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Natural History & Geology
- Podcast; The Tivola Whale
- Coastal Plain Correlation Chart
- GA Paleo Research by Paul F. Huddlestun PhD >
- Presentation; Oaky Woods Stratigraphy
- Physiographic Map of Georgia
- Fossils of Oaky Woods
- Collections & Stewardship of Georgia’s Fossils
- I, Periarchus (A Fossil's Tale)
- Georgia's Amateurs >
- Public Fossil Locations >
- Georgia Fossils in the Smithsonian
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Education Material
- My Field Kit; What You Need In The Field
- Meet Crassostrea gigantissima, Georgia's Historic Giant Oyster
- Georgiacetus Presentation; A Whale for Georgia
- The Natural History & Fossils Record of Houston County, GA
- Evolution in Georgia's Fossil Record
- Georgia's State Fossil; Shark Teeth
- Georgia's Paleontology For Georgia's Classrooms
- SW GA RESA 2018 Talk
- Library & School Presentations
- An Introduction To Fossils; Presentation
- Georgia's Fossils Presentation; 500 million years
- Georgia College Natural History Museum
- Meteorites
- 1: Georgia's Oldest Fossils; Archaeocyathids, At 513 Million Years Old
- 2: Trilobites; 500 Million Years Ago
- 3: Geologic Time
- 4: Our Oldest Vertebrate?
- 5: Georgia Before the Dinosaurs
- 6: 200 Million Years Ago
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7: Cretaceous Georgia, Dinosaurs & more
- 7A: Georgias Pterosaur
- 7C: Coelecanths
- 7B: So Many Sharks
- 7D: Xiphactinus vetus
- 7E: Side-necked turtles
- 7F: Marine Reptiles
- 7G: Dinosaurs in Georgia
- 7I; The Blufftown Formation
- 7L: Bill Montante's Mega "Gator" Tooth Discovery
- 7K: The Pio Nono Formation
- 7J: The Eutaw Formation
- 7H: Deinosuchus schwimmeri in Recognition of Dr. David Schwimmer
- 8: Suwannee Current, Gulf Trough, & Bridgeboro Limestone
- 9: The Clayton Formation Report; By Hank Josey
- 10: The Eocene; Georgia's Oldest Mammals
- 11: A Whale For Georgia
- 12: Basilosaurids; The First Modern Whales
- 13: Ziggy and The Museum of Arts & Sciences, Macon, GA
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14: Late Eocene
- 14A: Eocene Fossils & Stratigraphy
- 14B; Fossils, Impacts, & Tektites Dating the Clinchfield Formation
- 14C: The Tivola Limestone
- 14D: Twiggs Clay Vertebrates
- 14F; Sandersville Limestone, By Hank Josey
- 14E: Ocmulgee Formation Vertebrates
- 14I: Dating Late Eocene Sediments
- 14J: Georgia's Tektites; Georgiaites
- 14K; Shell Bluff; Georgia's Most Historic Paleontology Site
- 14L; Taylors Bluff, Paleo Paddling the Ocmulgee River
- 14M; Eocene Terrestrial Mammals From Gordon, GA
- 14N: Fossil Ridge, A Stratigraphic Study in Oaky Woods Wildlife Management Area
- 14O; Georgia's First Entelodont
- 14P: Historic Rich Hill
- 14Q; Bibb County's Christy Hill, Clinchfield Formation Hilltop
- 15: Early Oligocene
- 16: Bonaire GA Entelodont
- 17: The Whale Eating Shark
- 18: Miocene Epoch; 23.3 to 5.3 Million Years Ago
- 19: Pliocene Epoch; 5.3 to 2.5 Million years Ago
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20: The Ice Ages; Pleistocene & Holocene Epochs
- 20A; Clark Quarry's Mammoths & Bison
- 20B: Pleistocene Vertebrate List
- 20C: Georgia’s Eolian Dunes
- 20D: Georgia’s Carolina Bays
- 20E: Late Pleistocene Significant Events
- 20F: Southeastern Thermal Enclave
- 20G; Diamond Back Terrapins
- 20H; A Kaolin Mine Beaver Dam
- 20I; Pleistocene Vertebrate Fossils On Georgia’s Piedmont
- 20J; Watkins Quarry Pleistocene Vertebrates, Glynn County, GA
- *NEW* 20K: Pleistocene Vertebrates from Coastal Georgia
- 21: Humans in Georgia
- 22: Geology of the Coastal Plain, 1911
- 23: Coastal GA Locations (1957)
- 24: Needed; The Georgia Geologic Survey
- Building This Site