Finding Fossil Crabs and Shells from the Middle Eocene in Texas!

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  • čas přidán 12. 09. 2024
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    In today's video, I explore a waterway that's hiding fossils from the Middle Eocene! Besides gastropods and a few bivalves, I found a few fossilized crabs too! Come along with me on the adventure and learn a little bit about our ancient world from 56.0 - 33.9 MYA.
    ** Remember what I said somewhere in the video about taxonomists reclassifying stuff? Turns out the crabs were reclassified as Neozanthopsis sp and Harpactocarcinus is not the correct genus anymore, as of 2003. **
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Komentáře • 61

  • @jimmiarney
    @jimmiarney Před 6 měsíci +4

    As also I am a Rockhounder with fossils in the mix. You asked about the piece of petrified wood, what you have is a mimic of the real petrified wood. Meaning after the real petrified wood vacated the tree, sand replaced it filling the void. Thus over thousands of years the sand was forced inside the void. Eventually the water would push it out of the mold and now you have a mimic of the voided part of the tree. I learned this from a game warden and a property owner who was trying to have me arrested as I was standing in the water in the estuary of the river. Never got that ticket as I had never stepped out of the river. Property owner was schooled on the legality of his un-educated understanding of the tiers in the land on the sides of the river.

  • @johndaut2838
    @johndaut2838 Před 2 lety +6

    All I find in Real Co and surrounding areas is Gastrapods, Echnoids and Bi-Valves from the Cretaceous. Would love to know where this location is.

  • @katlyn57inParadise
    @katlyn57inParadise Před 2 lety +6

    Just found your channel. I LOVE that you are in Texas. I am in North Texas and LOVE finding neat rocks and fossils. ❤

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety

      Thank you for watching! I love to see my viewer's finds too so if you have Instagram or Facebook, tag me in your posts!

    • @jimmiarney
      @jimmiarney Před 6 měsíci +2

      As a avid Rock Hounder I can say with certainty find the Brazos River and You find what you seek. I use a kayak to look into the banks along both sides of the river, using the long grasses to pull myself along the banks. Here I have found pockets of shells and fossils along with many different types of Minerals…Quartz, Agates and even Gold,(not enough to get rich), but the fact that I have found Gold in this river.

    • @sandramartin5155
      @sandramartin5155 Před 6 měsíci

      Me too in an around white rock area thinking of a new place to go with my grand boys and son for some hunting soon as my radiation is finished

  • @jimmiarney
    @jimmiarney Před 6 měsíci +2

    Great stuff, but you should consider a kayak. There are far more shells along the banks of the river than were you are looking. They are just as easy to get out of the river banks as you are trying to get out of the dry river islands. You can get a new kayak at the end of every season. People buy them in the Spring and find out they have no place for them during the winter months and thus sell them for a fraction of the original cost, just wanting to get out from under trying to find somewhere to store it. Three years ago I gave kayaking lessons and trips down the Brazos River, I had purchased 13-16 assorted kayaks, took a old,’bull hauler trailer and fixed it up to haul all 15 of them to a designated place to launch from. We ALWAYS, paddled up river so that everyone could get back to their vehicles, without getting lost. Some only came to paddle and not looking for Minerals and fossils, while others would stay look and find both.

  • @jefftrag1956
    @jefftrag1956 Před rokem +3

    If you are not familiar with Paraloid (I hope I spelled it right) it is a fossil stabilizer. You should have some in the field. Super glue and catalyst too.

  • @joannparker1977
    @joannparker1977 Před 12 dny

    Major rockhound here. Just subscribed!

  • @TheAdventureCloset
    @TheAdventureCloset Před 2 lety +1

    Angie these are really, really cool! You'd have to drag us out of there. Amazing fossil finds. You've got some super good smarts 🤓 about em' too.

