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  1. #1

    Jul 2012
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    Bone.... How?

    Found this piece of bone that had pretty much turned to stone. It looks filed down to a tool also. What is strange is no bone tools are found outside of water here. (so says my distant cousin a retired archeologist, that did the largest percent of his work in TN). Tell me If y'all agree that it is bone. If it is, that means the acidity of our soil has just recently (in terms of history) reached this high level.

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    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

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  3. #2
    Charter Member
    us
    Jan 2009
    South East Tennessee on Ga, Ala line
    Tesoro Conquistador freq shift Fisher F75 Garrett AT-Pro Larson mo jo pro Flippin stick
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    Could it be a fossil that was used?

  4. #3

    Jul 2012
    2,863
    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by Tnmountains
    Could it be a fossil that was used?
    Doesn't fossil have to be chipped out of stone? I know nothing about them. I was just reading about bone in my area, and found out that little has been found due to humidity they say. What I'm getting at is "very little" leaves room to find a bone in rare occasion. It looks like if it were a used tool, the marrow would be gone.??
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

  5. #4

    May 2012
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    Is it hard like stone? If so it may be fossil. Its hard to tell in the photo but do you see porous structure on the rough part? Like little bubble looking pits. It looks like a fossil inner ear bone of a small whale like a pilot whale or dolphin.

  6. #5

    May 2012
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    These are two from north carolina

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ID:	679480 the color is just from the sediment it came to rest in. It can be different.

  7. #6

    Jul 2012
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    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by GatorBoy
    Is it hard like stone? If so it may be fossil. Its hard to tell in the photo but do you see porous structure on the rough part? Like little bubble looking pits. It looks like a fossil inner ear bone of a small whale like a pilot whale or dolphin.
    It is hard. Remember where I am bro. One would have to dig deep to find whale bones. It has fossilized. I don't know if natives would have used it, it has the marrow in it. Hard of corse
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

  8. #7

    Jul 2012
    2,863
    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by GatorBoy
    These are two from north carolina

    <img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=679480"/> the color is just from the sediment it came to rest in. It can be different.
    Looks like a comparison a good one. I'm 2 1/2 or 3 hours from the coast. Weird huh?
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

  9. #8

    May 2012
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    Large portions of our country including your area has spent long periods underwater from one polar cycle to another. ..Ice age...low water because its frozen from the poles down.... non ice age...high water because its all melted. Not weird.

  10. #9

    Jul 2012
    2,863
    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by GatorBoy
    Large portions of our country including your area has spent long periods underwater from one polar cycle to another. ..Ice age...low water because its frozen from the poles down.... non ice age...high water because its all melted. Not weird.
    True! Sorry about that. Now that you mention that, about 5 miles away from where this piece was found, large amounts of glacier sediment are all over the place. Rocky hard hunting grounds.
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

  11. #10

    Jul 2012
    534
    140 times
    That's pretty cool, I have yet to find any bone and probably won't because of where I live. Nice job man HH

  12. #11

    Jul 2012
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    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by bblaha
    That's pretty cool, I have yet to find any bone and probably won't because of where I live. Nice job man HH
    I should not have, according to text book! It has fossilized and as Gator said, probably came in with glaciers .
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

  13. #12

    Jul 2012
    534
    140 times
    That makes it even cooler, it probably took a pretty long journey to get where it was when you found it

  14. #13

    May 2012
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    There is fossil shark teeth including large megalodon teeth found alot in north Carolina.

  15. #14

    May 2012
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    These were all found in Lee creek in Aurora N.C. Beaufort county.

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  16. #15
    Prof. Shellman

    Dec 2006
    Tampa Bay, FL
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    I believe that looks like a Giant Tortoise spur!

  17. #16

    May 2012
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    I think Tom is right. I was just posting as I was thinking.

  18. #17
    us
    Feb 2009
    Northcentral Florida
    1,435
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    I cannot say for sure, but the object looks bilaterally symmetrical. There are no tool marks, no trace of cancellous bone or even of vascular pores? If that is the case, you may have a steinkern from a bivalve. A steinkern is a cast of the interior of a (typically) marine fossil.
    Sometimes I go about pitying myself, and all the time
    I am being carried on great winds across the sky.

    ------Chippewa saying, translated by Robert Bly

  19. #18

    May 2012
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    Here is an example of what Harry Described. There is a portion of shell still on this one.

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  20. #19
    Prof. Shellman

    Dec 2006
    Tampa Bay, FL
    ShadowX2, TEJON, Eyes, Pony Shovel
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    OOooooooh...Macrocallista??

  21. #20

    Jul 2012
    2,863
    708 times
    Quote Originally Posted by GatorBoy
    There is fossil shark teeth including large megalodon teeth found alot in north Carolina.
    I have a friend that collects those huge teeth. But, he finds them on the coast. I have found shark teeth, but never in my back yard. Bone won't last in our soul. Teeth,well. I have found fossilized k-9 looking teeth in my area. The glacier sounds right to me. That means that they were fossil upon arrival here. I hope that made some sense.
    Their were so many fewer questions when stars were still just the holes to heaven

 

 
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