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Florida fossils are often very well preserved. [1] The oldest known fossils in Florida date back to the Eocene. At this time Florida was covered in a sea home to a variety of marine invertebrates and the primitive whales, such as Basilosaurus. During the later Miocene Florida was exposed as dry land again due to geologic uplift and mountain ...
Under Florida law, fossils of vertebrates found on state lands, ... Lundberg has a permit to collect such fossils and must report the tusk find to the museum when his permit is renewed in December ...
Fossil collecting, as practiced by amateurs, is the predecessor of modern paleontology and many still collect fossils and study fossils as amateurs. Professionals and amateurs alike collect fossils for their scientific value. A commercial trade in fossils has also long existed, with some of this being practised illegally.
In the United States, it is legal to sell fossils collected on private land. [7] In Mongolia and China the export of fossils is illegal. [9] [11] Brazil considers all fossils as federal assets and prohibits their trade since 1942, banned the permanent exports of holotypes and other fossils of national interest in 1990, and requires permits by the Ministry of Science, Technology and Innovation ...
Growing up, Danny Case became interested in fossils through his father, an amateur paleontologist. Hunting and collecting fossils, or buying them at auction, is a passion that has never left him.
Workers at the Montbrook fossil site, just two hours north of Tampa, are sifting through clues to Florida's past.
A collection of fossils in the Florida Fossil Hall. Located in Powell Hall, the $2.5 million, 5,000-square-foot (460 m 2) exhibit describes the history of the Florida Platform through five geologic time periods. The exhibition takes visitors on a walk through time beginning in the Eocene epoch, when Florida was underwater.
Florida during the Miocene. The Thomas Farm site is an Early Miocene, Hemingfordian assemblage of vertebrate fossils located in Gilchrist County, northern Florida. [1] The Thomas Farm site is one of the richest terrestrial deposits of Miocene vertebrates in the 18 Ma range found in eastern North America according to the Florida Museum of ...