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Showing results for tags 'Pleistocene'.
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Coelodonta antiquitatis 4th cervical vertebra
LordTrilobite posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Mammal Fossils
Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799) The 4th cervical vertebra of a woolly rhino. Location: North Sea, Netherlands Age: Pleistocene -
Coelodonta antiquitatis 3rd cervical vertebra
LordTrilobite posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Mammal Fossils
Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799) The 3rd cervical vertebra of a woolly rhino. Location: North Sea, Netherlands Age: Pleistocene -
I found this tooth in a dry creek bed in NE Iowa. The area I found it in is unique due to the fact that even though it is surrounded by farmland, the sheer rock bluffs and rock overhangs cut by the little creek over the centuries made this area unsuitable for farming. Northeast Iowa was apparently missed by many of the ice advances during the Ice Age so the area as a whole has a much older surface geology than found anywhere else in the state. The tooth is between 1 1/16” and 1 3/16” in all measurements. It looks too old to be from a cow though I’m sure they have been in the area since first settled. The closest thing I’ve found myself online is a tooth from a prehistoric camel. Any help IDing it would be much appreciated!
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From the album: Mammal Fossils
Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799) The atlas vertebra of a woolly rhino. Location: North Sea, Netherlands Age: Pleistocene© Olof Moleman
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Coelodonta antiquitatis cervical vertebra
LordTrilobite posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Mammal Fossils
Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799) The sixth cervical vertebra of a woolly rhino. Location: North Sea, Netherlands Age: Pleistocene© Olof Moleman
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Coelodonta antiquitatis 1st Dorsal Vertabra
LordTrilobite posted a gallery image in Member Collections
From the album: Mammal Fossils
Coelodonta antiquitatis (Blumenbach, 1799) The first dorsal vertabra of a Woolly Rhino. Location: North Sea, Netherlands Age: Late Pleistocene© Olof Moleman
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I found this today in a coastal Early Pleistocene deposit in South Carolina. I was thinking mammoth when I found it, but now I think it may be something else? It doesn’t have the characteristic rows of a mammoth tooth.
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Hi all, So this little bone piece was found at the beach of Wassenaar, Netherlands; it’s from the late Pleistocene, 40’000 years old. I got two questions on this one: Is it possible to say anything more about this bone fragment (eg what animal/what part of the skeleton)? In the last picture, are those predation marks? I can take better pictures if needed. Thanks in advance for your help! Max
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http://artdaily.com/news/103216/A-giant-bear-of-the-late-Pleistocene-was-found-in-Buenos-Aires
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This fossil was dug up fishing recently in Kankakee County, Illinois, where the bedrock is Silurian, but this fossil would have to be Pleistocene. Any help with ID is appreciated. I do not have possession so these are the only photos I have. If you provide an ID, please provide your reasoning. Thanks!
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A friend of mine found this tooth on the Brazos River and wanted me to try for an id. I have some ideas, but don't want to influence opinions. It measures 1 5/8 inches long and the crown length is 9/16in. Thanks!
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- brazos river
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Hi all, What species of Ostrea do you think this is? My first thought was O. edulis, but I am wondering if it maybe isn't O. ventilabrum after all. In fact, how exactly can you differentiate the two different species? It was found on the Zandmotor, Netherlands. Most of the shells found here are (apart from modern) from the Eem Formation, Eemian, Pleistocene; 120'000 years old. And it would be this old if it is an O. edulis (which is a very common species). But maybe it is the rarer Eocene O. ventilabrum? I know that they do occur here too, but I never know how to tell them apart from O. edulis. Looking forward to hearing your answers! Max
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Mammoth Trackways Found at Fossil Lake, Lake County, Oregon
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Mammoth steps found at Fossil Lake Ancient trackways discovered in Lake County By Kurt Liedtyke, Herald and News, Oregon https://www.heraldandnews.com/news/local_news/mammoth-steps-found-at-fossil-lake/article_72c659d4-38f6-545f-b7a2-5718be8c4d51.html Rare Mammoth Tracks Reveal an Intimate Portrait of Herd Life Researchers piece together a 43,000-years-old tableau of an injured adult and concerned young, Smithsonian Magazine https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/rare-mammoth-tracks-paint-intimate-portrait-pachyderm-group-life-180968256/ Retallack, G.J., Martin, J.E., Broz, A.P., Breithaupt, B.H., Matthews, N.A. and Walton, D.P., 2018. Late Pleistocene mammoth trackway from Fossil Lake, Oregon. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2018.01.037 https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0031018217312154 Yours, Paul H.- 2 replies
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Another nice double valve bivalve from Columbus County. Common as a single valve find, but very uncommon with both valves.
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Survives today as the Southern Quahog. A common food source of clam strips.
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Hi There, I've been holding onto this for a year or so waiting to get it ID'd .. always suspected it was a tapir tooth partial but that was before I stumbled upon a few Dire Wolf carnassials with similar breaks. Is this possibly half of a Dire Wolf Carnassial tooth ? @Harry Pristis This was found in dredge material in Port Royal, SC. Pliocene to Pleistocene or so ... Thanks, Brett
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Avery nice double valve cockle. Single valves are not uncommon at this site but double valvers are very uncommon for this species.
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Single valves are an extremely common find at this site. However, this is the first double valve specimen I have found. A very interesting looking little bivalve.
