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  1. paleo.nath

    Is this anything?

    I’ve just recently sifted through some permian micro matrix from Oklahoma and I came across this and wasn’t sure if it was anything at all, it was very uniform and sleek so I didn’t immediately assume it was a pebble, it also had that strange split on one end. I’m not even sure if it’s a fossil.
  2. I made a drive to explore a new creek in Hill County Friday morning. It ended up being some of the toughest hiking in a creek bottom I've done. This is another Eagle Ford outcrop, and in satellite photos, the blue-gray shale went from the sides of the creek walls all the way to the bottom of the creek bed, just like the Ellis County creek I visited last week. In real life on Friday, the creek bed was full of mud, and it covered much of the lower walls of the creek too. I've never seen such a difference in a reasonably recent satellite photo and actual appearance. To make matters worse, it rained Thursday. I didn't think the showers had reached that far west, but I was mistaken. It didn't raise the water too much, but it made the creek bottom a muddy mess. I've never before gotten this muddy hiking a creek, and it really wore me down, sloggin through that. With the mud that high, there was no finding any fossiliferous layers of matrix anywhere in the creek walls, but there were plenty of broken pieces of it, along with shale pieces, in the bottom of the creek. So, I spent my time looking for individual fossils on the gravel bars (more like mud bars). But the rain had turned the shale really dark, and that along with the dark brown mud, made spotting fossils really tough. I picked up lots of likely looking pieces of matrix too, and I did find a few things. Here are the only teeth I found that weren't seriously encased in matrix. I really should stop picking up modern bison teeth, but can never seem to resist them.
  3. I have been wanting to make it back to the Ellis County creek where I found so many teeth, but by the time I could do it, it had rained enough to raise the creek quite a bit. The water level has just now dropped again. I was working near Ellis County this morning, and when I finished very early, it seemed the perfect time to go back. Rain is forecast for this evening and the next couple of days that will likely bring the creek up again. Below is what I found that was either loose, or easily removed from matrix.
  4. Kilo586

    What is this thingy?

    Found it in a park by a creek inside a little cave. It's all black, feels rather light and has a strange texture.
  5. GPayton

    Pterosaur Finger Bone?

    I've been doing a lot of exploration in the Grayson Formation (Lower Cretaceous) exposures south of Waco lately, and so last week I was doing some hunting on a nice marly slope in the South Bosque River. I picked up lots of pyritized heteromorph ammonites and some turritella, but what really caught my eye was this tiny piece of fossilized bone. I know that vertebrate material can be found in the Grayson - I've even found some nice Cretolamna and Ptychodus teeth myself - but this doesn't seem to be fish or shark. The walls of the inner cavity are extremely thin when you look at the cross section where it is broken which is what's leading me in the pterosaur direction. Maybe a metatarsal? Or a fragment of a larger bone from a much smaller species? Any help would be appreciated.
  6. Good Day, I currently reside in Houston but have roots in West Texas and the Hill Country. Having been away in the intermountain west for the last 23 years, getting back to limestone is a joy! I've been a fossil collector most of my walking life and enjoy thinking about what must have been here and Wow, it is just mind boggling to consider! Rocks and minerals, geology and the world we live in is fascinating from so many perspectives. I'm an environmental scientist by trade and currently work in the transportation sector.
  7. Excited to have found this little gem in the Post Oak Creek matrix. Question is.....Claw or Jaw? I have found some crustacean claws and while similar, the oblong indents are making me question. It looks very much like some of the Permian amphibian jaws. But that's really odd. So please, help me out! Jaw or Claw? Thanks for any info!! A couple of crab claws (that I am 99% sure of at least) from the same matrix. Has kind of similar texture, but different color. A Permian Amphibian jaw for comparison:
  8. Apophis

    Nautaloid?

    Howdy folks, Last weekend I returned to a place in Texas that I have collected marine fossils at previously. The owners of this area have specifically asked that I not share any details on the location, but it’s a bit of an anomaly as it appears to have a number of fossil bearing matrix including sandstone, shale, limestone, and the thickest mud I’ve ever seen. It doesn’t match any of the USGS data either. I found a number of things there that I would like to preset, but the main one is this: The little plates that make up this stone form a spiral and they shine like opal / ammolite. This tear drop shape is something I’m familiar with as I have another one, smaller, that also shines, as well as chert nodules of the exact same shape that I suspect are related. Here are a few other things I collected at this location: this piece of limestone is rather large, about 20lbs, and it’s filled with things I’m not even remotely qualified to ID. It deserves its own post which at some point I’ll get around to. I collected this at the same location years ago. I think it’s an orthocone or pseudo-orthocone nautaloid. Well, half of one at least. Not sure really, but it also deserves its own post.
  9. Hello all! I got some fun Post Oak Creek Matrix and am finding all kinds of odd things!! I am not too familiar with the stuff that comes out of POC aside from the shark teeth and crabby stuff (found a couple of nice claws!) so these things have me wondering what they are! Any help is appreciated! 1.First is this little thing: 4 mm 2. Then this weird thing 6 mm (the backside makes me think denticle but the front.....I don't know) 3. Have found quite a few of these - .I think they are some kind of dermal plates? All are aprox 3 mm 4. Another type of dermal plate? 4 mm 5. Perhaps a worn fragment of a vertebra? 4 mm But it is not the same color or texture as any of the other verts I've found in the matrix; 6 An odd bone bit. It has a concave circle on the small end. Perhaps a tail vert? 5 mm 7. Is this perhaps a plesiosar tooth fragment? 4 mm 8. And finally, not sure what tooth this might be. It's curved, but not rounded. It has ridges unlike a shark tooth blade, but is flat like a shark tooth blade. 6mm
  10. Hey everyone, The Paleontological Society of Austin holds meetings once a month and always on the third Tuesday. Those meetings have always been open to the public. Now that we are doing them virtually via Zoom I would like to invite the members of the Fossil Forum as well. The meeting starts at 7pm CDT and we usually have a lecture for the first hour (often interesting) and then a short club business meeting (boring for guests). I am actually going to be the speaker tomorrow. Although I am by no means an expert on fossil crustaceans, I am presenting a review of what species are currently described from the Glen Rose and Walnut Formations (Albian) of Central Texas. I'll review the current literature, described species and show examples of what I have managed to collect myself (or with the help of others) over the last 15 years. I'll also have images of a handful of "unknowns" that maybe some of you other Texas collectors have encountered. We'll follow the presentation with a Q&A session as best I can. Here is a link to our newsletters and the meeting info is included in the September Volume. https://austinpaleo.org/newsletter.html Hope to see some of you there tomorrow evening. Erich Rose President, Paleontological Society of Austin
  11. Hey everyone. Yesterday while out on the NSR. I found several new items. I have been able to identify most. I do have two waiting for help in the ID section. But, lets get to why I am here. I found a Pachydiscus (P.) paulsoni piece with a piece of black material sticking out of it. This material seems to "puncture" the ammonite. I am delicately cleaning it right now and hope to have some pictures soon. Of course my thought was a broken piece of a tooth. Could it be a tooth? Or, something other that was burrowing into the ammonite upon its death or after?
  12. austinswamp

    Mammoth skull

    Good morning, I walked by this while servicing my truck at a dealership. I thought it didn’t look modern, but could be wrong. If it is an ice age fossil I was planning to purchase this to prevent anymore sun damage. Thanks
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