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Showing results for tags 'mussels'.
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Hello, my friends, and a jolly warm welcome to one and all. Many moons ago, my friend, the exceedingly kind and generous Brett @Elmo sent me nearly 6 lbs of micromatrix from the Purse State Park in Maryland, USA. The tiny fossils found in this gravel are from the Piscataway Member of the Aquia Formation which is Late Palaeocene in age and about 60 million years old, give or take. I have been trying to sort through a little every day and am about two-thirds of the way through and have found lots and lots of goodies. Now, this is well out of my comfort zone as there is not a brachiopod to be seen, but lots of teethies from sharks, rays, skates, and bony fish. I have no idea what I am doing at all, and so Brett, who is also seeking some IDs, and I decided it might be useful and fun to start a thread to show off our finds, hopefully get some help with identification, encourage others to post their own finds and have a fun time, really. I don't have any Palaeocene material at all, except a couple of larger sharks' teeth from this location. So, please feel free to comment, just watch and enjoy or tell me off for my obviously stupid attempts at ID. I'll start this off with a really beautiful tooth that I think might be Delpitoscyllium africanum. On second thoughts, perhaps Ginglymostoma cf. subafricanum is a better fit? Because of the multiple side cusps.
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- angel shark
- anomotodon
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- angel shark
- anomotodon
- anomotodon novus
- aquia formation
- brachycarcharias
- brachycarcharias lerichei
- burnhamia
- carcharias hopei
- carcharinoformes
- cow-nose ray
- cretolamna
- cretolamna appendiculata
- delpitoscyllium
- delpitoscyllium africanum
- eagle ray
- fish teeth
- ginglymostoma
- ginglymostoma subafricanum
- goblin shark
- hypolophodon
- hypolophodon sylvestris
- hypotodus
- hypotodus verticalis
- late palaeocene
- late paleocene
- mackerel shark
- maryland
- microfossils
- mussels
- myliobatis
- myliobatis dixoni
- nurse shark
- otodus
- otodus obliquus
- pachygaleus
- pachygaleus lefevrei
- palaeocarcharodon
- palaeocarcharodon orientalis
- paleocene
- parabula
- parabula marylandicus
- piscataway member
- potomac
- purse state park
- ray plates
- rey teeth
- rhinoptera
- sand tiger
- shark teeth
- skate teeth
- squalus
- squalus minor
- stingray
- striatolamia
- striatolamia striata
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Just want to introduce myself as a new member. I have no education in paleontology and have stumbled on a fossil rich area while swimming and hiking at a lake close to my home. My intentions in joining besides enjoying the member's posts and learning more is to find out how to find the people I need to find to get the site I found evaluated. I have found animal fossils and what I belive might be paleo Indian artifacts and environments in the same area while hiking. Pictured are fossils I recently collected in an area of less than thirty yards taking less than half an hour to find them which exhibits just how rich the area is. The paleo Indian artifacts were collected on a trail that connects the lake to it's river inlet and probably less than ten miles from the area where I collected the fossils.
- 11 replies
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- mussels
- radiolitid
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Here is something one doesn't see everyday. I've been lookiing forward to posting this video for some time now. Check it out. You wont be disappointed. https://youtu.be/KwLFEwgHALc
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Another decent haul over the last few days. Bunch of nautiloids and whatnot, a couple mussels. These were my favourites from the last 2 days in the river. This was a biiiiig nautiloid, and after cleaning it I realized there were two of them! wowowowo! (Sorry the picture didn't turn out quite that nice) This is probably one of my highest quality specimen so far, although it did break near the end when extracting it from the matrix.
- 4 replies
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- canada
- georgian bay formation
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Wowowow I was very surprised to find all this amazing stuff today at my favourite river bank fossils spot of the Etobicoke creek. I managed to snag a whole lot of stuff today, some Orthoconic Nautiloids, Brachipods and what I believe to be the nicest tentaculite I've ever seen!!! The fossils are from the Georgian Bay Formation and they were found in the broken up "rock fields" next to the creek. This is going to be one of my longer posts, so I will have to split them up into section. The full haul, with the typical estwing 22 ounce rock pick (33 cm from bottom of the handle to the top of the hammer end for anyone who doesn't own one). First lets start with the usual: Them cone boys, aka Orthoconic Nautiloids. I believe all of the following to be Treptoceras crebriseptum.
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- brachiopods
- canada
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From the album: Pelecypods
I found these in Northern California quite a few years ago in the Falore Formation. I think these are Mytilus californianus? These are quite large!- 3 comments
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- falore formation
- mussels
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