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Found 7 results

  1. freerangetraveler

    Gravel Bars On Denton Creek

    We had some pretty good rain earlier this week in north Fort Worth, so I figured I’d head to Denton creek and wade the gravel bars. All in all it was a productive day, finding a few ammonite pieces and some of the largest denture clams I’ve ever found. The highlight of the trip was the (almost fully intact) echinoid I spotted in about 4 inches of water… It’s only the second echinoid I’ve ever found and it’s by far the most complete!
  2. freerangetraveler

    Coral Or Bone???

    Another noob question… I found all of these examples in Denton Creek (north Fort Worth) over the last few weeks and I’m trying to decipher what’s coral and what’s bone. Below are my best guesses, but I’d love to get a quick education on these. Pic 1 - Some sort of fossilized coral? Pic 2 - Some sort of fossilized coral? Pic 3 - Fossilized bone? Pic 4 - Fossilized bone (possibly petrified wood)? Pic 5 - Modern bone? I say modern because it makes a beautiful bell-like ringing sound when softly dropped on a granite countertop (while all the others sound like stone). As always, thanks in advance and I appreciate the wealth of knowledge this community holds!!!
  3. freerangetraveler

    Some Sort Of Bivalve???

    I’m having some trouble identifying this one… I presume it’s some sort of bivalve and it came off a gravel bar in Denton Creek (north of Fort Worth in the Duck Creek Formation) but I can’t seem to find any photo matches on the inter-webs to identify it. Any thoughts on species? Thanks Paul L.
  4. freerangetraveler

    First Ammonites!!!

    Hello all! Been fossil hunting for about a month now (still very new to this) and today marked my fifth trip. Today I also found my first pieces of Ammonite (two of them to be exact)!!! There’s nothing like hanging out in a creek and discovering things from millions of years ago. So stoked!!!
  5. freerangetraveler

    Possible vertebrae & Crab Leg?

