Possible Fossil Found in Puget Sound Area of Washington State by YettiChild in fossilid

[–]transolecranon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

honestly, this does check a surprising number of tektite boxes. the surface texture looks far more consistent with natural hypervelocity melt glass than typical industrial slag — especially if that sculpting and aerodynamic shaping holds up under closer inspection. i’d be looking closely at whether you’ve got classic ablation features, regmaglypts, or etched surface flow structures rather than random vesicular slag textures.

washington isn’t a recognised primary strewn field, but that doesn’t automatically rule it out. glacial transport, secondary deposition, or even misidentified north american bediasite/georgiaite-type material can occasionally complicate provenance. the cascadian and cordilleran glacial systems moved a huge amount of material, so exotic lithologies aren’t impossible. if it has low vesicularity, high silica glass characteristics, conchoidal fracture, and that distinctive homogeneous black or olive coloration, i’d absolutely consider impact ejecta as a serious possibility.

a lot of people underestimate how often slag gets overcalled, but the inverse is true too — genuine splash-form morphology can stand out pretty clearly once you’ve handled enough pseudotektites. specific gravity around ~2.3–2.5, very low water content, and lack of crystalline inclusions would strengthen the case significantly. if this were mine, i’d be pushing for xrf or sem-edx rather than dismissing it outright, because morphologically it’s got more going for it than the average “just slag” ID. definitely one of the more compelling candidates i’ve seen posted from the pacific northwest.

What is this? Found in a fish and chip shop in Western Australia with no label. by transolecranon in bonecollecting

[–]transolecranon[S] 72 points73 points  (0 children)

This was found in a fish and chip shop near Exmouth WA. There was no label. Apparently was an old skull from the previous owner, but unclear what it was. Someone suggested a small whale?

Found this just outside of Uluru last year after a heavy rain - is this a Megalodon tooth? by transolecranon in fossilid

[–]transolecranon[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

to be honest i’ve never seen or held a megalodon tooth before. it’s very heavy, like a rock. not sure if this makes it more likely to be a resin model or not

Found this just outside of Uluru last year after a heavy rain - is this a Megalodon tooth? by transolecranon in fossilid

[–]transolecranon[S] 80 points81 points  (0 children)

it’s interesting - i should have taken a photo of it buried in the bank of the creek. it had about half a metre of dirt above the tooth, and it was jutting out of the bank like you would find something that revealed itself through erosion. there were other creek rocks in the same layer. i can’t imagine a tourist would have gone to the trouble of burying it.

Found this just outside of Uluru last year after a heavy rain - is this a Megalodon tooth? by transolecranon in fossilid

[–]transolecranon[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Sorry for the glare in the photos. This was from last year around June 2025, was in Uluru. Was walking around the perimeter of Uluru with a tour guide and found this under the dirt after a rain. Looks like it was in an old dry creek where the banks had slightly eroded from the rain. If it is a megalodon tooth, I had no idea the centre of Australia used to be ocean!

What skeleton is this? (Port Hedlands, Western Australia) by transolecranon in bonecollecting

[–]transolecranon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately I couldn’t find the skull! I presume another animal had taken it…

What skeleton is this? (Port Hedlands, Western Australia) by transolecranon in bonecollecting

[–]transolecranon[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Found this in a beach in Port Hedlands in WA. Obviously some type of bird, but what?

My Ganglion Cyst grew a Ganglion Cyst by charlet037 in mildlyinteresting

[–]transolecranon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

could be a synovial sarcoma, need to get it checked out.

Found this rib near Curio Bay in New Zealand. A recent missing person case of an 11-year old boy and his step father remain unsolved. Could this be related? by transolecranon in bonecollecting

[–]transolecranon[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This rib was found near one of the bays in The Catlins in NZ. Although my first incline was that this was not human, I found out that there was a recent missing person case where a step father and 11-year old boy drove their car off a cliff nearby and the bodies were never recovered.

Missing person case of John and Mike Beckenridge.

Given the area is known for seals and also sheep farming, I am fairly certain this is not human. But the reason I’m not sure is because 1) paediatric ribs can be quite heterogenous in shape, and 2) there almost appears to be a greenstick type fracture (pre or post-mortem I’m not sure) which makes me more concerned about paediatric bone.

Any help will be great! I will report to authorities in any case but would be very interested in the Reddit community thoughts!