Need help with fossil ID

/ Need help with fossil ID #1  

Tractors4u

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Athens Alabama
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Deere 4310, Kubota L355, John Deere SST18 Spin Steer, 2006 Polaris Ranger
My daughter found this fossil this afternoon in a pile of dirt that was excavated from our basement. It looks like a tooth. What do you guys think?
 

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/ Need help with fossil ID #2  
Could be. Interesting colour. Our fossils are limestone grey.
I can't get an idea of the size. Could you put someting else in the picture?
 
/ Need help with fossil ID #3  
tooth or a wild boar tusk ?:confused:
 
/ Need help with fossil ID #4  
Tig said:
I can't get an idea of the size. Could you put something else in the picture?
The width of your thumb is about the same as 1 to 2, on that tape in the first picture.
 
/ Need help with fossil ID #5  
Umm -- excuse me--- I know there is a world of experience reflected in these here pages. But WHY IN THE WORLD would you ask members of a tractor forum for help to identify a fossil?
 
/ Need help with fossil ID
  • Thread Starter
#6  
wjoerob said:
Umm -- excuse me--- I know there is a world of experience reflected in these here pages. But WHY IN THE WORLD would you ask members of a tractor forum for help to identify a fossil?

Paleontologist have tractors too.

I also sent an e-mail to the biology department of our local university and another e-mail to an on-line fossil dealer.
 
/ Need help with fossil ID
  • Thread Starter
#7  
/ Need help with fossil ID #8  
California said:
The width of your thumb is about the same as 1 to 2, on that tape in the first picture.
:D oops :p I guess I should have looked at both pictures. Nice answer. :D
 
/ Need help with fossil ID #9  
Do you have a local natural history museum or organization? The could help you identify it. A university is a good place, also. You said it was found in a pile of dirt? That seems kind of odd. Was there other rock and gravel there? What I'm getting at is if it is something that was depostited there after it died or was it deposited there later from somewhere else. Around here there are many fossils that originated here, and many that were brought down from way up north by glaciers.

So, I would start searching for local fossils, first. Then if you don't find any matches, you will have to expand your search.

Cool find, by the way. :) Get a card and date when, where and who found it.
 
/ Need help with fossil ID
  • Thread Starter
#10  
MossRoad said:
You said it was found in a pile of dirt? That seems kind of odd. Was there other rock and gravel there?
Cool find, by the way. :) Get a card and date when, where and who found it.

Back a few months ago our builder had to come back and tear our patio out and dig down to the bottom of our basements back wall. The basement was leaking and it needed to be resealed. The dirt is where the dug out to get to the basement. There are quite a few fossils in our soil. They are mostly the type that look like Cheerios. I was told at one time that those are a fossil of some type of reid.
 

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