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  1. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Lobster!

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from a Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation several yr. ago. Maastrichtian. This specimen is yet to be worked out of the matrix, and is missing it's tail....tragic...sombody had Lobster for dinner. The first couple of segments of the tail are still there. A rare find indeed.
  2. Tennessees Pride

    Ghost Shrimp

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from a Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation in 2013. Maastrichtian.
  3. Tennessees Pride

    Ghost Shrimp

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from a Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation in 2013. Maastrichtian.
  4. Tennessees Pride

    Unidentified Paleobotanical Pic 1

    From the album: Most of my collection

    This has to be one of the strangest paleobotanicals i've ever laid eyes on. The material has been replaced by siderite or some other iron type stuff=iron wood! It has been looked at by one Paleobotanist and one Geologist,neither had saw something like this before, and i was told there was a possibility it could be a new species of some type! It's still unidentified. The preservation is nothing short of remarkable....this specimen is so incredibly life like, that one would almost expect it to start moving in your hand! All the internal parts can still be viewed, even veins! Strange....you almost expect a heart to start beating in it! was collected in 2013 from a Late Cretaceous Campanian formation. The outside surface has many holes in a regular pattern which lead to internal parts.
  5. Tennessees Pride

    Unidentified Paleobotanic, Pic 1

    From the album: Most of my collection

    On Dec.26th 2013, this paleobotanical was collected from a Late Cretaceous Campanian formation around Sardis, TN. It has been looked at by several and is still unidentified. It's not listed in any of prof. Berry's works that i know of and i have been told it may be a new species. Possible Pinus or Araucaria species.
  6. Tennessees Pride

    Unidentified Paleobotanic, pic 2

    From the album: Most of my collection

    On Dec.26th, 2013, this paleobotanical was collected from a Late Cretaceous Campanian formation around Sardis, TN. The specimen has been looked at by several and is still unidentified. It's not listed in any of prof.Berry's works that i know of, and i have been told it may be a new species. Possible Pinus or Araucaria species.
  7. Tennessees Pride

    Unidentified Paleobotanic, Pic 3

    From the album: Most of my collection

    On Dec.26th 2013, this botanical was collected from a Late Cretaceous Campanian formation around Sardis, TN. It has been looked at by several and is still unidentified. I have been told it may possibly be a new species. Possible Pinus or Araucaria species. It's not listed in any of prof. Berry's works that i know of.
  8. Tennessees Pride

    Metal Ore

    From the album: Most of my collection

    This might be a replaced fossil? From the Silurian/Devonian of Perry co. Tennessee.
  9. Tennessees Pride

    Phragmacone Of A Belemnite

    From the album: Most of my collection

    This Phragmacone was collected April 25th 2014 from a Late Cretaceous Maastrichtian formation. The Coon Creek formation.
  10. Tennessees Pride

    A Very Large Ghost Shrimp Burrow

    From the album: Most of my collection

    This material was collected from a Late Cretaceous Maastrichtian, Coon Creek formation, on April 25th 2014.
  11. Tennessees Pride

    Native Elemental Silicon!

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Native Silicon is truly one of the rarest materials on earth,and this is the largest specimen i know of anywhere. This is a better close-up shot of the material.
  12. Tennessees Pride

    Native Elemental Silicon!

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Native Silicon is truly one of the rarest materials on Earth, & this is the largest specimen i know of anywhere. Here the specimen is pictured to scale.
  13. Tennessees Pride

    Native Elemental Silicon!

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Native Silicon is truly one of the rarest materials on Earth, & this is the largest specimen i know of anywhere. Pictured here is sediment fused into the Silicon on what i call the top of the material.
  14. Tennessees Pride

    Native Elemental Silicon!

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Native Silicon is truly one of the rarest materials on Earth, & this is the largest specimen i know of anywhere. Pictured here is some burnt material still attached to what i call the bottom of the specimen.
  15. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Crab

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from the Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation in 2013. Maastrichtian.
  16. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Crab

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from the Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation in 2013. Maastrichtian.
  17. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Crab

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from the Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation in 2007 (or 08?) Maastrichtian.
  18. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Crab

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Collected from the Late Cretaceous Coon Creek formation on Jan. 29th 2014. Maastrichtian.
  19. Tennessees Pride

    Cretaceous Fish Vertebra

    From the album: Most of my collection

    This Fish Vert comes from a Late Cretaceous formation.
  20. Tennessees Pride

    Trilobite

    From the album: Most of my collection

    A Trilobite from the Silurian in Decatur county, TN
  21. Tennessees Pride

    Late Cretaceous Shark Teeth

    From the album: Most of my collection

    A small selection of Late Cretaceous Campanian shark teeth, and a fish vert.
  22. Tennessees Pride

    Plesiosaur Or Xiphactinus Tooth

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Here is a comparison of the tooth with that of a Plesiosaur tooth from North Africa (purchased material). The find is Late Cretaceous, Campanian. The first ever reported instance of a Plesiosaur or Xiphactinus tooth to be found on Tennessee soil. Collected April 26th 2014.
  23. Tennessees Pride

    Plesiosaur Or Xiphactinus Tooth

    From the album: Most of my collection

    Badly decomposed before preservation. This is the first reported instance of a Pliesiosaur or Xiphactinus tooth to be found on Tennessee soil. Collected April 26th 2014.
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