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Found 23 results

  1. DeanK

    Hello from upstate New York!

    My name is Dean Kreplin I would like to have some of my Western fossils ID Here is a picture and a video of a fossil I found on a private ranch with permission about 20 miles from Douglas Wyoming. I believe it’s a dinosaur bone but would like some expert opinion found in 2016 IMG_4188.mov
  2. DeanK

    Hello from upstate New York!

    More pictures of this fossil
  3. DeanK

    Hello from upstate New York!

    Here is a picture and a video of what I found on a private ranch in 2016 with permission about 20 miles from Douglas Wyoming I know it’s hard sometimes to look at a picture and try to identify it’s gembone broken end of something please help IMG_4188.mov
  4. Jonathan Raymond

    Real amber ?

    Hello everybody ! I bought these two pieces of amber on the internet. Is it real amber ?
  5. Danielb

    Fossil id? Shark tooth?

    Hi I found this near peublo Colorado on a private site. And I was wondering what it could be. I was just wondering if I could have some help for ID? This is what it came out of.
  6. Niranjan

    Identification of Abelisaurid

    I got this on online auction site few days ago, yet to arrive. The seller told me he got this from a dealer in Madagascar. Is this from Madagascar? Or is it from Kem Kem bed and the seller is just lying? He has better reviews in online auction site but he described the tooth as Carcharodontosaurus
  7. I took a fossil finding guided tour last month and now I'm pretty much hooked! If someone could please help with identifying these. Found them a couple days ago sifting in a creek in central NJ.
  8. We took the family out for a day trip to Big Brook today and among many sharks teeth and squid pens, we found this interesting thing. My first thought was corprolite but it has cracks and structure? Idk any help would be great!
  9. My faithful assistant and I have been sidelined with covid. But we felt good yesterday so we decided to explore a creek in Austin, Texas that has some Eagle Ford Shale exposed. It was a sunny, warm afternoon, and a cold front would be moving in at night. At this location we've found quite a few teeth in the loose rocks strewn about. We're hoping to find mosasaur material but we've had no luck yet. Our goal was to get a bucket of gravel to search for micro-fossils. I suspect most of the teeth are eroding from the underside of a large rock slab in the creek. We think this because my assistant stood on the rock causing the edge to break. He fell in the creek, flat on his back, and as he was getting up he noticed some exposed teeth. We collected a bucket of gravel by the rock slab and searched through a small bowl and found several small teeth. The teeth range in size from 1/4 to 1 mm. We also took a few rocks with some small teeth sticking out. It was a fun hunt after being stuck inside for the past week.
  10. Fishinfossil

    Shell Surprise in NJ Cretaceous brook

    Found this little clam type full mold in NJ Cretaceous stream (not Big Brook). First time I've found a shell mold like this there. Reminds me of the Coquina clams in the undertow along the Jersey beaches in the summer. Any info on what it's nomenclature may be? Fun highlight of the day outside of the common shark teeth.
  11. I'm wondering what the rounded fossil might be? The place it was found contains mostly sand, and smaller shark teeths here and there. I think later createous? Really small shark teeth sometimes, not more than 2-3 mm sometimes. The rounded fossil is about 1cm on the long side. It might just be a pebble, or a fish tooth or a gastric stone, or a miss-grown shark teeth? I really don't know? I'll add some of the shark teeths for reference so you guys know the setting it was found in.
  12. Dear members, here I want to present my latest hunting trip, in the south east of France. This region has been known for decades to geologists for the vas amount of outcrops of Cretaceous age. In fact, there's even a GSSP and a stratotype section. Since most of these areas are protected, I checked where I could collect fossils freely. A famous spot for collectors is Carniol, located 125 km (77 mi) north of Marseille. Here, Aptian (Early Cretaceous) clays crop out and fossils can be easily collected by hand or with a small tool. A view of the outcrop: Fossils are extremely abundant. You don't need to excavate, you can easily pick those exposed on the surface. Because of these, many are too fragmented or fragile, but there's no shortage of well preserved specimen! Ammonoids are the most common specimens. I have not been able to ID them yet, because of the lack of specific papers on Carniol. Here's two of the largest and best preserved specimen that I found: Belemnites are extremely common as well, but complete specimens much more rare. Here's a complete specimen: And here a large one! And now, all my finds together: you can see ammonoids, belemnites, gastropods and bivalves. The best-preserved fossils after a cleaning process: Finally, I'm not sure about these: Here's all! I sincerely hope that you enjoyed my post. I'd love to hear your comments and hopefully IDs. Besides, if you have any reading suggestion, they are more than welcome. Thanks, Fabio
  13. Went to explore the creek with my family to enjoy a beautiful, peaceful day. My hubby found a tooth in the creek bed that cuts into Cretaceous clay and I initially thought it was a shark tooth but not like any I had seen before. Also, found something with crosshatched markings and was wondering if it is a fossil or just an erosion pattern on a stone. Thanks for taking a look.(Hands look like fossils)This measures about an inch across
  14. Had to share,went for a short hunt Valentine’s Day with the wifey and it was 32 degrees and she was a good sport about it and I was able to find her a heart fossil for Valentine’s Day lol,it didn’t get me off the hook though for flowers and dinner later but she did like her Squali heart fossil I found her.
  15. Huntlyfossils

    Marine tooth ,Central Queensland

    Nice tooth found in Richmond, Queensland of Creataceous age in marine sediments. It has been id as a sharks tooth but is missing the top section. Any more info on this tooth would be great. Cheers
  16. https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/new-elasmosaur-fossils-vancouver-island-1.5206062?cmp=rss
  17. https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/ancient-crocodiles-would-have-ordered-salad-180972518/ https://cosmosmagazine.com/palaeontology/some-prehistoric-crocs-were-vegetarians
  18. https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-01/caos-ttb011719.php
  19. I_gotta_rock

    Ammonite

    From the album: Delaware Fossils

    Small section of a heteromorphic ammonite of the genus Didymoceras. Probably D. platycostatum. Late cretaceous Found at Reedy Point North, Delaware City, Delaware Mt Laurel Formation Identified from W. J. KENNEDY AND W. A. COBBAN. UPPER CAMPANIAN (UPPER CRETACEOUS) AMMONITES FROM THE MARSHALLTOWN FORMATION-MOUNT LAUREL BOUNDARY BEDS IN DELAWARE. J. Paleont., 71(1), 1997, pp. 62-73 Thanks to abyssunder and piranha for the ID help!
  20. I_gotta_rock

    Pycnodonte mutibilis

    From the album: Delaware Fossils

    Oyster from the Mt. Laurel Formation, Reed Point Spoils at C&D Canal, Delaware City, DE Cretaceous Era, approx. 72 myo Same as previous shell, but opened to show interior.

    © Heather J M Siple

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