A simple half inch Cole chisel is great for parting layers of rock - couple of bucks or maybe ten depending.. Find a seam or grove between the layers, line up the chisel blade and tap lightly a couple of times. Move the chisel along the seam and repeat until a long way around. If it doesn't work and split, start again and go deeper. Nice video Pro
My guy, as a science educator, your work keeps getting better and better. This is one of the coolest videos you've made. Your recent videos are really inspiring in the category of reminding folks that interesting history is all around us, and we never know what we might find if we just take the time to look.
I have been an avid collector since childhood. Through the decades, I have lost my collection, sadly... ( long story) But at 60 years old, I have had an urge to rekindle my former passion for all things pertaining to fossils. I especially like trilobites, crinoids, sea slabs, echinoderms, bryozoans, and corals; but also fish and plant fossils. Videos such as this one help revitalize my interest.
23:06 I live in a private house and I smashed a ton of rocks, however generally big ones not as delicate as yours. I think you should've made small accurate cracks on the side, this way you not only could make it crack faster but also could divert where the crack will go, but I think the main thing you did wrong was taking a screw, screws are made to stay, you should've found a beefy nail or just used pliers and kept fixing a single(or a bunch) of nails again and again. Or you could buy an electric saw with disks name of which I don't know in English, it can even break concrete but you might need to find someone's garage because using it on the street is a bad idea
12:35 I have one of them in my collection. I was hoping you would tell me what it is. Mine is from Bloomington IN and has one of the ends preserved, it tapers at the ends if thet helps. If you walk behind my house to the creek every single rock is made out of crinoid stems. I used to collect it when I was a kid but there's so many that you just can't take them all home. And out of the millions and millions and millions of chronic stems I have found one crinoid crown with the feeding tentacles. Just one that's how rare they are. I also have a handful that have fish scales and a bunch of seashells. 350 million years ago Morgan County Indiana was the epicenter of crinoids.
If you have a drill with a concrete bit, you can probably make a few intrusive holes that are less that 1/8 in across, minimizing damage to the fossils. Then using a chisel and possibly a 5lb sledge, you can hit the rock along your drilled holes to get a very clean opening
The best method I’ve found for splitting rocks is to drill a few pilot holes and hammer in wedges fairly gently to give more control over how the rock splits.
Watching a geologist (amature or pro) show off their collection of cool rocks they found is always entertaining. I had a geo teacher in high school that had a sand collection 😁
@@Gingerchalky Perhaps you could follow in the steps of the noble Mary Anning, the palaeontologist that changed the world back in the day. The film "Ammonite" provides a reasonable appraisal of her life and achievements. Whitby was where I was born, Dorset is where I now reside. Happy and safe hunting in which ever direction you choose to investigate.
not many things can bring me back to that child sense of wonder, but i remember searching for fossils as a kid in the summer and havent much thought about it since. thanks for another interesting dive into a new world! always a good time here
Very interesting video! I really enjoyed it. But, wow, did I want to reach through the screen and hand you my geologist hammer! I’ve never seen a geologist trying to split a rock using a nail, and now we know why! Please keep making more like this!
I had a fantastic time with these two fossil videos. You really are one of the best content creators. I'm a subscriber, and watch every single one of your videos. Thank you so much for what is clearly a lot of time and effort on your behalf to bring such fascinating content to those who enjoy the subject material. You do a fantastic job, and I always find myself getting so happy when I see that Atlas Pro has posted a new video. Thanks again! Please keep up the incredible work!
Thanks for this delightful video, in which I re-lived my own fossil hunting in the Helderbergs and on the shore of Lake Champlain more than a half century ago. Having just discovered your channel, I hope to see more of your interesting and informative presentations. Thanks.
As a retired geological engineer I had a good laugh. I remember trying to collect a chunk of rose quartz from a huge bolder and failing. I even Had a real rock hammer. You needed a larger set of tools. A large screw driver or a thin chisel. Would work and your want to hit the driver sharply, then move to the right or left and repeat. It will create a line along the cleavage. After several hits it will split. Anther option is to use a masonry bit and drill a series of small holes then drive a wedge in each hole in series and one little deeper on each hole. Email me and we can talk if you like
17:00 With mountain building, in this case I'm guessing the Taconic Orogeny, we also get a lot of erosion. Bays and inlets and shallow seas that supported corals can get silted over, killing those life forms. I'm no expert, but it's my guess as to what that rock represents.
