Huge LANDSLIDE Fossil Hunting! Biggest Outdoor Hunts Of 2022! | Fossil Hunter
Here is another video from one of our fossil hunts, make sure to stick around to the end of the video to see the special fossil at the end! Today, we will be showing Crocodile Bones! This is an insight into the past, what life was like 180 Million Years Ago even before many of the most famous land-dwelling Dinosaurs ever existed.
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Пікірлер: 290
I think it's so wonderful and lovely a father has passed down his passion for fossils to his sons. You lads are doing a great job. You deserve all the views!
@YorkshireFossils
9 ай бұрын
Thanks so much, we really appreciate that!
Watching you guys is so therapeutic. None of that flashy loud music in the background that some KZreadrs do lol and the finds are always immaculate!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind comment, we really appreciate it! 🐬🐳
@patsturgeon1953
Жыл бұрын
I was just thinking the same thing as I had just watched one with that music that was so distracting . I just find myself relaxed and living vicariously through your adventures ! Thanks for letting me tag along ! ♥️
@billrobbins5874
7 ай бұрын
Your Dad did some nice work. All very interesting. What a beautiful place to spend time looking for fossils that are over 1 million years old. Fortunate and blessed your family is. 👍👍
Aaron and shae are totally professional in their pursuit of fossils from our distant history and I love the fact shae is totally professional in the health and safety aspects. We'll done Lads. Graham Smith.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks Graham, we really appreciate that. Safety is incredibly important.
@user-pk9qc4fr2k
9 ай бұрын
Indeed
It is absolutely amazing to think that the fossils you are finding were already 119 million year old fossils under the feet of dinosaurs that were walking the planet. Just amazing. Beautiful finds this year. Looking forward to many more amazing fossil finds in 2023. Stay safe.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Pretty incredible to think isn’t it, there is so much out there yet to be discovered! Thanks for watching and Happy New Year 🥳
@LiSa.N.J
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils Happy New Year to you and your family too.
What I find almost as amazing as the fossils is that you have all that coastline to yourself.
It's amazing to see that marine fossil with the vertebrae and ribs in that calm moment on the beach. Just listening to the sea and thinking of the millennia that brought it to this point.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Lovely isn’t it! Happy New Year!! 🥳🥳
@eckyx9019
Жыл бұрын
Time is a strange thing.
@chicagolee1143
Жыл бұрын
😊
@no3225
Жыл бұрын
@@chicagolee1143 a quad
Had a great experience fossil hunting with Shae! We found fossils and imprints right away, multiple varieties! A wonderful way to spend an afternoon!
Thank you guys for another brilliant video I really enjoyed it catch you guys in the next one.💥🐊🦕🦖😌👍💥
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
You’re most welcome, I’m glad you enjoyed it! Looking forward to seeing you on the next one 🐊⚒️
"This is an amazing video showing the power of nature and what it can uncover! I have never seen such a huge landslide fossil hunting before and it's amazing to see the team's hard work and dedication in uncovering these fossils. It's always a treat to see the fossils being discovered and the process of digging them out. I am sure that the fossils will tell us many stories of the past."
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, more fossils to come! 🐙🦎 Really appreciate your comment
My greetings from Brussels, Belgium. I adore your documentation. I have ben in a geologique club for seven years.
I like how you'll stop briefly (perfect amount of time btw) to let the audience try and find the fossils.
@ 3:09 looks like a orange tangerine sitting next to the ammonite. I love cobbles.
no matter how many times i follow you, what promises, curiosity, announcements, i only ever see ammonites!
Am a new subscriber Form Lawrence Massachusetts god bless all of us amen 🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🇩🇴🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
60 years ago I 'walked' the shore from Boggle Hole YHA to Whitby and saw peeping out from the cliffs, 6 to 10 feet up several nodules between at least 3 to 5 feet across and fat ovals in profile. Long gone now but I still wonder about them and their tremendous size while looking at the 3in ammonite I still treasure. Thank you boys for the memories you help me relive.
