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Some Of My Fossils


Phoenixflood

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Most of these are my bigger Megs. The rest have some pathology or are rare.

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The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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Is this a baby meg or something else? :rolleyes:

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The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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Nice bird ulnas; Lee Creek?

The other stuff is plenty cool too! The first Meg (the "rusty" one) looks like some of the ones I used to find in one spot at Westmorland State Park.

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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The Paleocarcharodon from is pretty :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub:

What formation, Nanjemoy or Aquia?

Tha tighin fodham, fodham, fodham!

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Nice bird ulnas; Lee Creek?

The other stuff is plenty cool too! The first Meg (the "rusty" one) looks like some of the ones I used to find in one spot at Westmorland State Park.

Yes, the ulnas are Lee Creek ;) And you are spot on with the rusty tooth. That was a Stratford find.

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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The Paleocarcharodon from is pretty :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub: :wub:

What formation, Nanjemoy or Aquia?

I'm really not sure :D I found it at Purse State Park in MD, if that helps.

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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Most of these are my bigger Megs. The rest have some pathology or are rare.]

Is that second meg from Lee Creek? Show us some of the rarer megs you mentioned having in your collection. :D

Nice material - thanks for posting.

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Oh, :rolleyes: the rest of the pictures are rare teeth or pathological teeth :D

Yes, the second meg is from Lee Creek, 4 and 1/4.

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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Great teeth! I never get tired of seeing big meg teeth.

The small one I think is from a juvenile meg. I've seen them called Hubble teeth (in honor of Gordon Hubble I'm guessing)

I've got one about the size of yours in my collection.

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Oh, :rolleyes: the rest of the pictures are rare teeth or pathological teeth :D

Yes, the second meg is from Lee Creek, 4 and 1/4.

Got it! Sorry, my misinterpretation: I read it to mean that there were specimens in addition to those posted.

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Got it! Sorry, my misinterpretation: I read it to mean that there were specimens in addition to those posted.

Well, there are a lot I haven't posted, they are just not pathological meg teeth or they are ones that are smaller than 4+" :D

I have a lot of three inchers and Makos, and the normal loot from the miocene. I have four large bottles just filled with tiny teeth. The bottles are the same shape and size as a wine bottle. I have whale bones, some teeth and white ferns, trilobites, belamites, turtle bones, shells, mammoth, mastodon, and Gomp teeth, (well that one's a piece) corpolites, some dinosaur teeth and mammal material as well as bird. But most of my fossils are shark teeth. Most of my fossil I have collected myself but some I couldn't pass up buying ; )

I'm lacking in pinapeds though. I don't have any seal material that I know of and I don't have very many squaladon teeth.

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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I'm really not sure :D I found it at Purse State Park in MD, if that helps.

Maryland usually has the Aquia formation. :)

Tha tighin fodham, fodham, fodham!

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If thats a baby meg sittin by that nickle, then that is just absolutly COOLER THAN snarge!!! Now I want one. How can I get one? I think that would be soooooooooooo cool sittin by my big 6inch + meg!!!

RB

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If thats a baby meg sittin by that nickle, then that is just absolutly COOLER THAN snarge!!! Now I want one. How can I get one? I think that would be soooooooooooo cool sittin by my big 6inch + meg!!!

RB

That pathological maco is BA

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  • 2 weeks later...

Random pics of my some of my collection

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This is a wine sized bottle full of little shark teeth; I have three more that are filled like this as well :D

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The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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Looks like you've been busy!

Is that a Therapod tooth (see arrow), and what's in the gem jar with it?

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"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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Looks like you've been busy!

Is that a Therapod tooth (see arrow), and what's in the gem jar with it?

Yes there's a dromeasaur (spelling, sorry) and a metaposaur (amphibian tooth) in there. :D

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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<singing> "FOUR bottles of teeth on the wall - FOUR bottles of teeth..."

nah, doesn't work...

Yeah not really, but there's most likely a thousand teeth in one those bottles, mulitple that by 4 and 4000+ :D I'm too lazy to count them :rolleyes:

The soul of a Fossil Hunter is one that is seeking, always.

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