At work when splitting big rocks or parts of mountains we hit with a sledge and create like a line of stress in the rock by hitting in multiple places that all connects up to eventually splitt it in controlled manner, not sure how well it works on smaller rocks but could be worth try to learn (it's extremely easy) before buying a set of specialized tools.
Highly recommend a rock hammer & chisels. They are inexpensive, but be careful where you carry them in NY, because some places you can collect without an issue, and other places you'll get in trouble. We tend to leave ours home and only break stuff open here, but So. Much. Easier.
I've fossil hunted on the shores of Skaneateles Lake, and I've found a few small trilobite fossils before. They're not eurypterids, but trilobites can definitely be found in the most fossil rich areas of that Devonian rock. Also, other people have said it, but a solid chisel is what you want to split those rocks. Works like a charm on that soft shale.
Depending on how close you are to the finger lakes it might be worth your while to collect shale because they often have fossils embedded in them and are easily broken apart. In Ithaca (where I’m located) it’s relatively easy to find shale near Cayuga lake or anywhere that has exposed rocks like Taughannock state park or Truman state park or any of the other waterfalls nearby.
Use a very hard chisel, such as cold chisels, mason or brick chisels, some of which are available with hand guards so that you can really hit them without risking hitting your hand. Wear eye protection goggles! A small sledgehammer is heavier than the nail hammer that you were using, and its extra weight will be more effective.
Wow, the last two videos was amazing, I love working on the field, and as I cannot do it everywhere, it's lovely to what peoples from onother continent can find
I enjoyed this video very much. Watched it while trying to relax, found it soothing and informative, and I would definitely be interested in more content like this. It makes me wish I pursued sciences instead of arts. You have a new subscriber :)
i grew up in northeastern ohio with a small creek in the woods behind my house. when i was 7 a tornado touched down for a bit on the creek which tore up an insane amount of trees. while sad for the trees, it exposed the roots which allowed me and my dad to dig around for fossils. tons of lil shells super similar to the ones in this video. long story short, this vid brought me back soooo many memories of spending afternoons trying to break open the rocks on the driveway, either with tools similar to the ones used in this or just chucking them at the ground and hoping for dinosaurs 😂 and despite never finding a sauropod, finding each tiny shell was truly magical experience! i hope this video inspires more people to explore the world around them 😁
Grew up in NE Ohio too. We had this big rock pile out back that my dad and mom had either dug up out of the garden or some other hole they were digging, and my sisters and I used to climb all over it looking for fossils. I eventually learned there were no dinosaur fossils in Ohio to my eternal disappointment but we did find lots and lots of imprint fossils!
Looks like you might have a gastropod impression at 18:48 or so! Check out the little spiral! I'd be more inclined to call the brachiopod at 20:10 an internal mold, but very cool nevertheless. I'll also echo what others have said about getting a proper rock hammer. You'll want a chisel-tipped one for working with sedimentary rocks.
I loved collecting fossils when I was young. I entered my collection in a NOLA school science fair where it was stolen. I never got back into it... Enjoy what you have.
Another excellent video. I'm jealous that you have a location near you so laden with fossils! On a side note, how tall are you dude? Its super difficult to gage without seeing you next to anything that can provide context but you look pretty tall!
Hello atlas pro your fossil review looks interesting what’s even more interesting is you may be right about the fossil being related to something like the ammonite. Though not from america you do find ammonites commonly in partials and the patterns of ammonites being small ridges spaced out make it look like something from an ammonite. If not maybe it could be some sort of fossil tree or an uncoiled ammonite Which is basically and Ammonite but it’s not curved and is just strait with the small bumps/ridges spaces out. Although an u coiled ammonite is least likely.
iin 28:07 you have 2 cosicle's crinoid, your fosil comes from Devonian Rocks, the ARCHAEOCYATHA is almost exclusive from Cambrian. I have the same fossils from Bolivia.