@nodarkthings
Жыл бұрын
a tantalising memory!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing that with us, I’m glad our videos helped you relive that memory, it would be interesting to know what was inside those rocks that you saw! All the best and Happy New Year!! 🥳
@celticdowser5566
Жыл бұрын
@@nodarkthings Funnily enough my maiden name was Hopper too!
@nodarkthings
Жыл бұрын
@@celticdowser5566 quite likely related somewhere then! I traced us back to the 1600s in Rudston which is kinda nearby and features the tallest prehistoric monolith in Britain. Quite a few Hoppers are buried around the monolith going back to the 1700s. I'm convinced we erected it!!!
Lovely finds. You must be so excited!
Really loved this video.Def a fan. Thank you for sharing your finds. Signed, Jealous in Ohio
I come from a bottle digging background and the thrill of pulling things out from the earth like teeth is exciting, I get the same vibe with this hobby, I'm gonna have to do my research and see if there are any suitable environments for me to dig around here for fossils.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
I bet bottle digging is also exciting! We’ve never done that before
Such a sweet hobby❤
Thanks for taking us with you, on your hunts, and thank you for showing some amazing fossils, and the work that goes into. Prepping them
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
You’re welcome, thank you for commenting and enjoying the videos, more to come!
Love the anticipation of "what might be". Thanks for sharing these great videos.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you, glad to hear that you enjoyed them 🙏🏻 more exciting fossils to come! 🦕🦖
Fabulous fossils - amazing scenery and superb video presenting. Enjoyed every minute! :-)
This video is the coolest fossil hunting experience I've ever had. Very cool. Thanks
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind comment, we really appreciate it! 🐬🐳
Your videos are always brilliant lads, love watching them. When I come up to whitby each year I always go down to sands end and search for ammonites, I normally find a few Dacs.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
That’s a nice place to look for Fossils, we have certainly had a few exciting finds there over the years! Thanks again for watching, really glad you enjoy our videos!
Brilliant video Aaron, tell shae I used to have an sas bergen just like his when I was in the armed forces, you can certainly carry a lor of stuff in them. 🇬🇧😁
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏻 We love those bags, none others are fit for purpose for what we do!
Another great day and a great video, thanks for sharing lads
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching! Stay tuned for more 🙏🏻🦖🦕
As ever, informative, inspiring and fascinating. Keep 'em coming lads!
Great video lads! You make it look easy but I know it's taken you years to get the experience and the eye for seeing what most people think is just a stone! Well done.
Amazing fossils! It’s also absolutely stunning there, the sky is breathtaking. I would love to visit there some day.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
It really is!
Thanks for all the great videos you've shared through the year! Happy 2023! :D
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
You’re most welcome, hope you’ve enjoyed them and thanks for watching! Happy New Year 🥳
I live just across the pond in the NLs and while it is a great country to live in I do often sigh deeply when I see videos of amazing natural site like in britain or the US bc all we mainly have is sea clay that doesn't hold any natural treasures. If I had a fossil site like yours near me I'd be out there every day
What an amazing place 😮😊
Another very nice video from the best fossil guys on you tube I hope this new year your channel grows as it deserves I'm looking forward to more great videos in the future.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much, we really appreciate that. We are working hard to keep producing original videos to be enjoyed, plenty more to come I’m sure!
Great video and beautiful scenery as usual! It must be so exciting to hunt for fossils whenever you want! You're quite lucky to live in such an amazing place!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, the scenery is definitely one of the best parts! We are really fortunate to live here, it’s nice to be out at the beach 🏝️
Good video, Fantastic ichthyosaur fossil, also with a nice story, I imagine it must have taken a lot of work to prepare it, great result, extraordinary and congratulations, greetings!
