along time ago base rock appears to be Coeymans... There was a similiar post by Eros daveyboy42 a long while back ,,looks the same fossil but never really identified I'll try and link that below any more clues ? http://www.thefossil...__fromsearch__1 Correct Poster information from link above