I've seen a video in how to crack big rocks apart before, the key is to use multiple pressure points. Think multiple nails/screws, not just one. And each one gets tapped in a little further until the total pressure breaks them....
I have a few fossil too. Two Orthocones, a fern, and a big rock that I found in the Desert east of San Diego, California. It has fish, seashell fossils and imprints of some kind of seagrass. I originally was looking for geodes and happened upon that rock with all the fossils in it. I had a museum ask if I wanted to donate it but I polity declined and it's with the rest of my rock/crystal collection
If you spend time in Winnipeg, you’ll notice that notable downtown buildings like the Legislature and Manitoba Museum are built of limestone that is rich in fossils, some quite large. This is the “Tyndall stone”, mined from around the small community of Tyndall, Manitoba.
20:49 "technically this isn't the right tool for the job" 3 minutes later: "So, I'm admitting defeat for now, at least until I have the proper tools" Nice video, thank you 😄
I would recommend atlas if u think it’s something like a cephalopod dig it out to see what’s inside the rock. Because sometimes details are hidden inside and outside. I’d think it’s a partial of an ammonite
Hey! Just wanted to chime in. Those stars on the Echinoderm rock are not baby Echinoderms, but rather I believe pieces of crinoid lily stems that have fragmented off! The star shape is like the lumen of the stem, filled in with sediment over time. Also, the crinoid skeleton is magnesium rich calcium, hence the different colour on the circle part around it
Just watched further and you covered it, but sea lilies are Echinoderms y’all! They’re the weird cousins of the starfish and urchins! I love those lil’ guys
10:09 Ahh, yes. A fossilized "media offline" - my very favorite! 😂
Fossils are seriously so cool. you can just look around the ground/stream and find hundreds of millions of years of history, right in your hand.
And extremely tasty
Ayo????
@@AllenMBanks no he means millions
@@AllenMBanks how’s he wrong?
Because it’s tasty
A simple half inch Cole chisel is great for parting layers of rock - couple of bucks or maybe ten depending.. Find a seam or grove between the layers, line up the chisel blade and tap lightly a couple of times. Move the chisel along the seam and repeat until a long way around. If it doesn't work and split, start again and go deeper. Nice video Pro
Also safety goggles
Cole chisel or cold chisel?
@@jayyydizzzle Chold Chisel
@@dylan0003 lol
@@LeoiCaangWan twtttttttt
My guy, as a science educator, your work keeps getting better and better. This is one of the coolest videos you've made. Your recent videos are really inspiring in the category of reminding folks that interesting history is all around us, and we never know what we might find if we just take the time to look.
10:09
That is one of my favorite fossil imprints
I have been an avid collector since childhood. Through the decades, I have lost my collection, sadly... ( long story) But at 60 years old, I have had an urge to rekindle my former passion for all things pertaining to fossils. I especially like trilobites, crinoids, sea slabs, echinoderms, bryozoans, and corals; but also fish and plant fossils. Videos such as this one help revitalize my interest.
I had no idea I was going to watch a video of a man smashing rocks today and utterly enjoy it :)
23:06 I live in a private house and I smashed a ton of rocks, however generally big ones not as delicate as yours. I think you should've made small accurate cracks on the side, this way you not only could make it crack faster but also could divert where the crack will go, but I think the main thing you did wrong was taking a screw, screws are made to stay, you should've found a beefy nail or just used pliers and kept fixing a single(or a bunch) of nails again and again. Or you could buy an electric saw with disks name of which I don't know in English, it can even break concrete but you might need to find someone's garage because using it on the street is a bad idea
12:35 I have one of them in my collection. I was hoping you would tell me what it is. Mine is from Bloomington IN and has one of the ends preserved, it tapers at the ends if thet helps. If you walk behind my house to the creek every single rock is made out of crinoid stems. I used to collect it when I was a kid but there's so many that you just can't take them all home. And out of the millions and millions and millions of chronic stems I have found one crinoid crown with the feeding tentacles. Just one that's how rare they are. I also have a handful that have fish scales and a bunch of seashells. 350 million years ago Morgan County Indiana was the epicenter of crinoids.