Wow. That find at 27:00 is incredible. It is arranged in a pattern that is strongly suggestive of being the result of a "Birkeland Current," rather than caused by fossilization. For it to be truly resultant of fossilization, the bones would have to have broken and arranged together in a diamond pattern. This is just "what Birkeland Currents do," on the other hand. Notably, there are two of the rib-like structures flowing from the bottom center to the top right, and then a third seemingly flows out where they separate. Currents can do this, but it is quite odd for bones to have done. There is a video by Myron Cook on KZread titled "Unravel a Mysterious Outcrop of Rock with a Geologist," where he shows a structure that he explains to be definitively geological in nature, yet is alike to the vertebrae of this fossil. Flows of volatiles are known to be capable of inducing fractional crystallization. It appears that this fossil demonstrates that currents can specifically flow in "Birkeland Current" manners through the Earth's materials and cause fractional crystallization to differentiate the minerals and make-up of materials in the flows. In some instances, eddies emerge where current becomes contained by pressures and ammonites are then likely formed as a result of currents in a like manner. This is likely why they are so useful for biostratigraphy, because they are markers of times in Earth's history when specific processes were occurring because specific currents were present. I know it sounds obscene, but there are many interesting subtleties. They are too much to go into in a comment here, but I did discuss this object and react to it in my last video, "Underground Science #163 - Going with the Flow." I have gone through other content and found several interesting nuances that I will likely go into at least another video or more of discussing from the angle of currents inducing their form. If it is true, then they are much cooler because they are like fractal galaxies and demonstrate nuances of fundamental processes in immense detail. I have seen enough basis to strongly suggest that it is the case with this fossil. You found a fossilized Birkeland Current. ;) Much love, your videos are excellent. Please pardon my unsolicited insertion of my opinion on the matter. This appears to be a very unique area for studying the subjects I have become interested in and I find myself browsing your videos looking closely for distinguishing features. That fossil is too exceptional to not let you guys know the potential alternative of what it may *be* that seems quite likely in my--someone who has claimed to be the discoverer of the theory of everything for 9 years and documented in depth many unknown nuances of reality--eyes. -Steve
I am so jealous of your ichthyosaur fossil!! I used to go down to the Dorset Jurassic Coast fossil hunting before I moved up to Leicester. I’ve stood on ammonite a metre across showing out of the shale! Can you tell me where you go fossil hunting as now I’m retired I’ve got the time to go out hunting again. Love your videos, keep up the good work.
@DreamCreeperE
8 ай бұрын
Same
Mary Anning would be so proud (and jealous) of you.
Super cool! Thank you for sharing! ☆ Jesimiel🐝Millar
I’m going there tomorrow❤🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
The colors, I live in Alaska, long winter, white snow and black skies. This is great
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks, great isn’t it 🦖🦕
How nice this guys!
Fun to see a nodule in situ in the cliff!
Great video, relaxing even😊
What a great hobby. I feel like I’m right there. Great work!
Hi guys! Love your video’s! I am planning to go on holiday to Yorkshire. Where can I go looking for fossils myself? Which beach can I go to?
geez.... Shae's a G-unit. Great channel.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching 🙏🏻
Absolutely amazing! Your knowledge and skill is very impressive!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! Really appreciated 🙏🏻
I would be so happy with a truck load of those colorful rounded small rocks for my garden.
Another great watch Aaron and Shae ❤.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much mam ♥️
Just discovered your channel, excellent stuff, thank you
I like and love your tik tok vids and KZread 😊
I really enjoyed your video. Thank you. You give me peace.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind comment, we really appreciate it! 🐬🐳
I hope the adventurer this time you get very satisfying results and be given safety greetings
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching! Stay tuned for more 🙏🏻🦖🦕
Wow, beautiful! Would love to do that!
I love when you say huge. Have you seen the videos from ammonite finds in Texas, USA? Now they are huge. It is interesting sizes from different areas of the planet. Love your finds and the prepped pieces are wonderful!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻 Huge to us is comparing it to what we tend to find here, but absolutely there are some far larger specimens in other parts of the world as you say 🌎
love the rune tshirt
AWESOME video guys some great finds nice selection
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate, plenty more to come!
@michaeltaylor2449
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils AWESOME
Just loved watching your videos.
just loved watching your videos.
