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Showing results for tags 'Macro'.
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I’d like to clean up the micro/macro fossils I’ve been finding so that the the pics will look good. Can they be soaked in vinegar or will that destroy them? Here’s an example of what I’m dealing with.
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Nautilus eating garbage in beautiful Blackwater larvae pictures
Lone Hunter posted a topic in Members' News & Diversions
I could look at these all day, pictures taken with macro lens of exquisite baby creatures in deep water. However I found the last picture disturbing, shame on us humans.- 13 replies
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Hi all As you probably know I have really been interested lately in macro photography. Let’s see any of your wonderful fossil adventures in close up. Today I found this little beauty a shark tooth (I have not ID it yet but it could be Negaprion lemon shark tooth) form Rattlesnake Creek micro matrix I was sent. It is only about 3mm but a Bobby dazzler. Looking forward to seeing some of your very interesting pictures.
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Hash plates are among my favourite of fossils and they are fantastic to photograph. So please add some of your beautiful photographs of your stunning plates. Properly one of my favourite Hash Plate. I found it in a river in Wales Uk when I was 16 and camping . It reminds me of the The Nazca Lines , Nazca Desert, in southern Peru.
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Today, I stopped at one of those stores that sells Amazon returns. On Fridays they replenish the store and everything is $8.00, but today, they had everything for $6.00. I found a cool little case that I opened up and it had an attachment for a cell phone camera. I bought it to give it a shot and it works out very well. This first picture is a standard shot at 1x, without the attachment. This next picture is zoomed all of the way in, without the attachment. This picture is with the macro attachment on the camera at 1x. This gives me the same results of the camera when zoomed all the way in without the attachment on. The top picture and the below picture are almost exact. This last picture is zoomed all of the way in with the macro attachment on. I really like the results of this and it should work very well when taking close-up shots.
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This was found in the Turonian aged marine deposits of the Ladd Formation of Orange County, California. The size is .5 cm along the longest axis. Any ideas as to what this may be?
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- cretaceous
- formation
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I love fossils and I love macro photography! If anyone is interested in having this photo to make a puzzle out of, let me know and I will send you a full res copy of it. This is part of a rock that I found in our backyard in Madison County, Alabama, just a couple of days ago. You could spend a lot of time studying it and finding a wide variety of fossils - mostly bryozoan - so I thought it might make a fun puzzle for these pandemic times. I'm not sure how this works, but I think there is a messaging option here where you could give me your email address so I could send the full resolution photo, right? It's large (over 10mb), so there's no way I can post it here. Blessings Ramona
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I found this little specimen that I assume is a jaw section a while back when sieving through some matrix. The material that it came from is marine from the toolebuc formation in central Queensland Australia this is cretaceous albian in age. Any input I would be grateful for. The specimen is 4mm on the long so quite small Regards Mike
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- albian
- australian
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what is this???? strange spirals on stone it is in the stone I already tried to scratch it off the big ones are indented in the stone...
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Hi I got one of the very resemble priced Macro lens for a IPad . very please with the first run out with it. images are X 12 and x24 . It it really shows off my spear tip with fossilised glue and fibres and I have added a few more images. thanks for looking cheers booby
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I have done a little bit of sieving and found this interesting little vertebra. Its quite small at about 3 mm long and was found in the cretaceous (Albian) of central Queensland Australia. The specimen was found in a cretaceous sediment from a marine environment, however I do not think its a marine animal. I have a good idea of what I believe it is from but comments would be appreciated. Mike D'Arcy
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- australia
- cretaceous
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This one is baffling me. I found it in Post Oak Creek, Sherman Texas. It's about 3/4 inches long and the top is somewhat bony, The triangular part is smooth with a glossy white coating.
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It's been pretty cold here in Kansas the last couple of days, so I decided to go through some matrix that I collected from the basal Greenhorn, bottom of the Lincoln Limestone. This matrix is full of sharks teeth, bone fragments, fish teeth, gastroliths, clam shell fragments and lots of coprolites. I thought I would share these photos I took with my iPhone with my 5x loop held in front of the camera. I haven't id'd the small tooth yet. The squalicorax is 10mm. >Michael