I expected this to be boring, but you made it as interesting and educational as every other video you produce. Loved it
If you have a drill with a concrete bit, you can probably make a few intrusive holes that are less that 1/8 in across, minimizing damage to the fossils. Then using a chisel and possibly a 5lb sledge, you can hit the rock along your drilled holes to get a very clean opening
The best method I’ve found for splitting rocks is to drill a few pilot holes and hammer in wedges fairly gently to give more control over how the rock splits.
Ah yes posted 44 seconds ago, we early today
Same here for some reason but for me it's minutes
Early gang?
For me it was 17 minutes ago when video started
Watching a geologist (amature or pro) show off their collection of cool rocks they found is always entertaining. I had a geo teacher in high school that had a sand collection 😁
This makes me want to go to the fossil beach here in the UK 😊😊
Do it!
Whitby and Lyme Regis are prolific providers.
@@Magical-Ixalan Lyme Regis is the one I was thinking of. Didn’t know about Whitby
@@Gingerchalky Perhaps you could follow in the steps of the noble Mary Anning, the palaeontologist that changed the world back in the day. The film "Ammonite" provides a reasonable appraisal of her life and achievements. Whitby was where I was born, Dorset is where I now reside.
Happy and safe hunting in which ever direction you choose to investigate.
Port Mulgrave is a great spot near Whitby
not many things can bring me back to that child sense of wonder, but i remember searching for fossils as a kid in the summer and havent much thought about it since. thanks for another interesting dive into a new world! always a good time here
This is literally my favourite UA-cam Chanel. Every video is top notch.
So cool to have that many fossils on your doorstep! I go miles away to go fossil hunting haha. Great vid :)
Your collection rocks
I see what you did there
Very interesting video! I really enjoyed it. But, wow, did I want to reach through the screen and hand you my geologist hammer! I’ve never seen a geologist trying to split a rock using a nail, and now we know why! Please keep making more like this!
It's getting more interesting and the way of explaining makes it even more interesting....Thank you for the knowledge....
I had a fantastic time with these two fossil videos. You really are one of the best content creators. I'm a subscriber, and watch every single one of your videos.
Thank you so much for what is clearly a lot of time and effort on your behalf to bring such fascinating content to those who enjoy the subject material. You do a fantastic job, and I always find myself getting so happy when I see that Atlas Pro has posted a new video. Thanks again! Please keep up the incredible work!
Being so early makes me feel like you’re watching a small, unknown channel. :)
One of the best educational channels man - keep it up!
Thanks for this delightful video, in which I re-lived my own fossil hunting in the Helderbergs and on the shore of Lake Champlain more than a half century ago. Having just discovered your channel, I hope to see more of your interesting and informative presentations. Thanks.
As a retired geological engineer I had a good laugh. I remember trying to collect a chunk of rose quartz from a huge bolder and failing. I even
Had a real rock hammer. You needed a larger set of tools. A large screw driver or a thin chisel. Would work and your want to hit the driver sharply, then move to the right or left and repeat. It will create a line along the cleavage. After several hits it will split. Anther option is to use a masonry bit and drill a series of small holes then drive a wedge in each hole in series and one little deeper on each hole. Email me and we can talk if you like
17:00 With mountain building, in this case I'm guessing the Taconic Orogeny, we also get a lot of erosion. Bays and inlets and shallow seas that supported corals can get silted over, killing those life forms. I'm no expert, but it's my guess as to what that rock represents.
Epic and interesting. I loved watching you nerd out over your cool Fossil Collection.
At work when splitting big rocks or parts of mountains we hit with a sledge and create like a line of stress in the rock by hitting in multiple places that all connects up to eventually splitt it in controlled manner, not sure how well it works on smaller rocks but could be worth try to learn (it's extremely easy) before buying a set of specialized tools.