I live on the West Coast of Florida and we do find Fossilized Sharks teeth and different types of bones. They are at Venice Beach, Florida. We don’t have any cliffs in Florida but lots of Fossils.
the best channel and fossil video ever ...God bless you
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your kind comment, we really appreciate it! 🐬🐳
Love your blog. Wish I had more knowledge, I live by the sea and we have constant erosion. Most look for sharks teeth but I am sure there is more out there if you knew of what to look for
Amazing...the historic evidence of creatures from ancient times. The patterns are beautiful. (Happy New Year. Greetings from LA area..)
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
So cool isn’t it! Happy new year!
Enjoyed your videos! Some very cool fossils! From Arizona, USA!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks for watching! Much appreciated that you enjoy them from all the way over in the USA 🐊🦴
This is super, love fossils, esp amanites. so cool.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed the video! More videos to come!
Keep going mate! You can make a sand beach.
Love watching your videos 👌
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Glad you like them! Thank you 🙏🏻
Wow amazing fossils! That cracked bedrock stone is the best to find fossils in. I love the red jaspers stones around you at 3:03 left side of the screen you will see two "cracked" looking rocks that are septarian. Just thought I would point that out to you.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻
Excellent video 🤗 thank you
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
exciting to watch. thank you.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it, thank you 🙏🏻
23:11 oh wow that is a beautiful piece of flint...
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
🤔
Just found you guys! Great stuff, indeed! Just subscribed 👍
Ces fossiles sont superbes je vous remercie de.nous avoir montré en cette année 2022 des vidéos magnifiques ...en cette nouvelle année je vous présente mes meilleurs vœux pour 2023.avec toujours des vidéos aussi belles🙏🙏🙏
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you!! Happy New Year!! 🥳🥳
Where is this? Nice to see so many fossils being found especially when you think how old they are and how long they have been. I’m a new subscriber now an£ this after only one video! 😊
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, it’s pretty incredible what’s out there if you look hard enough! Thanks for watching, see you in the next one
I like it pacaso
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏻
😍Truly amazing 🤩 high quality 🎥as always 😀🙌🦕🌊
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks mate! Happy New Year!! 🥳🥳
@rednaxelavb
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils Happy New Year! ... 🤗😁🍸🎊🦕
I wish you could show a drawing or picture of the animals that left these fossils 😍
That is. A great video and I really like the finds😊
Oh incredible so lucky someone sent you down a gift
I would be so excited to find even the ones you throw back
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Happy New Year!! 🥳🥳
Hi guys - not sure you'll see this but you show a few amazing Golden fossil finds. But i cant get my head around how you find them. I mean, they cant be like that when you find them of everyone could see them and pick them up. Are they encased and you have to work them to bring out the golden layer they are encased in? In that case, what is done to get them to the standard that you show us? You guys are awesome men. Laid back, but professional and intelligent. Your dad must be proud of you both. I would be.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, we really appreciate that. Funnily enough, I actually filmed a little video about them this afternoon. Essentially, they begin looking quite dull, then we polish up the mineral that is naturally present in order to bring out the shine ✨
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Our family is certainly proud of us, it’s been a family hobby from day 1
You defintely have an eye for spotting fossils!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻🦕🦖
As a paleontology student we often studied fossils brought back from that area in class and watched our Professor show film of him and his wife (who he met while over there hunting fossils for the museum ) who go over there and to the tundra to bring back Mammoth fossils. See we built our own Log home several years back and designed the front entry way just to display these 2 great finds. When I was in my early 20's my Grandfather had a gravel pumping outfit come on his property and that's where all the Fossils we have came from. My Wife and I kept what we wanted but Donated 90% of what we found to our State University Paleontology Dept. They have some on display but most are locked away in some basement storage facility amongst the thousands of other Mammoth and Mastodon fossils they have. It's sad they are just sitting in a drawer with honestly hundreds of others from various places around the state and country never to be seen except by the occasional student but....that's the way of things. We could have sold a lot of what we found to private collectors for big $$$$$$ but that didn't seem right either. This place where all these came from was obviously a spot where multi species and animals became trapped because we also found flint knives, spear heads, broken stone tools and a lot of the bones had tool marks from cuts so prehistoric man was taking advantage of the trapped animals like a big meat market. There were several species of Camel, Bison, horse, etc that had over the years become trapped in this spot we assume was like a big area of Quicksand, at least that is what we thought and the Paleontologist from our University told us.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Searching for Mammoth fossils sounds really fun 🦣
@IRONHORSE427RACING
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils It is and I have a bunch. Mammoth molars , 1 pair of complete tusks and the front of the skull, a bunch of Mastodon Molars also from the same area. And my prize possession a 99% complete Smilodon Skeleton (except for 3 of the left hind foot toe bones but we reconstructed them to make a complete skeleton) and its all mounted up now, mouth open showing it's huge sabre like canines as you walk in our Front Door into the Entryway then behind that on one of the main support huge log timbers for the roof is the reconstructed Mammoth Skull with both it's tusks in it .