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety +1

      I've always been a researcher so, yeah...it helps me be a better rockhound! The only problem is that you either find some that are eroded out - which is unpredictable - or you pack out pounds and pounds of concretions to go through later. Even with lots of research, sometimes you depend 100% on luck! Lemme know next time you're down!

    • @TheAdventureCloset
      @TheAdventureCloset Před 2 lety

      @@AngieDoesStuff we definitely will. I'm sure you could teach us a bunch.

  • @JBPTX85
    @JBPTX85 Před 2 lety +3

    Great video! If you're ever in the Austin area, there's a cool spot on Shoal creek that I've been going to recently and found some good specimens. I'd be happy to tell you about it or show you where it's at!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety

      I would love to! I haven't been to Austin in awhile. Would you mind shooting me an email? It's listed in every description box.

    • @TylerWrong97
      @TylerWrong97 Před rokem

      Hey I’m in the Austin area and am a newbie fossil hunter, I’d love to check out any spots you guys can recommend. Thank you!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem +1

      As Jordan mentioned, Shoal Creek in the middle of town is a good place. Just about any road cut is going to yield something neat. Head out to Dripping Springs and look on all the road cuts off 150, 12, 165, and 170. Drive up to Llano and find some Llanite on the roadside. Join The Fossil Forum and see what you can uncover from old posts!

  • @largent45
    @largent45 Před 2 lety +1

    Cool video. I love fossils and wildlife! Thank you for the adventure and the knowledge! keep up the great work!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank YOU for watching! I'm glad I can bring some value with my videos. I just like sharing the Stuff I Do with other people and as long as y'all keep enjoying it, I'll keep doing it!

  • @josephthompson7145
    @josephthompson7145 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for letting us go along with you on your adventures!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks for watching! You can come down and get crabs too! 😆

  • @craigerrington5061
    @craigerrington5061 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Brilliant video 😊

  • @LanceHall
    @LanceHall Před rokem

    Awesome! The shells look close to the fauna exposed at Whiskey Bridge.

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem

      It's not the same place, but does have the same layer!

  • @rickross2709
    @rickross2709 Před 2 lety

    Great finding, such cute shells!!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety

      (I thought I'd responded to this. Sorry!) Thank you so much!

  • @davidzamora7270
    @davidzamora7270 Před rokem

    Enjoyed your humor, you look adventurous 😊

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem

      Thank you! It's sarcastic and dry so if you get it, you're my kind of people! Yeah, I like to think I'm adventurous. Thank you for watching and hanging out with me for a bit.

  • @KOIstories
    @KOIstories Před rokem

    Awesome video! Thanks for sharing.

  • @richardgipson4023
    @richardgipson4023 Před rokem

    Did you know that the Brazos is one of the few rivers with a resident population of fresh water crabs . They dont get very big but are through out the system .

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem

      I didn't! That's a great fact to know. Thank you for watching and sharing that info with me!

  • @melodyhart2017
    @melodyhart2017 Před 2 lety +1

    You should use stabilizer on them,you paint it on before you work on it !

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety

      I've got some and I don't know why I didn't think about that. Duh! Thank you!

  • @ronniehart8052
    @ronniehart8052 Před 2 lety

    Have you found many arrowheads from your walks in the creeks? Sure looks like you would somewhere along this creek. I'm new to your channel, so I'll asked, have you hunted McFaddin beach about High Island? What a place for finding Pleistocene fossils.

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety

      Oddly, I haven't found any arrowheads yet and I've definitely been looking! I go to McFaddin a couple of times a year and it's one of my favorite beaches.

  • @dstarsfranklin
    @dstarsfranklin Před 11 dny

    Just found ur channel. Where are some good places to go closer to the Gulf area? Coming from Lake Jackson. So hard to find any rocks here besides the driveway. Brazos, San Bernard, Colorado rivers and Oyster Creek is just mud down here.