Amazing video! I absolutely loved the content and would like to see more content of this type keep posting videos!
really enjoying the fossil content, especially from relatively nearby
I always enjoy seeing other people's fossil collections.
Highly recommend a rock hammer & chisels. They are inexpensive, but be careful where you carry them in NY, because some places you can collect without an issue, and other places you'll get in trouble. We tend to leave ours home and only break stuff open here, but So. Much. Easier.
I've fossil hunted on the shores of Skaneateles Lake, and I've found a few small trilobite fossils before. They're not eurypterids, but trilobites can definitely be found in the most fossil rich areas of that Devonian rock.
Also, other people have said it, but a solid chisel is what you want to split those rocks. Works like a charm on that soft shale.
I live in Appalachia too (North Carolina) and you’ve made me want to go the mountains and look for fossils myself!
That super fascinating and I’m glad you’re willing to do stuff like this. Good luck on your future expeditions
your videos feel like they have thier own lore to them with it all being interconnected
Good one .. thoroughly enjoyed. Definitely waiting for the second video :0)
Amazing video, bringing attention to the smaller yet still very interesting fossils most people tend to overlook
Yess! Please do so, find and explain more of them) Can't wait to see it)
I love your work in general, but this was an amazing video!! Please keep up the great work!
Thank you for uploading this informative video. It helped me in identifying several of my own fossils I've found in my local area.
Depending on how close you are to the finger lakes it might be worth your while to collect shale because they often have fossils embedded in them and are easily broken apart. In Ithaca (where I’m located) it’s relatively easy to find shale near Cayuga lake or anywhere that has exposed rocks like Taughannock state park or Truman state park or any of the other waterfalls nearby.
Use a very hard chisel, such as cold chisels, mason or brick chisels, some of which are available with hand guards so that you can really hit them without risking hitting your hand. Wear eye protection goggles! A small sledgehammer is heavier than the nail hammer that you were using, and its extra weight will be more effective.
All this fossilhunting could make for a really cool collab with @PBS Eons
Wow, the last two videos was amazing, I love working on the field, and as I cannot do it everywhere, it's lovely to what peoples from onother continent can find
A good day when I come across one of my favorite channels new videos this early!
Good stuff, great that you're in such a prolific fossil belt.
I really loved this video! Hope to see more like this soon 😃
I've loved these past 2 videos.
That bit of you trying to break open the rock was the biggest tease of the century
23:10 - MONKE SMASH ROCK 😂
Very Nice, I hope that you find more to show us!
I enjoyed this video very much. Watched it while trying to relax, found it soothing and informative, and I would definitely be interested in more content like this. It makes me wish I pursued sciences instead of arts. You have a new subscriber :)
i grew up in northeastern ohio with a small creek in the woods behind my house. when i was 7 a tornado touched down for a bit on the creek which tore up an insane amount of trees. while sad for the trees, it exposed the roots which allowed me and my dad to dig around for fossils. tons of lil shells super similar to the ones in this video. long story short, this vid brought me back soooo many memories of spending afternoons trying to break open the rocks on the driveway, either with tools similar to the ones used in this or just chucking them at the ground and hoping for dinosaurs 😂 and despite never finding a sauropod, finding each tiny shell was truly magical experience! i hope this video inspires more people to explore the world around them 😁
Grew up in NE Ohio too. We had this big rock pile out back that my dad and mom had either dug up out of the garden or some other hole they were digging, and my sisters and I used to climb all over it looking for fossils. I eventually learned there were no dinosaur fossils in Ohio to my eternal disappointment but we did find lots and lots of imprint fossils!
Those sea lily things are so gnarly, I like 'em!
Fossils are so diverse and cool love em
These videos about fossils have been great, you're awesome!
Totally enjoyed these videos, like all of your videos. 🙂
Love this, great collection!
Congrats on 1 million subs dawg!!!
Oh! This could be a great collaboration opportunity for The Water Jet Channel!
Hope you get to do a part 2 to this
your intro gives me goosebumps every time, best intro on youtube.
Very nice video . Keep up the good work
Fantastic video. More like this please.
Different is good. Geology/geography... Same thing!
