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Showing results for tags 'Missouri'.
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I decided to travel to and visit my twin brother this past weekend. Sometimes, he's on-call for his job on the weekend and he happened to get a call for a job that would take 2 or 3 hours to finish. I didn't feel like sitting around a nursing home for some hours, so I decided to take the chance and visit a crinoid locality close by while I waited for him to get free. The area got a lot of hard rain and some severe weather during the weekend as well. With that in mind, I was hopeful some easy pickings would be washed out or weathered out from my last visit. A couple hours spent scouring the weathered hillside resulted in some okay finds. The first rock I flipped over had a nice Azygocrinus calyx on it exposed. Azygocrinus was the first crinoid I ever found while young, and that was what sparked my interest in crinoids. I set it aside with my keep pile, and kept on flipping bigger rocks over. I ended up finding another calyx exposed on a bigger block of limestone within a few minutes. It is only missing a few calyx plates, and looks like it will prep out nicely. I haven't counted plates or bothered trying to ID this yet. Another nice calyx was spotted exposed atop a nice washed out pile. I believe it is an Uperocrinus calyx. An easy clean up there. Another recently washed out calyx was readily exposed. I believe it is a Macrocrinus. A couple of other partial calyx bits were littered about. I left them in place. A partial Agaricocrinus. I believe this is a partial Physetocrinus. The last rather interesting find is what I think is an Evactinopora bryozoan. I posted it in the fossil ID section, but last I checked there was no consensus yet. I don't think it is crinoidal, but who knows. It looks like it has the classic 4 rays like Evactinopora grandis has. My brother finished up and gave me a phone call after 2 hours or so. After picking up my keep pile, I left back for town to smash him in some Super Smash Bros. That's all for now, thanks for reading.
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- burlington limestone
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I believe this is an Evactinopora grandis from the Mississippian aged Burlington Formation limestone, but am not certain and would like other opinions. 2 of the "rays" are pretty weathered away and one is smaller than all of the others, but it looks apparent that it had 4 rays. I checked some of the references I keep downloaded on my phone, but none of them have bryozoan illustrative plates. I traded away the only other specimen I've found like this long ago, and didn't take any pictures. As found Dry Wetted
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- bryozoan
- burlington formation
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Missouri creek bed find- what is this?? Its fairly uniform shape, measurements-‘thinly sliced’, curvatures etc are throwing me off, ... ... naturally occurring? Nonsense?!
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- fossil
- fossilhunting
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Rocks fossils missouri Hello I am new was wondering if anyone can help me identify these fossils ? PLEASE AND THANK YOU 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
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- Creeks fossils
- missouri
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Hey, I happened to have come into contact with some nice folks in Northwest Missouri and they were wondering what finds they were collecting off the local river near Iowa but on the Missouri side. They have found Mastodon and mammoth bones/teeth along the same river but as I am a Pennsylvanian invertebrate fossil hunter this is out of my expertise. I could only give basic answers and I was wondering what everyone's thoughts were on IDs and ages. Some images I took while the rest were taken by them. Ill start off with this highly weathered Mammoth/possible mastodon vert (Dont know if Ids can go further on if it's Mammoth or Mastodon): I posted this elsewhere and was suggested Cow Humerous with butcher marks? Modern Horse Maxillary? https://ibb.co/KV54V87 Bison or Cow Scapula? not sure on age Bison Atlas vert? ??? https://ibb.co/LZ4gSgn Modernish jaw? Edit: Sorry these were meant to be on another post, I assume this is a badly weathered stigmaria Root cast? still weird whatever it was. Not removing it here as some people might have already seen it.
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I found this on my property (in Missouri), in a hunk of clay about a week ago. I spent up until now searching the area for other pieces, however, alas... nothing. Any information you may have is appreciated. This last image (below), I enhanced a bit to bring out details. Thanks for looking!
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I found this while walking along the lake shore of Table Rock Lake in Branson, Missouri. I know next to nothing about fossils but was hoping someone here might be able to point me in the right direction.
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Here’s one for our resident ichnologists. This is far out of my league to id. Found in Branson MO, it’s limestone. Bunch of ripples where I found this. I don’t know Branson strat, so unfortunately that’s the most info I can give you. The trace in question is roughly 1 cm wide. Thanks in advance!
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I decided to take a trip out to the Mississippi River. With the weather warming in Missouri, the trees and plants are starting to grow and bloom once more. It is quite beautiful seeing some of the flowers and trees flourish, which I wish I had snapped some photos of. The downside to that, is some of my fossil hunting spots get quickly overgrown, or sometimes get submerged underwater. This trip was to check out an exposure of Silurian aged Bainbridge Formation rock. I had not been to this site before, so I was excited to get out and explore once more. After a nice walk to my destination, I found the exposed red rocks along the river I was looking for. Almost immediately, I found what I was searching for, trilobites! Calymenids are common in the right exposures of the Bainbridge Formation, but I didn't expect to see so many. 95% of the specimens found were weathered, damaged, and missing a lot of shell. Here's a few photos I took before I got overwhelmed by the sheer amount of trilobites exposed on the rock. See how many you can find in the first picture. You may need to enlarged the photo. I counted over 10. And the search was on! The goal was to find a nice, complete specimen or two to take home, clean, and then compare to other Calymenid trilobites I've found in different exposures of Bainbridge Formation rock. I spent the warm and windy afternoon hunched over, scouring over all the exposed bedrock. After hours and counting over 100 poorly preserved specimens, I finally found a nice looking one worth taking home. It had a little bit of weathering, but looked to be all there. Many of them were exposed in this sort of flexed position. A bit of noise, and I extracted the specimen. This is a nice one I'll hopefully get a professional to clean, so I carefully packed it up and continued my search. A nice cephalopod, and a few crinoid holdfasts were also exposed atop the bedrock. They were both pretty cool to see, especially that cephalopod fossil. Like trilobites, they aren't things I get to see everyday. I didn't find anymore good trilobites exposed and I didn't want to split rock, so I shifted to flipping over and looking through the river tumbled rocks for a while. The 9th rock I had fllipped over, looks to have a ventral trilobite on it. The luckiest, and cutest find was this little .3 inch Calymenid trilobite that was washed along the riverbank. I have no clue how it hadn't been destroyed from the river, but I was quite happy to find it. Note how it's exposed in the similar flexed orientation as the last one I found. One other interesting rock on the riverbank that probably has a complete specimen within was found. It had a few pleura segments and part of the pygidium exposed, but I forgot to photograph it. I'll upload a photo of it when I get home and unpack it if I don't forget. It was great to get back out to the Mississippi River. I always enjoy nature, solitude, and fossil hunting. I avoided ticks this trip, but not the mosquitos! A good afternoon spent, I decided to pack up my belongings and head back to St. Louis for the night.