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 10 dny

      Hi! I'd love to give you some ideas. If you look at the description box of any of these videos, there's a link to my website. I have a contact form on that website. If you could send me an email that way, we can chat about it!

  • @volcanixthanksyoufortheviewz

    Falls of the Brazos has some great fossils ❤

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem +1

      I've never been there and I don't know why not. I'm so close!

  • @963ag
    @963ag Před 2 měsíci

    I am a fossil collector living in southwest Texas. I have some unusual bivalves ( I would say clams, oysters.) and a large gastropod snail. I can't identify them through either the Internet or books, or having taken photos and posting on Facebook rockhounding groups. I am trying to organize my collection and label everything by at least genus, if not species. I found a geological map of the area I found them in, it says Quartenary, but the pieces just seem so much older - and resemble similar species I found on the Internet from the Cretaceous. What is the best way to identify pieces? The local museum and college doesn't help - unless it is a significant vertebrate find.

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 měsíci

      Howdy! If you go to my profile page or my very outdated website, you can find my email address. If you want to send me pics and more info on location (nearest intersection is always most helpful), I might be able to help you. If not, that will help me steer you in the right direction. I look forward to seeing what you found!

    • @963ag
      @963ag Před 2 měsíci

      @@AngieDoesStuff I just sent you some emails. I hope you received them. I am old school and don't have Tic Toc, just Facebook and email. Thank you in advance!

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 měsíci

      Just wanted to mention I haven't seen anything come through yet. Please check the email address! Don't forget the "YT" after "angiedoesstuff." I also have a form you can fill out on my website that will go right to my email.

  • @fossilsoft
    @fossilsoft Před 9 měsíci

    The crabs look like they are a bit of a challange...nice finds, not a lot of places you can find crabs in the UK...

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 9 měsíci

      They're difficult, for sure. Still trying to figure out the best way to open them. I know there are other places in the US to find crabs but I can't remember where, off the top of my head. But y'all have the Jurassic Coast, which is a bucket list destination for me!

    • @fossilsoft
      @fossilsoft Před 9 měsíci

      @@AngieDoesStuff The Jurrasic coast as you know is world famous for fossil collection, but is prolifically collected from. You would do far better collecting from the Yorkshire coast around the Robin Hood bay area and the Whitby area, you would go home with a lot more fossils ranging from the Lower lias to the Upper lias Jurrasic formations. If you ever come over to the UK and wish to search this area drop me a message and I will provide you with the best locations to collect from...

  • @frankanddanasnyder3272
    @frankanddanasnyder3272 Před 6 měsíci

    What formation? What location?

  • @thelostdogs2328
    @thelostdogs2328 Před rokem

    Hardened mud might be stramatelite

  • @AussieRockhoundingandAdventure

    Awesome video there so fragile aren't they

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! Unfortunately, yes. The ones in the hard mud are very delicate. There are some in rock that are much better but I'm not sure how to get them out yet, because they're not nodules; it's like bedrock. I can't imagine using a rock hammer in 104°F weather right now!

  • @thelostdogs2328
    @thelostdogs2328 Před rokem

    Those are awesome!!! Fossilized sea life! Wanna trade? I have 350 million year old clams crinoids coral and shell

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem

      I might be willing to buy some stuff from you but I haven't really found enough decent ones and now I live about 12 hours from the location. 😔

  • @toddcorley464
    @toddcorley464 Před rokem

    You should put dates when they were alive on the screen

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před rokem +1

      Sometimes I do. It's in the description box of this video though.

  • @brianjacob8728
    @brianjacob8728 Před rokem

    Brazos River?

  • @scottking7260
    @scottking7260 Před 2 lety

    Or Jeep like stuff, like not start...😉

    • @AngieDoesStuff
      @AngieDoesStuff  Před 2 lety +1

      Oh, it always starts. It's just the stuff that happens between that time and when I get where I'm going that's sketchy af

  • @bediasite
    @bediasite Před 2 lety

    Sent you a PM........