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Showing results for tags 'santa fe river'.
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Here's a land mammal petrosal that I've just retrieved from storage. It's from the Santa Fe River, so it's Pliocene or later. It appears to be complete. These petrosals all look about the same to me. Help me out here.
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I've switched my hunting from the Peace to the Santa Fe for the balance or the summer and into the fall. I do not find nearly as many fossils, but the water remains cool and clear. I found this jaw section on one of my last trips and decided to keep it. I don't usually keep broken bone fragments, but this looked interesting. If I'm reading it right, the last molar would have been round in cross section, while the 2 adjacent molars were oval in cross section. I assumed sloth and the size is about the same as the teeth I have, but the channels are straight. My sloth teeth are all curved, so they would not fit in the channels. I figured @Harry Pristis would provide a suggestion, but invite all takers who want to try an ID.
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Hello All, My daughter and I went to the Santa Fe River and dove down even though the water was really deep and moving fast. At the bottom, she found a deer bone tool artifact that was fossilized after thousands of years. We put together a video clip of it all for you. Everything I've read says that this type "pin" is uncommon or rare. Have any of you found something similar? I'd love to hear. https://youtu.be/5rfnghopAjk best wishes, Lloyd
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Hi everyone! Long time lurker, first time poster haha. I’m still kind of new to this so sorry if this is a super obvious ID, but I was wondering what kind of tooth this is exactly. I was thinking crocodile, but it seems to have a slightly different shape so I wasn’t sure. I found it at Ginnie Sprints in High Springs on the Santa Fe River in Florida. It’s about 2 1/4” long. Thank you in advance for your help!
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During another rather unproductive trip to the Santa Fe, I stumbled upon this rather unusual tooth. Based on it's form, I would assume it belongs to some kind of small whale or other marine mammal. Anyone have something similar or know to whom it belongs? Appreciate it.
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I know this is probably foolish to even ask, but can anyone give a likely identity to this 22 mm phalanx I picked up in the Santa Fe yesterday?
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Hi all, So here is a foram that I found in the Santa Fe River in northern Florida. I got told that it is either Eocene or Pleistocene. Well I know absolutely NOTHING about forams (the fact that they are single-called still confuses me! ), so I ask your help: what species is this one, how old is it, and how exactly would it have lived/looked like when it was alive? Thanks in advance, Max
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Hi all, From Fossil Voyages with @Cris, at the end of our trip together in the Santa Fe, I got spoiled with a bunch of great fossils! Unfortunately I don’t remember what everything was... Anyways, please help me putting an ID on all of these! All from the Santa Fe River in north Florida, and all likely from the Pleistocene. Thanks in advance, Max #1
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Hi all, I found this tooth during my trip with Fossil Voyages. It’s from the Santa Fe River, Florida, US. From the Pleistocene. Anyone know what it is? I’m thinking three-toed horse, or small horse, but I’m not sure... Oh, the tooth might be incomplete, I’m not sure either about that. Thanks in advance for your help, Max