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Showing posts with label fossil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fossil. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2019


A friend of mine recently told me about a fossil he had found here in Southeast Kentucky. He brought the item to my house a couple days later for me to have a look at and take some pictures. This appears to be the fossilized horn of some sort.

It was found near an old strip mine road and the thought was that it may have washed out during a rain storm but that was something unclear.

Here is a close up picture and some more details.
Tuesday, October 29, 2019 No comments » by Thomas Marcum
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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

 
 
 
A giant fossil was was recently found in Northern Kentucky by Ron Fine. The Fossil is 3 feet wide and 9 feet long. The fossil -has been dubbed Godzillus, but palaeontologists have no idea what this monster might have looked like or even if it was a animal or a vegetable.
The Fossil is estimated to be about 450 million years old.
Ben Dattilo, an assistant professor of geology at Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne, said: ‘We are looking for people who might have an idea of what it is.’
 
[Via dailymail.co.uk ] 
 
Wednesday, April 25, 2012 No comments » by Thomas Marcum
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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

This is the only known fossil of a bat fly, a specimen at least 20 million years old that carried malaria and fed on the blood of bats.
A one-of-a-kind fossil shows that so-called bat flies — tiny vampire insects that survive on the blood of bats — have been parasitizing the winged mammals and spreading bat malaria for at least 20 million years, scientists report in a pair of studies Friday.
"Bat flies are a remarkable case of specific evolution, animals that have co-evolved with bats and are found nowhere else," George Poinar, a zoologist at Oregon State University who led the studies, said in statement.

The highly specialized parasites, some of which only dine on specific bat species, spend most of their lives crawling through the animal's fur or on its wing membranes. They often have flattened, flealike bodies with long legs, and can be winged or wingless, depending on the species.
Bat flies fall into one of two families: streblidae and nycteribiidae, which are mostly found in the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, respectively. Currently, scientists have only identified nycteribiid flies as vectors, or transmitters, for bat malaria, but researchers have now learned that streblids may also be spreading the disease.
In the La Búcara mine, located in the Cordillera Septentrional mountain range of the Dominican Republic, Poinar and his colleagues uncovered an ancient malaria-carrying streblid fly entombed in amber.

Tuesday, February 07, 2012 No comments » by Thomas Marcum
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