    Hello all Still a bit of a newbie here but I stumbled across a couple things I haven’t seen before… The first find looks a bit like a vertebrae (pics 1 and 2)… Pics 3 and 4 are what looks like a segmented crab leg, but I’m just not sure what to make of it. It may just be my mind playing tricks (in both cases), but I was hoping to get the consensus of the experts here. Any help is much appreciated! Thanks, Paul L.
  6. This is part 2, site 2 of my Memorial day fossil hunting trip. You can see the site one report here: I chose to drive out to Denton Creek north of Ft. Worth. I had been there before, but had not gotten to explore the area. It was the takeout point from a kayaking trip I’d taken down the creek a few weeks before. It took me 30 minutes out to drive out there from the first location I hunted in Benbrook. If you pass the creek going north you can go up to the next exit and then loop back to the creek. There is a little rock and dirt path off the shoulder of the road that leads down to under the bridge where you can drive your vehicle. The hill down to under the bridge is kind of steep. My car was a bit on the low side for getting over the curb and then a steep embankment with rocks. I bottomed out once. I thought I might park my car in the shade under the bridge, but when I arrived there was another vehicle in the area. I thought I was the only person crazy enough to be out here in the heat. Nobody could pass if I parked under the bridge so I pulled through into a small clearing there. The grass and weeds were grown up pretty high in the clearing. I knew of a sizeable exposure on the creek that I wanted to try to get to on foot, but I didn’t know the terrain around the creek. I switched to my rubber boots for walking in the creek. I reapplied sunscreen and headed down the steep hill to the edge of the creek. I had to sit down and scoot myself over the edge and drop down to the rock ledge that ran along the creek. I inspected the exposure. Last time I was here I found a pretty decent Macraster obesus right by the spot I came in by. I didn’t see a single fossil. The creek was maybe 40 feet wide give or take. The water was less than 10 inches deep where I entered the creek. I don’t think the creek is ever a high energy creek. The rocks that are in this part of the creek are angular and jagged. The water in the creek is rather murky so you can’t see into the water. All of that makes it a difficult creek to walk in. Most of the creek in that spot is one level at bedrock with rocks scattered across much of the creek bottom. There is a narrow jagged rift in the bedrock that meanders along the creek bed. The water is deeper in the rift. I walked down into the creek and squatted down looking at some ammonite fragments in the creek. I saw two butterflies nearby. I tried to get a better picture from the side, but they flew away before I could do so. Sorry it is not a very clear picture. You can see the creek bed is kind of slimy looking. In some areas where the water was very low it looked foul and fetid. It had a green bubbly looking surface. I assessed the creek and decided to walked along the exposed rock ledge above the creek. As I walked up the creek there was a horrible stench of something dead. The further I went the worse it got. Finally I came upon a gar fish carcass on the rock ledge above the creek. It was close to one of the places where I had wanted to have a look around, but the odor was too strong and repulsive. It looked to be just over 3 feet long. I can’t imagine how it got there. It had to be a person who had drug it there. This section of the creek does not seem deep enough for such a large fish to swim in. Maybe it swam in the rift though. There were deeper sections of the creek where it could live, but not here. There were signs of racoons all over along with remnants of their meals. Evidently gar is not on the racoon menu, which was surprising to me since it seems raccoons will eat almost anything else. I looked at the thin, razor sharp gar teeth. It is kind of scary to think that type of critter was in this creek when I kayaked it. I was in and out of the water all the time. A bite from that thing would be nasty. Here is a pic of it. I walked back down the creek upon the rock ledge to a place where there weren’t too many jagged rocks in the creek and where the rift in the creek would be narrow enough for me to step across it. Since the water was flowing slowly the rocks were covered with algae and were very slippery. I got to the rift. There were rocks pilled up there. I place one foot on a large one sitting at an angle and it tottered underneath me. I made sure my foot wouldn’t slip and I balanced myself as I put my next foot on another rock. It tottered too. To slip and fall in this creek with all the jagged rocks would really hurt and might do considerable injury. At least when I slipped and fell in the NSR the riverbed was smooth, without any rocks. I took a few more steps on similar rocks and I was I on smooth riverbed again near the other bank. I began to inspect the exposure. I found these just sitting on the bank. A cute little impression of an ammonite and what appeared to be a fragment of a Pinna clam. I have yet to find a whole Pinna clam. I’d kind of like to find at least one whole one someday. The only other formation I have found them is in the Goodland. It is another of the Washita Group formations.
  7. I went hunting today. I hit 2 places. Found lots of ammonites. I lost count after a while. Anyway, my last stop was Denton Creek North of Ft.Worth. The formation is Duck Creek. Found a number of ammonites, 1 nautilus and a couple echinoids. There were also a lot of the typical burrows, oysters and Neithia. I say all that so you get the environment and other fossils present. I also found this (see pics below), I’ve never found anything remotely like it so I have no clue what it is. It was in a layer of what I believe to be limestone in an exposure along the bank. I had to hammer it out to bring home. At first I thought it could be something in the echinoderm family with all the small bumps along the side, but so far I’m not seeing any ambulacra. Also it seems to be cylendrical in shape, but I don’t have it exposed from the matrix yet so I could be wrong about it being cylendrical. I’d kind of like a clue as to what it is before proceeding with extraction so that I don’t botch the extraction and mess up the fossil, because I didn’t know the shape. It appears to be generally the length and size of my index finger about 3 inches long maybe 1/2 inch in diameter. here is a pic from the side. There are little rows or columns of bumps. The rows seem to be every few mm apart. You can only see 1 row here. The ones on the exposed surface are worn down and barely noticeable, but they’re there. This is from the other side. You can see the end is broken off. I’m calling this end the top end. Heres a slightly different angle of the top end. Notice the 3 pointy protrusions on the broken end. I’m not sure if that is an artifact of the break or anatomy relative to the specimen. This is a shot of the exposed broken end. I have been trying to remove the matrix. It’s fairly soft so it’s easy to scratch so extraction is going slowly. Under what matrix I have removed are more rows of bumps. Any help with ID even as to the type of organism it is, would be very much appreciated. I kind of wonder if when I’ll see it exposed I’ll have one of those “D’oh!” moments and it will be so obvious. Right now nothing rings a bell. I have no clue whatsoever what it may be. Thanks Kim
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