• Crystalized Clam (OK9)

    Notes specific to this specimen: Lots going on here: Three shells with shiny nice dogtooth calcite crystals trapped in matrix. Plus a superb large shell with great recrystallization.

     

    SIZE: 9″x 8″x 5″

     

    NAME: Mercenaria permagna
    AGE: Pleistocene 2 million years
    UNIT: Nashua Formation
    SITE: Okeechobee County, Florida

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin. In addition, an attractive and informative display card accompanies the specimen.

  • Crystalized Welks (W1)

    Notes specific to this specimen: At our Rucks Pit site we sometimes come across fossil welks (conchs).  On rare occasions they may be crystalized.  This one has been cut in half to show the great crystal-lined hollow section inside.  Rare find.

     

    SIZE: 5″

     

    NAME: Mercenaria permagna
    AGE: Pleistocene 2 million years
    UNIT: Nashua Formation
    SITE: Okeechobee County, Florida

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin. In addition, an attractive and informative display card accompanies the specimen.

  • Crystalized Welks (W2)

    Notes specific to this specimen: Fossil welks are much rarer than the clams found at Rucks Pit and most of them have no crystals.  But, when you do find a nice crystal-line specimen, there’s nothing like it in the world!  This is a single welk with a natural opening on its dorsal (top) allowing you to see the crystal lining of the shell and the gray sparite “floor” that was the sediment which partially filled the shell after the animal had died.  Very unusual.

    SIZE: 4″

    NAME: Mercenaria permagna
    AGE: Pleistocene 2 million years
    UNIT: Nashua Formation
    SITE: Okeechobee County, Florida

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin. In addition, an attractive and informative display card accompanies the specimen.

  • Crystalized Welks (W3)

    Notes specific to this specimen: Fossil welks are much rarer than the clams found at Rucks Pit and most of them have no crystals. But, when you do find a nice crystal-line specimen, there’s nothing like it in the world! Here we have a nice matrix specimen with a natural opening on the side of the shell exposing gemmy dog-tooth calcite crystals. They don’t get much better than this!

    SIZE: 4″

    NAME: Mercenaria permagna
    AGE: Pleistocene 2 million years
    UNIT: Nashua Formation
    SITE: Okeechobee County, Florida

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin. In addition, an attractive and informative display card accompanies the specimen.

  • Crystalized Welks (W4)

    Notes specific to this specimen: Fossil welks are much rarer than the clams found at Rucks Pit and most of them have no crystals. But, when you do find a nice crystal-line specimen, there’s nothing like it in the world! Here we have a nice natural window on the top side of the shell exposing beautiful gemmy dog-tooth calcite crystals on the inside. Also has a well-defined protoconch (the “tip” where the shell began). They don’t get much better than this!

     

    SIZE: 5″

     

    NAME: Mercenaria permagna
    AGE: Pleistocene 2 million years
    UNIT: Nashua Formation
    SITE: Okeechobee County, Florida

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin. In addition, an attractive and informative display card accompanies the specimen.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D21)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 2″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D22)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 2″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D23)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 2″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D24)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 2″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D25)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 2″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D31)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 3″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

  • Dinosaur Bone (D32)

    Notes specific to this specimen: We learn a lot of stuff from studying the animals and plants of the past. Here’s a great example – It’s a little-known fact that bipedal dinosaurs were far more well-adapted to walking upright than humans have ever been. Modern medicine does, in fact, utilize this important attribute: When the time comes to stabilize someone’s back injury, doctors sometimes attach reinforcement rods to the vertebrae in the injured area and fuse it together with the bone. This exact type of reinforcement is something dinosaurs had already developed 200 million years ago!

     

    At our site in Wyoming we excavated mostly the bones of Edmontosaurus, a bipedal ornithischian dinosaur from the late Cretaceous. In the bonebed we found lots of backbones and, with them, hundreds of pieces of ossified tendon which Edmontosaurus had crisscrossing their vertebrae. These tendons strengthened and reinforced the skeleton, stabilizing their backbone especially in the area of the pelvis. Here we are offering genuine pieces of ossified tendon – mounted on the very matrix we dug it out of – dug directly out of our site in Wyoming. It’s a piece of human history and ancient natural history as well.

     

    SIZE: (box) 3″ x 3″

     

    NAME: Edmontosaurus
    AGE: Cretaceous Period – 68 million years
    UNIT: Lance Creek Formation
    SITE: Lance Creek, Wyoming

     

    DATE: Early 1990’s

     

    Documentation: This authentic fossil specimen comes with a Certificate of Authenticity and Origin.

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