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Curious what you guys think. Found last saturday near Arcadia, pretty much all I found of note was this & a large sand tiger tooth lol
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From the album: Gastropods and Bivalves Worldwide
10cm. A nice "Crystal clam" from the early Pleistocene at Fort Drum Crystal MIne, Fla., USA. Thanks to CBOB for the blind trade.- 1 comment
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Long-Buried Ice Age, Alabama Forest Offers Climate Change Clues
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Scientists: Long-Buried Ice Age Forest Offers Climate Change Clues All Things Considered, Debbie Elliot, February 9, 2018 https://www.npr.org/2018/02/09/584116280/scientists-long-buried-ice-age-forest-offers-climate-change-clues https://www.npr.org/programs/all-things-considered/2018/02/21/587519897 Underwater forest in the Gulf acts as climate change time capsule Times-Picayune, NOLACom News, February, 12, 2018 http://www.nola.com/environment/index.ssf/2018/02/underwater_forest_in_the_gulf.html Alabama's 60,000-year-old underwater forest spills its secrets in new documentary, ALCom News, June 25, 2017 http://www.al.com/news/mobile/index.ssf/2017/06/underwater_forest_discovered_alabama.html Gonzalez, S., Bentley Sr, S.J., DeLong, K.L., Xu, K., Obelcz, J., Truong, J., Harley, G.L., Reese, C.A. and Caporaso, A., 2017. Facies Reconstruction of a Late Pleistocene Cypress Forest Discovered on the Northern Gulf of Mexico Continental Shelf. Gulf Coast Association of Geological Societies Transactions, v. 67, p. 133–146. https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4369196-DeLong-Paper.html http://www.gcags.org/exploreanddiscover/2017/00196_gonzalez_et_al.pdf Faught, M.K. and Donoghue, J.F., 1997. Marine inundated archaeological sites and paleofluvial systems: examples from a karst‐controlled continental shelf setting in Apalachee Bay, Northeastern Gulf of Mexico. Geoarchaeology, 12(5), pp. 417-458. http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.211.1206&rep=rep1&type=pdf https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/46c6/3f837e40f489e80397d8f52a751f046d91f0.pdf A related paper is: Archer, A.W., Elrick, S., Nelson, W.J. and DiMichele, W.A., 2016, Cataclysmic burial of Pennsylvanian Period coal swamps in the Illinois Basin: Hypertidal sedimentation during Gondwanan glacial melt-water pulses. In Contributions to Modern and Ancient Tidal Sedimentology: Proceedings of the Tidalites 2012 Conference: International Association of Sedimentologists Special Publication (Vol. 47, pp. 217-231). https://www.researchgate.net/publication/299407830_Cataclysmic_burial_of_Pennsylvanian_Period_coal_swamps_in_the_Illinois_Basin_Hypertidal_sedimentation_during_Gondwanan_glacial_melt-water_pulses https://repository.si.edu/bitstream/handle/10088/30890/2016-ArcherEtAl MeltwaterPulsesLPIA IAS.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y Yours, Paul H.- 1 reply
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Mrs. SA2, @MikeR & I guided a trip for 12 along the lower James River in Virginia this weekend. Started out with very iffy weather Saturday morning with 2 foot swells and white caps from an unfriendly westerly wind. She and I were both quite busy tending our boats even when on the beach so we didn't get many photos. Mike was busy helping the folks with IDs and stratigraphy, so he didn't get many either. There were some taken though. Later in the day we did find a very nice, large Eastover Formation slough (upper Miocene). @Fossil-Hound Mrs. SA2 said she "had the feeling" as we approached in the boats. Not to disappoint, the slough produced at least 10 Ecphora between the different members of the group, most were whole or almost whole. @Daleksec still has hold of the lucky horseshoe and found about 6 foot of whale jaw. (After initial inspections last night it appears to be 3 foot of both sides of the lower jaw / mandible. Lots of further work is required.) I will post more photos of Saturday in next couple days. Today was much nicer on the river and we hunted a section of beach with the Rushmere Member of the Yorktown Formation (Upper Pliocene) in the bottom 2 - 3 feet of the cliff. It's very shelly and it too produced large #s of Ecphora. @Fossil-Hound, I'm not exaggerating when I say the group got over 20 on the day, cause I found Mrs. SA2 7 by myself, she found a couple, @Daleksec had 4 or 5 and other members of the group had some too. Here is a photo of my 1st of today, lying there waiting to pose with 2 of @aerogrower's custom scale cube. We were testing out the metric one to make sure Ray put some magic in it. Here is a photo showing the Rushmere Member exposure at the base of the cliff. We had about 600 yards of exposure today. Paleo pick for scale. Here is a photo of my last Ecphora of the day. @Fossil-Hound, calm down. YES, it really is "that big!" @MikeR can vouch for it, he saw it and photographed it, with his brand new metric scale from @aerogrower. Obviously, I have some prep work ahead of me. Speaking of the world famous @MikeR, ladies and gentlemen - here he is coming back to the boat with his bucket of trophies after a few hours in the sun! One of the nicest, most knowledgeable guys you would ever want to meet. I'll post photos of all of Mrs. SA2'S Ecphora from the weekend, @Daleksec's jaw and his gorgeous ~2 inch hastalis with red hues in the next few days. Gorgeous tooth! Cheers, SA2
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Great day, hunting with a friend, warm, sunny. Did not even need a wetsuit. and then unknowns!! I love unknowns because it gives me a chance to learn and study thesenewly acquired fossils. First a tooth found by my hunting buddy. I have no clue what this is.. Next a medial phalanx.. almost 2 inches.. and finally a vertebral process.. I once found a Mammoth process almost 14 inches... this one is not that large... In the same hole, I found a 3 inch Sloth Proximal Phalanx... Lots of bones today.... As always, identifications, suggestions, and comments are greatly appreciated. Shellseeker
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