I made a quick trip yesterday back to the Ellis County creek where I found so many teeth. With all the work being done to deer stands and feeders near it last time I was there, I knew my days of being able to hunt it this year were numbered, and sure enough, I have been officially banned by the landowner whose pasture I must cross to get to the creek, until at least next February.
I knew my two best micro-spots in the creek were pretty much played out until we get floods and erosion, but I figured I might spend some time searching the gravel bars in the creek, and walk a little further down the creek than I had before. I made the walk further down the creek first, and never got around to searching the gravel bars very much. Here’s what I spotted just past where I’d been before. How many teeth can you see in that matrix? Click the photos to be able to zoom in and get a closer look.
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Besides that one, I brought home some other great looking pieces of matrix. Here are just a few of them.
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Obviously, I have a lot of matrix work waiting for me, and I’ll post photos showing what comes out of the matrix later, but I wanted to post photos of a couple of other pieces now. Here is the find of the day, a pliosaur tooth. It’s crumbling too badly for me to remove it from that matrix, but I still thought it was a great find.
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And this vert. Even with a piece broken off, it’s still the prettiest vert I’ve ever found. From everything I’ve looked at, it seems to most favor a Coniasaurus vert.
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Update: October 3rd. I have stabilized the pliosaur tooth, and think it’s going to hold together.
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Update: October 9th. I have finally finished going through the matrix from this trip. Here are the Ptychodus teeth, all 97 of them.
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And the other teeth. There were 93 of them. Since I forgot to include the scale in the photo of all of them, the photo below shows the four largest with the scale.
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And finally, the Pliosaur tooth is delicate enough that I decided it needed a protective display. Here is what I came up with.
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