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Three fossil shells that I found by the shore at Lake Granger in the rolling farmland hills northeast of Austin recently. I placed them in my backyard for a photo. The live oak leaves provide some scale. The leaves are around an inch (2 to 3 cm) long.
Skjelltre (Sigillaria sp.) er beslektet med nålevende kråkefotplanter. I karbon levde arter som kunne bli 20-30 meter høye. Toppen av stammen var todelt.
I found a wall just around the corner from work that is very fossil rich. It's in Norwood, about 7 miles north of Cincinnati, and I suspect that it's made from local stone. Can anyone identify the fossils? Or the period?
I found this one right away after going under the barbed wire fence and rounding the small table. It's not the best example of a fossil tortoise. It's badly eroded and in scattered pieces.
L’origine des pierres fossilisées
Célèbre pour ses fossiles de l'ère Primaire, la pierre de RISSANI, n'est intéressante qu'après polissage.
Elle est extraite dans le Sahara marocain près de la localité de RISSANI (d'où elle tire son nom).
C'est une roche marbrière pétrie de fossiles, principalement de céphalopodes, qui n'apparaissent que si la pierre est polie.
Dans le cas contraire le fossile se confond avec la pierre.
La roche est très dure, elle possède un coefficient de capillarité nul.
L'âge de ses fossiles est daté du Dévonien supérieur (environ 360 millions d'années).
La majorité de la faune est composée par des Goniatites, Orthocéras et Ammonites des Coraux et quelques trilobites.
Des oxydes de fer et de carbonates confèrent la couleur noire à la roche.
As the placard says, this fossil footprint was found next to a dinasaur footprint in rock dated to 110 million years old. Since humans were not supposed to be here that long ago something is wrong. Probably with the dating method.
I purchased a chunka fossil bone from a man who found it in the Henry Mts., Utah. Cut into thick slices- produce nice 360 degree carvings........Currently working on a mass of quartz crystals with a fossil. The stand at bottom is for it- getting a test run.\o/
Like ved Digne-les-Baines er det et stort område der det er funnet mange fossiler. Her er en fjellvegg full av ammonitter. Det ser nesten ut som et digert kunstverk!
Near Beaver Springs, PA. Most of the impressions on this sandstone were left by Brachiopod mucrospirifer, from the Middle Devonian Period about 370 million years ago. This was found in central Pennsylvania, in the Bald Eagle to the north-east of middle creek, near the former site of Klinger's covered bridge, now State Game Lands and Faylor Lake Preserve. It's about 12" x 18" and 3" thick, and had been part of the foundation of a homestead that has long since been swallowed up! There was a huge black salamander underneath. :) I snapped his picture too... which is somewhere on my computer!
This a Cretaceous-era, 100-million-year-old log in east-central Utah. It is part of an entire forest at this location.
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Looking down at the side of the hill you can see the turtle fossil eroding out, with pieces of it scattered on the floor at the hill's bottom. It's a small one, about the size of a dinner plate.
All these fossils were collected many years ago. This one was when I lived in Morris IL when I was 16.
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