@joanneash3305
7 ай бұрын
@@IRONHORSE427RACING Man that sounds so impressive. Thanks from Canada
Good Video. With the nice pyritized specimen in the flat rock earlier in the video, could you not chisel a few inches around it to extract it? It looks to be VERY nice. Happy New Year!
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
We could certainly consider doing that, especially if it look like an unusual/rare specimen. Happy New Year!! 🥳
I love your video's.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻🌊
Wow I love this. I always have collected bones, feathers,rocks. Although recently discovered a femur which appears to be very aged, so now bone fossils amaze me. It is insane on the lack of information about dating bones. Any experts willing to lend an opinion?
I’m in need of a bit of advice please , I have quite a large ammonite about 1ft diameter that my dad found about 30 years ago, if I sent you a picture would you be able to advise on how best to clean it up ? Great videos by the way 👍
Love this
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻🦕🦖
Thanks
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much, we really appreciate your help 🙏🏻
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Have a great day
Good video
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thanks so much 🙏🏻🦕🦖
May I ask what's your camera set up, its so clear & steady ? Cheers
This is great 👍 1 minor criticism , try and put a bit of personality into the narratives lads , you both talk like you are reading
Broooo what's the name of that camera it's SOOOO GOOOOD
Gettin' a good split on the nodules may rival pulling apart an Oreo
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
I think I agree 🤔
Looking at the cliff in the background is there a certain layer in that cliff where the fossils come from? I noticed a center section that is a lighter color.
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
You can get Fossils in pretty much any layer within the cliffs from these videos. The difference is that some layers will yield different species for example
@paulstan9828
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils Really amazing. Thanks.
Just wondering what do you do with all the fossils that you find. What was the big one? You are finding fantastic stuff
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
We do all sorts with them, sharing them with others is one of our favourite things to do with them, as well as hopefully contributing some scientifically important specimens if we come across any
Nice 👍
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
Thank you 🙏🏻
Iverson looked thru a lot of the comments and couldn't find it and the close captioning couldn't translate it correctly. What are the conical shelled animals called that looking like dino teeth? I couldn't understand what you were calling them
Do you find a lot of the Pirite dollars in the shale? I use them for my kids stories in my church… stories about how to not be fooled by fake fools gold “”coins”. We’re in Oregon and love beachcombing for agates and fossil clams.. I’m amazed at the fact that here in the pacific NorthWET that has tons of fossil evidence that we were once a tropical climate… Fort Rock is the best example of the climate was tropical because of the amount of sharks teeth and the wave action that wore down the side of the big volcanic plug
@YorkshireFossils
Жыл бұрын
We do find a lot of small chunks of iron pyrite, but usually not worth taking! Finding sharks teeth sounds really fun, we don’t tend to find them here
@ZeldaZelda-RichesToRags
Жыл бұрын
@@YorkshireFossils check out Fort Rock here in central Oregon… and there a 5 miles long obsidian flow of snow flake, black and brown obsidian in east Cyril Oregon called New Berry Crater… has a very tiny amount of the Green olivine glass that is like hair is called Pales Hair in a few places here in Oregon… I love the pacific NorthWET and the big Agates and the clam fossils we find on the beach