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Showing results for tags 'worm burrow'.
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Howdy all, I've been wondering about this piece for a while. I picked it up thinking it was just a strange rock but someone said it was a worm burrow. What do y'all think? (Found in the Drakes Formation of Louisville, Kentucky).
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I believe I found some trace worm burrows in clay… Lincoln Creek Formation in WA. unfortunately the dried clay makes it very unstable, some of the burrows are filled in with harder matrix. I’m not sure what to do… any advice would be great!
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- lincoln creek
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Found two of these fossils now. Both on beaches that are probably Devonian in age. One is from SW Wisconsin on Lake Michigan and the other is in the Lower peninsula of Michigan from the shores of Lake Huron. Organ pipe coral or some sort of burrow trace fossil? Thanks!
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- bradford beach
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Hi All, While prepping a mosasaur vertebra I uncovered a few markings I'd love some feedback on. They were underneath a layer of hard matrix which might explain why they fossilized. Here's a zoomed out view: Top one (#1) is approximately 3 mm and the lower one (#2) is ~4 mm. #1: I am thinking cast of a worm burrow? #2 I really don't know for this one. Any thoughts as to what this might be would be appreciated. Thanks,
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Ordered a fossil book, so I am hoping to learn a little more about fossils. Found this one in Walnut Creek in NW Austin, TX in Austin Chalk. Split on what it it. It is 7x8 cm. Point I am interested in is 3 cm.
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From the album: WhodamanHD's Fossil collection.
Large burrow, most likely polychaete worm. Collected outside McCoys ferry. Other than that not much, a few shells. The obverse is below. -
From the album: WhodamanHD's Fossil collection.
A hash of many species of brachiopods and crinoid s, no idea what most are. Found outside of McCoys ferry. On the back is a worm burrow, probably polychaete, and another possible one shaped like a chicken footprint, even after an ID thread we couldn't come up with a better explanation. Back is pictured below. -
We were on a fossil hunt in Lilydale, MN. Just South of St. Paul, right in the heart of the city. Down near the river is a regional park that allows fossil hunts, with a permit of course. As we first walked into the park, we stopped at a washed out river bed where we found chunks of shale with bunches of fossils in them. I also found what I think is a worm burrow. Does anyone know much about these to help me find some more information? I'm completely new to fossil hunting, but can't wait to go back!