Jump to content

Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'dendrites'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
    Tags should be keywords or key phrases. e.g. otodus, megalodon, shark tooth, miocene, bone valley formation, usa, florida.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Fossil Discussion
    • Fossil ID
    • Fossil Hunting Trips
    • General Fossil Discussion
    • Partners in Paleontology - Member Contributions to Science
    • Fossil of the Month
    • Questions & Answers
    • Member Collections
    • A Trip to the Museum
    • Paleo Re-creations
    • Collecting Gear
    • Fossil Preparation
    • Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
    • Member-to-Member Fossil Trades
    • Fossil News
  • Community News
    • Member Introductions
    • Member of the Month
    • Members' News & Diversions
  • General Category
    • Rocks & Minerals
    • Geology

Categories

  • Annelids
  • Arthropods
    • Crustaceans
    • Insects
    • Trilobites
    • Other Arthropods
  • Brachiopods
  • Cnidarians (Corals, Jellyfish, Conulariids )
    • Corals
    • Jellyfish, Conulariids, etc.
  • Echinoderms
    • Crinoids & Blastoids
    • Echinoids
    • Other Echinoderms
    • Starfish and Brittlestars
  • Forams
  • Graptolites
  • Molluscs
    • Bivalves
    • Cephalopods (Ammonites, Belemnites, Nautiloids)
    • Gastropods
    • Other Molluscs
  • Sponges
  • Bryozoans
  • Other Invertebrates
  • Ichnofossils
  • Plants
  • Chordata
    • Amphibians & Reptiles
    • Birds
    • Dinosaurs
    • Fishes
    • Mammals
    • Sharks & Rays
    • Other Chordates
  • *Pseudofossils ( Inorganic objects , markings, or impressions that resemble fossils.)

Blogs

  • Anson's Blog
  • Mudding Around
  • Nicholas' Blog
  • dinosaur50's Blog
  • Traviscounty's Blog
  • Seldom's Blog
  • tracer's tidbits
  • Sacredsin's Blog
  • fossilfacetheprospector's Blog
  • jax world
  • echinoman's Blog
  • Ammonoidea
  • Traviscounty's Blog
  • brsr0131's Blog
  • brsr0131's Blog
  • Adventures with a Paddle
  • Caveat emptor
  • -------
  • Fig Rocks' Blog
  • placoderms
  • mosasaurs
  • ozzyrules244's Blog
  • Terry Dactyll's Blog
  • Sir Knightia's Blog
  • MaHa's Blog
  • shakinchevy2008's Blog
  • Stratio's Blog
  • ROOKMANDON's Blog
  • Phoenixflood's Blog
  • Brett Breakin' Rocks' Blog
  • Seattleguy's Blog
  • jkfoam's Blog
  • Erwan's Blog
  • Erwan's Blog
  • marksfossils' Blog
  • ibanda89's Blog
  • Liberty's Blog
  • Liberty's Blog
  • Lindsey's Blog
  • Back of Beyond
  • Ameenah's Blog
  • St. Johns River Shark Teeth/Florida
  • gordon's Blog
  • West4me's Blog
  • West4me's Blog
  • Pennsylvania Perspectives
  • michigantim's Blog
  • michigantim's Blog
  • lauraharp's Blog
  • lauraharp's Blog
  • micropterus101's Blog
  • micropterus101's Blog
  • GPeach129's Blog
  • Olenellus' Blog
  • nicciann's Blog
  • nicciann's Blog
  • Deep-Thinker's Blog
  • Deep-Thinker's Blog
  • bear-dog's Blog
  • javidal's Blog
  • Digging America
  • John Sun's Blog
  • John Sun's Blog
  • Ravsiden's Blog
  • Jurassic park
  • The Hunt for Fossils
  • The Fury's Grand Blog
  • julie's ??
  • Hunt'n 'odonts!
  • falcondob's Blog
  • Monkeyfuss' Blog
  • cyndy's Blog
  • pattyf's Blog
  • pattyf's Blog
  • chrisf's Blog
  • chrisf's Blog
  • nola's Blog
  • mercyrcfans88's Blog
  • Emily's PRI Adventure
  • trilobite guy's Blog
  • barnes' Blog
  • xenacanthus' Blog
  • myfossiltrips.blogspot.com
  • HeritageFossils' Blog
  • Fossilefinder's Blog
  • Fossilefinder's Blog
  • maybe a nest fossil?
  • farfarawy's Blog
  • Microfossil Mania!
  • blogs_blog_99
  • Southern Comfort
  • Emily's MotE Adventure
  • Eli's Blog
  • andreas' Blog
  • Recent Collecting Trips
  • retired blog
  • andreas' Blog test
  • fossilman7's Blog
  • Piranha Blog
  • xonenine's blog
  • xonenine's Blog
  • Fossil collecting and SAFETY
  • Detrius
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • pangeaman's Blog
  • Jocky's Blog
  • Jocky's Blog
  • Kehbe's Kwips
  • RomanK's Blog
  • Prehistoric Planet Trilogy
  • mikeymig's Blog
  • Western NY Explorer's Blog
  • Regg Cato's Blog
  • VisionXray23's Blog
  • Carcharodontosaurus' Blog
  • What is the largest dragonfly fossil? What are the top contenders?
  • Test Blog
  • jsnrice's blog
  • Lise MacFadden's Poetry Blog
  • BluffCountryFossils Adventure Blog
  • meadow's Blog
  • Makeing The Unlikley Happen
  • KansasFossilHunter's Blog
  • DarrenElliot's Blog
  • Hihimanu Hale
  • jesus' Blog
  • A Mesozoic Mosaic
  • Dinosaur comic
  • Zookeeperfossils
  • Cameronballislife31's Blog
  • My Blog
  • TomKoss' Blog
  • A guide to calcanea and astragali
  • Group Blog Test
  • Paleo Rantings of a Blockhead
  • Dead Dino is Art
  • The Amber Blog
  • Stocksdale's Blog
  • PaleoWilliam's Blog
  • TyrannosaurusRex's Facts
  • The Community Post
  • The Paleo-Tourist
  • Lyndon D Agate Johnson's Blog
  • BRobinson7's Blog
  • Eastern NC Trip Reports
  • Toofuntahh's Blog
  • Pterodactyl's Blog
  • A Beginner's Foray into Fossiling
  • Micropaleontology blog
  • Pondering on Dinosaurs
  • Fossil Preparation Blog
  • On Dinosaurs and Media
  • cheney416's fossil story
  • jpc
  • A Novice Geologist
  • Red-Headed Red-Neck Rock-Hound w/ My Trusty HellHound Cerberus
  • Red Headed
  • Paleo-Profiles
  • Walt's Blog
  • Between A Rock And A Hard Place
  • Rudist digging at "Point 25", St. Bartholomä, Styria, Austria (Campanian, Gosau-group)
  • Prognathodon saturator 101
  • Books I have enjoyed
  • Ladonia Texas Fossil Park
  • Trip Reports
  • Glendive Montana dinosaur bone Hell’s Creek
  • Test
  • Stratigraphic Succession of Chesapecten

