First published at 04:20 UTC on May 13th, 2019.
Over time, we have packed out quite a few potential mudfossil stones to destroy the gear in our packs, makes our backs hurt, and to also be able to look at them more closely when we get home. We have run across several that look like lungs or somet…
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Over time, we have packed out quite a few potential mudfossil stones to destroy the gear in our packs, makes our backs hurt, and to also be able to look at them more closely when we get home. We have run across several that look like lungs or something similar, but all of them have been too big, too heavy, and too far of a hike out for us to want to try to pack them out. I have been intending to make a few videos to show a sampling of what we have collected so far in the hope that doing so furthers the discussion of mudfossils and the typical geological narratives. This first video is a cross-section of unusually lightweight, odd stones we find.
These were retrieved from an area in which the bones of giants were found.
To find out about the East Coast Dragon, search for it on the Mudfossil University channel on youtube. I'm not stating I believe the ECD is or is not a dragon. I reference it in the title because if the ECD really is a fossilized, decomposing dragon, then the fact that this video location is along the neck of the ECD may help identify the geology/biology in this video at a later date.
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