I don't mind you keeping things fresh!
good work.
And who could have predicted that rocks are so hard ^.^
I love this video, thanks for sharing
Looks like you might have a gastropod impression at 18:48 or so! Check out the little spiral! I'd be more inclined to call the brachiopod at 20:10 an internal mold, but very cool nevertheless. I'll also echo what others have said about getting a proper rock hammer. You'll want a chisel-tipped one for working with sedimentary rocks.
Super video, Thank You
I came here after twitter recommended your tweet about the missing clip and now I'm subscribed. 😂👍🏼
your sound design is so good to.
I loved collecting fossils when I was young. I entered my collection in a NOLA school science fair where it was stolen. I never got back into it... Enjoy what you have.
10:09 haha when you deleted a file and didn't rewatch the video, so relatable
A fantastic place in the U.S to look for fossils from many different periods that occurred after the dinosaurs is the Peace River in Florida
Thanks for the awesome content
Get rock splitting tools from Trow and Holden. Wedge and feather or a chisel that u can use to score the rock.
It's amazing what's around you if you only know where and what your looking at
hoow is it going?, Yeah-total gorgeous shots.;)
Cheers for the video mate 😎 👌
Very cool rocks
Love this!
sometimes i find myself watching a dude talking about his rock collection and enjoying it. What a sunday
23:00 and here we see the return to monke.
I was thinking the same thing
Hey thanks for delivering on my fossil/rock request.
I did it all for you!
Great video!
Another excellent video. I'm jealous that you have a location near you so laden with fossils!
On a side note, how tall are you dude? Its super difficult to gage without seeing you next to anything that can provide context but you look pretty tall!
Hello atlas pro your fossil review looks interesting what’s even more interesting is you may be right about the fossil being related to something like the ammonite. Though not from america you do find ammonites commonly in partials and the patterns of ammonites being small ridges spaced out make it look like something from an ammonite. If not maybe it could be some sort of fossil tree or an uncoiled ammonite Which is basically and Ammonite but it’s not curved and is just strait with the small bumps/ridges spaces out. Although an u coiled ammonite is least likely.
This is so fitting because I'm going fossil hunting today!
I love the part where you were smashing the rock, it's so out of character and refreshing to see you talk casually in real life😂
Good rock video
iin 28:07 you have 2 cosicle's crinoid, your fosil comes from Devonian Rocks, the ARCHAEOCYATHA is almost exclusive from Cambrian. I have the same fossils from Bolivia.
Awesome video.
I've seen a video in how to crack big rocks apart before, the key is to use multiple pressure points. Think multiple nails/screws, not just one. And each one gets tapped in a little further until the total pressure breaks them....
I have a few fossil too. Two Orthocones, a fern, and a big rock that I found in the Desert east of San Diego, California. It has fish, seashell fossils and imprints of some kind of seagrass. I originally was looking for geodes and happened upon that rock with all the fossils in it. I had a museum ask if I wanted to donate it but I polity declined and it's with the rest of my rock/crystal collection
If you spend time in Winnipeg, you’ll notice that notable downtown buildings like the Legislature and Manitoba Museum are built of limestone that is rich in fossils, some quite large. This is the “Tyndall stone”, mined from around the small community of Tyndall, Manitoba.
gratz on a mil btw king
20:49 "technically this isn't the right tool for the job"
3 minutes later: "So, I'm admitting defeat for now, at least until I have the proper tools"
Nice video, thank you 😄
I would recommend atlas if u think it’s something like a cephalopod dig it out to see what’s inside the rock. Because sometimes details are hidden inside and outside. I’d think it’s a partial of an ammonite
Hey! Just wanted to chime in. Those stars on the Echinoderm rock are not baby Echinoderms, but rather I believe pieces of crinoid lily stems that have fragmented off! The star shape is like the lumen of the stem, filled in with sediment over time. Also, the crinoid skeleton is magnesium rich calcium, hence the different colour on the circle part around it
Just watched further and you covered it, but sea lilies are Echinoderms y’all! They’re the weird cousins of the starfish and urchins! I love those lil’ guys