SECRET FOSSIL LOCATION! Isle of Wight

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  • Опубліковано 2 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 20

  • @davidthomas6859
    @davidthomas6859 2 роки тому +1

    Great hunt,love the Alligator teeth.We have been twice to I.O.W this year,we have found some Croc 🐊💩at Luccombe Chine ,and Ammonites and Lobsters 🦞 at Whale Chine.Met up with Jim from Bottles and Fossils a local collector from Sandown.We haven’t got to Fort Victoria yet ,maybe next year.

    • @WightFossilTours
      @WightFossilTours 2 роки тому +1

      Maybe next time I’ll take your here, that’s if you can pull me away from the ammonites 💪😜

    • @luckystones2291
      @luckystones2291  2 роки тому +2

      @@WightFossilTours I'm hoping to find a decent Tropeus when I'm back next March down at Whale Chine

    • @WightFossilTours
      @WightFossilTours 2 роки тому

      @@luckystones2291 fingers crossed for you 🤞 hard to find one, especially with all the locals that go there

  • @Train64693
    @Train64693 2 роки тому

    YAY Cave man with beard is finally back to find fossils on this location I never heard of. Interesting alligator teeth heard you can find some in belting but incredibly rare since everybody takes everything. Here seems less people so that’s good. Also I cannot just wiz past this but fantastic editing this time I love the end.

  • @dudleyb
    @dudleyb 2 роки тому

    So many teeth! Great job on editing very entertaining 😄

  • @salmakhaliq3432
    @salmakhaliq3432 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video Chris. Get lucky from eliottt and Salma

  • @jthomas8263
    @jthomas8263 2 роки тому +1

    You find the Eocene Fossils?

  • @damienbrown6764
    @damienbrown6764 Рік тому

    Amazing finds I would love a alligator tooth I fossil hunt on the Yorkshire coastline

  • @WightFossilTours
    @WightFossilTours 2 роки тому

    Lol great video love the intro 💪

  • @jthomas8263
    @jthomas8263 2 роки тому +1

    This is actually way before the discovery of the White Rock Spinosaurid in 2022.

    • @luckystones2291
      @luckystones2291  2 роки тому +1

      I'm not sure what you mean? Fort Victoria deposits are late Eocene and the spinosaurids were found in Cretaceous deposits.
      Have you been to Dinosaur Isle recently? They put the spinosaurids on display! They are superb! If you haven't seen them they are worth the price of admission alone!

    • @jthomas8263
      @jthomas8263 2 роки тому +1

      @@luckystones2291 Dinosaurs are even older than these Eocene Animal Fossils you found.

    • @luckystones2291
      @luckystones2291  2 роки тому

      @@jthomas8263 I know! I hunt for all types of fossils from multiple time zones. From Palaeozoic trilobites, corals and graptolites at the oldest, through the entire Mesozoic - including the Late Cretaceous which has the Spinosaurids, onto the Eocene and Oligocene deposits and even Pleistocene deposits too! I'm a qualified palaeontologist and I'm making a few videos having fun. I also lead fossil hunts through UKAFH, check them out, we cover most of the UK and run 12-20 hunts a year. I have most experience hunting in late Eocene deposits as they are my favourite.

  • @jthomas8263
    @jthomas8263 2 роки тому +1

    Lucky, these are not Spinosaur remains.

    • @luckystones2291
      @luckystones2291  2 роки тому +2

      LOL. If they were I'd be on the news!!! Spinosaurids are a family including the famous Spinosaurus (known from Egypt and Morocco) and Baryonyx (known from Wealden deposits from the UK) and now these new guys from the IOW.
      The alligator teeth that I found are from an Alligator called Diplocynodon, an Eocene Alligator with nothing to do with spinosaur!
      I'm still not understanding where you are coming from?

    • @jthomas8263
      @jthomas8263 2 роки тому +1

      @@luckystones2291 you found on the North of the Isle Of Wight.

    • @luckystones2291
      @luckystones2291  2 роки тому

      ​@@jthomas8263 Yes. Fort Victoria is west of Yarmouth on the North of the Isle. Thorness Bay is very good too

    • @jonathanroberts-bj7yl
      @jonathanroberts-bj7yl 5 місяців тому +1

      @@luckystones2291it’s called Diplocynodon hantoniensis.

  • @andu4384
    @andu4384 2 роки тому

    Now alli is toothless