help with ID

JUNKYARD DOG

Hero Member
Joined
Feb 29, 2008
Messages
753
Reaction score
10
Golden Thread
0
Location
Mid Mo
Detector(s) used
DFX, COMPASS SCANNER,

Attachments

  • 038.webp
    038.webp
    21.6 KB · Views: 329
  • 039.webp
    039.webp
    24.8 KB · Views: 327
  • 042.webp
    042.webp
    27.1 KB · Views: 327
Harry Pristis said:
Your bone appears to be a deer humerus.
thanks harry p. thanks for the ID. hey when does a bone or what does it look and feel like to it becoming a fossil ?
are they heavy and solid.... Thanks again. JYD...
 

Some fossil bones get permineralized or even replaced by minerals like silica dioxide. These tend to be somewhat heavier than "green" bone.

A bone is said to be "green" if, when you hold a flame to an edge, a smell of burning hair is produced. That is the collagen in the bone cooking. No smell, no collagen.

Some bones remain unchanged except for losing their collagen. What's left then is a crystalline latticework of the original calcium hydroxyapatite. Bones of the European cave bear, Ursus spelaeus, are an example of this sort of preservation. The bones are light-weight and inelastic or friable, but they are fossils.
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom