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More flint in bones
Ed Brooks:
When I was a kid of about 10, my family took a trip to a game farm in the upper northwest corner of Washington state. At the time there was a mastodon dig site near by. We added this to our trip. while we was standing on the edge of this pit they had dug, you can see bones in the bottom. my little brother started tossing rocks in the hole, (there was a frog in the bottom) my mom put a stop to that before the curators seen.
now years later I learned something new about this site. they found a bone point in one of the bones, this mastodon was hunted by man. hope you enjoy. Ed
http://www.auntminnie.com/index.aspx?sec=ser&sub=def&pag=dis&ItemID=97066
crooketarrow:
SWEETTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT
Zuma:
Cool memories Ed. Thanks for the link. :)
Thanks crooket.
Zuma
mullet:
It's cool to read this about isolated mastodon and mammoth sites. It's refreshing to see all of the publicity when one is found. Down here it is nothing to come across horse, camel. giant armadillo plates and mastodon an mammoth teeth and real lucky to find the whole critter or prehistoric horse skeleton while we are snorkeling the local rivers. And also at work in the Bone Valley area of the Phosphate mines.
A friend has a website you can check out, just do a google search of "Paleo Enterprise", it's a commercial site so you have to do a little work.
Zuma:
FL fossils are awesome Eddie. I have quite a few
elephant ones. Got them before the new laws.
Here is my best from High Springs.
Zuma
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