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Small Lance Fm Fossils


jpc

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Howdy all-

Here is what I have been working on lately. Doing some screenwashing from a site I found last month in the late Cretaceous Lance Fm of eastern Wyoming. I have a dozen (at least) sites that I have screen washed for fossils over the years. Most of them have yet to be picked (i.e. finding the fossils). But I decided to attack this one cuz it was only a small sample. These are from an anthill; the ants did a lot of the colleting for me. I have only picked maybe a quarter of the stuff, and it is turning out to be very rich. I usually put a half of a film cannister's worth of sediment on a tray and look at it under the binocular microscope. With some sites I find one of two fossils per tray. This one is producing over 50 fossils per tray. Very thick with mini fossils. Granted most of them are eenie weenie unidentifiable chunks of something bigger, or rounded pebbles of bone, but between those there are some beauties in this stuff. I love these things as much as jkfoam loves his little snails. Go small or go home. (Full disclosure... I also collect big things).

My favorites are the mammals, so I'll start with them. (I've found maybe ten of them,; these are my faves). I'm not going to ID them to genus yet. Save that for a later date... (retirement project?). There's no scale on these, but these pix are all shot through the microscope. The largest fossils are maybe 6 mm long. Well, the long toe bone is probably a full cm.

Here is a marsupial lower molar, missing one root.

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A multituberculate molar.

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A small croc tooth.

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And a flock of small theropod teeth, starting with Paranychodon

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And a troodontid (note the big serrations).

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A small dromeosaur, I think.

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Now this one is very unusual... I think it might be a snake vertebra. (sorry for the bad focus).

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And a hybodontid tooth.. Lonchidion. (The most common identifiable fossils in this batch are ray teeth, but I did not take any pix).

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Three little toe bones and a broken claw.... ah, to find a complete claw. I think it might be bird. That is only based on size; it could be a very small theropod.

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And I really like this one, the tip of a lizard jaw... seen from both sides.

post-1450-0-23610100-1304659773_thumb.jpg post-1450-0-89931000-1304659788_thumb.jpg

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Way kewl JP

Grüße,

Daniel A. Wöhr aus Südtexas

"To the motivated go the spoils."

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Way cool!

How itsy-bitsy are these things?

"There has been an alarming increase in the number of things I know nothing about." - Ashleigh Ellwood Brilliant

“Try to learn something about everything and everything about something.” - Thomas Henry Huxley

>Paleontology is an evolving science.

>May your wonders never cease!

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JPC,

Great photos! Thanks for sharing them with us.

Incredible to think these things are there - so small- and most people don't even know it!

Thanks again.

Regards,

    Tim    -  VETERAN SHALE SPLITTER

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Fascinating material, JP! Thanks for posting it.

The human mind has the ability to believe anything is true.  -  JJ

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Way cool!

How itsy-bitsy are these things?

They are all about 4-6 mm long. The long toe bone is longer. The little claw is smaller. I have no more photos for now. I'm gonna be too busy to chase thisproject for the near future. But I'll get more up eventually. Meanwhile, I'm about to put up a "Find-The-Fossils" post.

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Great eyes JP! I love the Micro-fossils easily overlooked for the bigger things. Thanks for sharing.... :) :)

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good eye and great finds.

In formal logic, a contradiction is the signal of defeat: but in the evolution of real knowledge, it marks the first step in progress toward victory.

Alfred North Whithead

'Don't worry about the world coming to an end today. It's already tomorrow in Australia!'

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Really fantastic...love the microfossils. Thanks for sharing the photographs and the identifications.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Real cool, JP! Thanks for showing them.

Best wishes, Roger

 

Greetings from the Lake of Constance. Roger

http://www.steinkern.de/

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