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- bainbridge formation
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From the album: Missouri Conulariids
Another broken specimen weathered from the rock. I always find these jellyfish fascinating whenever they present themselves.-
- conulariid
- iola formation
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From the album: Missouri Conulariids
A lot of my conulariid finds tend to be broken at or near the tip of the apex, even before the attachment which is typical of other conulariid specimens. I am not sure if it is a plane of weakness, a common feature when the animal dies, or simple predation, but when I collected this specimen from the Paola limestone the lower half was missing from the rest of the slab, despite being an almost clean fracture.-
- conulariid
- iola formation
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From the album: Mississippian fossils
A nice calyx I'm working on cleaning up.-
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- burlington formation
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From the album: Mississippian fossils
A common calyx I recently cleaned.-
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From the album: Missouri Conulariids
Found this wonderful specimen on March 10th, 2024. After finding this specimen I decided to do some research on these jellyfish and found out that they can form calcium phosphate pearls oddly enough. As fate would have it the only specimen I own to have a visible pearl was my most recent find! If I had not read in a paper that these jellyfish can create pearls I would not have believed it, but as the saying goes seeing is believing! Size: Pearl: Paper which has the only other image I've seen of these pearls online:- 2 comments
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- conularia
- conulariid pearl
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Found this while walking the dogs In Central Missouri USA . 3 cm long 2.5cm wide 2.5 cm tall limestone matrix. I thought it was a clam shell when I found it. The smoth rounded side was sticking out, but when I hit it with a hammer the Clow/Tooth shaped fossils was revealed. Let me know what you think Thanks
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- fossil claw?
- fossil tooth?
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Spring is finally coming around. Here in Missouri, we are getting a mix of nice weather, lots of rain, and even still some colder frosty days. I was off work yesterday, and the great weather had inspired me to go check out an Ordovician road cut I did some recon on last month. The roadcut isnt very large, but with the hard rain we had received this past week I figured it would be a good chance to rummage through the bedrock and scree pile. Within 5 minutes, I found my first find. It is likley an enrolled Eomonorachus intermedius trilobite. Unfortunately there was a crack running right through it. The trilobite was very small, measuring in at .25 inches. This is were things went wrong. I didn't bring any glue with me, and figured I would chance trying to extract it as-is, even with the crack running through it. Big mistake, as it can out in two pieces. This specimen was missing it's eyes and some shell, so I wasn't too distraught. About 10 minutes later, I found another enrolled specimen, this time with the tail exposed upright. It also measured in a .25 inches in length. It is likley also an Eomonorachus intermedius, but will need cleaned for a confident ID. After extraction, I walked to my car to put up my grinder and I couldn't believe what I saw just laying on the ground. Another trilobite! It is a miracle this bug was intact. I was amazed to turn the trilobite around and see some of its eye lenses looking back at me. It is a great day when you find a trilobite in Missouri with how rare they are, but to find three in one day is downright spectacular. This specimen isn't perfect either. It's compressed, missing it's genal spines, and also has it's tail tucked under the cephalon likley due to compression. Regardless, I am very happy with it. It should clean up well! I also snagged a nice little Isotelus hypostome. After that, I packed up and headed for home. I had a great time out, and will definitely have to check out this location again after time has passed, and some more weathering takes place. Thanks for reading!
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- decorah formation
- missouri
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From the album: Missouri Ammonoids, Nautiloids and Gastropods
Found this beautiful specimen the other day while searching in the rock pile attributed to the Iola Formation. More specifically, this one was most likely found in the Paola limestone member.- 3 comments
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- cephalopod
- cephalopods
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From the album: Mississippian fossils
A nice little calyx I finished cleaning.-
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Another piece I found in Lee Summit Missouri. I’m not really sure what to think of it other than it’s definitely something. It looks like a snail shell but has little crystals(calcite?) in it. Any information would be helpful
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- crystallized
- missouri
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From the album: Mississippian fossils
Another large Eutrochocrinus calyx I cleaned.-
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It was difficult to get a good photo. I brushed this untill I could see more. Found by blue river Kansas city. Is it an AMMONITE? It's sort of shaped like one very worn one. Not sure any help would be appreciated. Thx
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Found by blue river in Kansas City Missouri. I have no clue what I have found. I always find small brachiopods,horned coral or bivalves in this area. It was difficult to get a good photo. The whole rock itself is about 10 inches long Hope someone can tell me what it is. Thank you VID_20240301_092103~4.mp4 VID_20240229_234758.mp4 VID_20240301_092103~4.mp4
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From the album: Mississippian fossils
A large Uperocrinus pyriformis calyx I cleaned.-
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- burlington formation
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