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 8 results

  1. This location got on my list last summer but was a little further down because of two issues... 1) lacking an All Wheel or Four Wheel Drive vehicle. Birthday present to myself after much searching and Voila! I have an Orange 2010 Honda Element AWD! the first break-in trip with it off road was back in late January of this year. And the number 2) issue - which was both literal and a figurative descriptor for a bodily function - I contracted a nice dose of Carpal Tunnel Syndrome on the job. A tape gun was the culprit. So solution to #2 was to extricate myself from the job and get the surgical procedure. Done! I retired on March, 6 and had the surgery the next day. And yesterday I got the stitches out. Yay! And moving forward to the research, planning and execution of my excursion to Crittenden Springs, NV located in the northeast corner of the state. Distance to the destination - about 221 miles/355 km....time 3.5 hours. Nice road trip on I-80 West departing at 5 45AM, in the dark, obviously, with stars galore once I got away from the Salt Lake Valley light pollution. On my left - south - the constellation Scorpius had risen as the precursor to the Milky Way rising during the predawn hours. Which means the summer astrophotography season has begun! Astro at night, fossils in the daytime. Same location! Oh yeah! Sleeping is for some other time. At dawn, I paused for a leg stretch break and to see the sunrise over the Bonneville Salt Flats. This is the world famous land speed racing course during the fall, while winter and spring are wet and summer provides the heat to evaporate the water leaving a pristine, flat racetrack from 2.5 miles to around 9 miles depending on the salt conditions. Cobb Peak on the right and Graham Peak ( 7600') on the left. The water depth you see is ankle deep. Looking to the East. These two chaps went for a stroll into the super briny salt pond for whatever reason. Ruined their footwear? ...most likely. Salt, Sun and Sky. Sun's up, daylight's burning, time to roll! Okay, the paved road part is behind me and now comes a 23 mile gravel road cruise to my destination with a beautiful day before me. Heading north on BLM land, check. Open range cattle grazing, check. Three boats in the desert, check! First herd of Mule Deer crossing the road and heading to the hills, check! There were approx. 26 Muley's in this herd. To be repeated over the next 20 miles until I lost count and guesstimated over 200 deer were seen, jumping the fences, running across the road in front me and later in the day doing the same thing on my way home. Four stragglers climbing a 45 degree angle slope. Moving along...a nice rock formation and around the next curve the Crittenden Reservoir. The turnoff into Long Canyon is just a few miles ahead. Just passed the reservoir the turnoff revealed where the AWD vehicle was saving grace. Had I been in my good old Chevy Impala Cop Car, it would have been a turnaround point 4 miles short. No photos of the washes, ruts and ditches I navigated, but had I made this trip earlier in the spring I would have a major muddy road to struggle with as did the previous vehicle which left deep, dried tire tracks through the soft mucky area where the Crittenden Springs underground water source got its name. The Honda Element went down into every ditch and wash and crawled right out the other side. The vehicle's short nose and tail readily avoided scraping the steep angles in and out. And here we are at the mouth of the east/west oriented Long Canyon facing north. And looking at the north canyon hills on the south side of the canyon. Hmmm...snow...which means I've gained some elevation. I picked a spot to park, grabbed a hammer, chisel and gloves and up I went. Not two minutes later, I scan the rubble and Hey! there's a good omen that I might just be in the right place. Left the cm scale cards in my bucket. Doh! The pick point is just over the smaller ammonite on the back side of the frontal section of the larger specimen. I scanned this rubble pile for a bit to see what else I could find. Several more sections of large size ammonites were found as well as some dendrites, of which I collected a few. Onward and upward. My car is