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You Will Not Believe What’s Hiding In These Oregon Rocks‼️😱 If you’re looking for fossils in the Astoria Formation, don’t just look for perfect shells sitting on the beach. A lot of the best fossils are hiding as weird shapes, ridges, grooves, textures, and broken pieces inside ancient marine rock. This formation is made from old ocean sediment, including sandstone, silt, and volcanic ash, and it preserves marine life from roughly 15 to 20 million years ago along the Oregon Coast.   Here’s how to spot them: 1. Look for symmetry. Nature breaks rocks randomly. Fossils often have repeating patterns: matching curves, ribs, ridges, shell lines, circles, spirals, or evenly spaced segments. 2. Look for texture changes. A fossil may be a different color, smoother, shinier, bumpier, or more patterned than the rock around it. Shell fossils often stand out because they have lines or growth rings. 3. Watch for shell shapes. The Astoria Formation is known for marine fossils like bivalves, gastropods, scallops, and other mollusks. If you see a curved clam-like shape, fan-like ribs, or a spiral snail shape, slow down and look closer.   4. Don’t ignore ugly chunks. Some fossils are not pretty. Crab pieces, bone fragments, burrows, shell hash, and broken marine fossils can look like random rock until you notice edges, pores, joints, or repeating structure. 5. Check the rock type. Fossils from this formation are usually inside gray, tan, or brown marine sandstone and siltstone. If the rock looks like compacted ocean mud or sandy layers, it’s worth inspecting. 6. Be careful with bone. If you think you found marine mammal bone, don’t assume it’s legal to collect. Take photos, mark the location, and check the rules before removing it. 7. Use water and light. A little water can reveal hidden shell lines and textures. Side lighting can make ridges, grooves, and fossil outlines pop. So the trick is this: don’t look for “perfect fossils.” Look for patterns that rock should not naturally have. Because on the Oregon Coast, one boring-looking chunk of stone can be holding evidence of an ocean that existed millions of years before humans ever walked this coastline. #L#LearningE#Educationn#naturef#fossils
You Will Not Believe What’s Hiding In These Oregon Rocks‼️😱 If you’re looking for fossils in the Astoria Formation, don’t just look for perfect shells sitting on the beach. A lot of the best fossils are hiding as weird shapes, ridges, grooves, textures, and broken pieces inside ancient marine rock. This formation is made from old ocean sediment, including sandstone, silt, and volcanic ash, and it preserves marine life from roughly 15 to 20 million years ago along the Oregon Coast. Here’s how to spot them: 1. Look for symmetry. Nature breaks rocks randomly. Fossils often have repeating patterns: matching curves, ribs, ridges, shell lines, circles, spirals, or evenly spaced segments. 2. Look for texture changes. A fossil may be a different color, smoother, shinier, bumpier, or more patterned than the rock around it. Shell fossils often stand out because they have lines or growth rings. 3. Watch for shell shapes. The Astoria Formation is known for marine fossils like bivalves, gastropods, scallops, and other mollusks. If you see a curved clam-like shape, fan-like ribs, or a spiral snail shape, slow down and look closer. 4. Don’t ignore ugly chunks. Some fossils are not pretty. Crab pieces, bone fragments, burrows, shell hash, and broken marine fossils can look like random rock until you notice edges, pores, joints, or repeating structure. 5. Check the rock type. Fossils from this formation are usually inside gray, tan, or brown marine sandstone and siltstone. If the rock looks like compacted ocean mud or sandy layers, it’s worth inspecting. 6. Be careful with bone. If you think you found marine mammal bone, don’t assume it’s legal to collect. Take photos, mark the location, and check the rules before removing it. 7. Use water and light. A little water can reveal hidden shell lines and textures. Side lighting can make ridges, grooves, and fossil outlines pop. So the trick is this: don’t look for “perfect fossils.” Look for patterns that rock should not naturally have. Because on the Oregon Coast, one boring-looking chunk of stone can be holding evidence of an ocean that existed millions of years before humans ever walked this coastline. #L#LearningE#Educationn#naturef#fossils

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