almost dead center below. This area is what my researched suggested was where a bulldozer was used to reveal the layers/seams of fossils. And now I should back up a bit. In my online research I found several sites noting this location, several interesting science papers and publications and a blogger's site with photographic details. The only incidence in my search on TFF was posted here: Posted in 2015 by Mike Foley. Go to Number 48 in his list of bulletins in the above post. That's where you'll get to read the real deal on this location. I'm only a very late arrival. I think Hyatt and Smith were here in 1905. And much digging and excavations have been active in this location for many decades. One gentleman has been collecting here for over 30 years and is named in the above paper and one of the primary authors. Moving on...from the last picture I posted above where the bulldozer was employed in heavy overburden removal to reveal the main 3 layers, seams or as noted to be lenses of the ammonite beds, then at the conclusion of the excavations and collecting of many, many specimens and species the bulldozer then buried the site for restoration by nature. A rough specimen but a keeper for prepping practice. Found below a trench dug by some very enthusiastic fossil miners back on 2008 or 2009 when it was first found. I surface hunted the tailings piles below each of the large holes I found. My hammer is hanging on a juniper limb and in the photo below from 2009 the same juniper is visible in the freshly dug hole found by James Jenks back then. The boulder is from the trench/hole shows in the bottom of both pics. Time to break the thread into Part One and Part two. I need a short break for lunch.
  2. Daniel1990

    Dendrites on limestone

    Hi Dendrites? Best wishes Daniel
  3. The apartments I live in are doing plumbing excavation and this was dug up, couple things caught my eye so drug it home. It's a very pretty variety of rocks to be mixed in cement if that's the case, couple strange things one in first pics, (not the rock) then there is the stone with unusual dendrites I'm assuming, what is the thing they are growing around in center? Whats with all the tubular shapes? Sorry for picture quality my lens getting scuffed up. Except for first three pics all the rest are same stone, I became slightly obsessed with it
  4. Miocene_Mason

    Dendrite psuedofossil

    From the album: WhodamanHD's Fossil collection.

    Found in the Newark supergroup, probably new oxford fm, by me. Near Thurmont, MD. A broke a concretion in four pieces, there was calcite in many little crack and niches in the rock, and in one of the calcite side a noticed this dendrite. Not a fossil, but cool. Late Triassic
  5. PRK

    Nice looking agate

    A good friend has lived in Montana for 40 years. He is not a rock or fossil guy. And thusly just recently discovered his elderly neighbor had buckets of local agates he had collected back when he was a younger fella. My buddy acquired a lovely sample piece from him that I have recently cut and polished It looks great! hes got some nice stuff.
  6. abyssunder

    Manganese dendrites

    From the album: Pseudofossils

    © © abyssunder

  7. Hey everyone, I'm new to this forum and looking forward to being of help. Anyway, I found this rock while taking a stroll on the hills of Emilia Romagna, near Parma, in northern Italy. Looking up on a geological map what rocks compose the ground, I found out that it's predominantly argillite, which sedimented during the early Paleocene, in hemipelagic conditions. Now, the rock shows two different features: in two of the photographs you can distinguish tree-like structures, which resemble algae, but could as well turn out to be manganese oxide dendrites; in the other one instead, you can see a warm-like figure, of which I have no clue. Can you help me identify it?
  8. Kehbe

    Cordaites

    I know these aren't rare or unusual but this is a really nice example of Cordaites from the Pennsylvanian. Just thought you would enjoy looking at it! pic1 pic2 (edit) Added Pic2 Just a close up pic and this website I thought was an interesting site concerning cordaites http://www.uni-muenster.de/GeoPalaeontologie/Palaeo/Palbot/seite18.html
×
×
  • Create New...