A group of 12 Authentic 99 million year old Burmese Fossil Amber stones
these are fossil amber stones inclusions include a big eyed hemiptera, a crane fly,
a spider, a beetle, psocoptera, a cricket, a small centiped and small flies and small wasps
A101 BU1225 12 Group 9grams
$225.00 No Reserve






















I have personally examined many tens of thousands of Dominican amber stones, feathers are fairly rare in Dominican amber - I've only seen a handful. However in the few thousands of Burmese amber stones I've examined, I've seen nearly 100 feathers and some with bones and claws. Many of these Burmese amber stones were also examined by paleobiologists and paleoentomologists at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. We think that we are seeing many more feathers in Burmese amber than all the ambers for several reasons, there are more people excavating Burmese amber, many of the more important stones are being sought out by collectors and scientists so the important stones are coming to light, also the Burmese amber forest could have been home to a rookery, I’m sure we’ll find more evidence of actual nests in some Burmese stones. The questions I get about these feathers are mostly – how do know these are dinosaur feathers and not bird feathers? – Here's one reply::
“I’ve personally examined over 70 different pieces of Burmese amber that contain (single or multiple) feathers, and several that also have claws and/or bones associated with the feathers.  The 99 million year (middle Cretaceous) age of this amber precludes the feathers belonging to the Crown Group (Neornithes) that leads directly to modern birds.  Fossils of Neornithene birds first appear some 25 million years later, in the latest Cretaceous.  The various feathers from the middle Cretaceous, however, suggest a real diversity among feathered dinosaurs, including those in an extinct sister group to modern birds (Enantiornithes) that was widespread at this time, as well as feathered Dromaeosaurids, Troodontids and others. Feathers are considered to have first appeared on a common ancestor to all pennaraptorans, and the basic microstructural characteristics of feathers are already in place and recognizable in all amber fossils of feathers that I have examined.”

______________

some photos of Burma amber and Burma amber mining (Myanmar)




Burmese Amber or Burmite
Burmese Amber (Burmite) is from northern Myanmar, it is the only Cretaceous amber deposit in the world that is exploited commercially, as well as the first to have been studied scientifically. Burmite is 98.8 million years old and has been used primarily in carvings for at least two millennia by Chinese peoples. The age of 98.8 million years establishes an earliest Cenomanian age for the fossilized inclusions. The age also indicates that a volcanic eruption occurred at 98.8 million years ago in the vicinity of the Hukawng Valley.
The deposits in the Kachin state of northern Myanmar, are very productive (an estimated 83 tons were exported between 1898 and 1940), and some amber pieces are very large there is a 15 kg stone in the Natural History Museum in London and recently recovered pieces are larger.

The color of Burmese amber stones vary from a transparent yellow to a highly desirable deep red, the amber resists fracturing, is relatively hard (1.2 times harder than Baltic amber), and it receives a beautiful glassy polish. Burmite mining lapsed from just before the independence of Burma from Britain in 1947, and did not resume until the late 1990s. The greatest value of burmite, however is scientific.


Shipping and Insurance
Within the USA  $8.00 - we ship all specimens US Postal Service  Priority Mail.
Outside of the USA $48.00 - we ship US Postal Service Global Express Mail. 
If you require any other method of shipping please contact us.

Payment
Pay us Instantly and Securely with Pay Pal - fast, easy, and secure payments for all of your purchases!. Multiple items can of course be combined for one shipping cost.


About Us
We have been collecting amber in the field and prepping rough fossil amber specimens since 1993. Photographs of our specimens have appeared in National Geographic, Nature, Science, Scientific American, Discover, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times and others. We have been featured in BBC’s production, PaleoWorld's The Amber Hunters. We offer authentic museum quality Dominican and Burmese (Burmite) Amber display specimens of rare insects in amber and also authentic rare rough unprepared amber for sale. We have traveled many times to the Dominican Republic where we have chiseled beautiful amber gemstones out of the lignite layers deep in the amber mines north of Santiago. We have excavated in the Palo Quemado and Los CaCaos blue amber mines and also in La Nueva Toca and the world famous La Toca amber mines way up in the mountains north of Santiago. For many years we have extensively collected mid Cretaceous New Jersey amber in the Raritan formation of central New Jersey and have traveled many times to collect late Cretaceous and early Paleocene amber in the Hanna formation of eastern Wyoming. We have collected mid Cretaceous amber in the Black Creek formation of eastern North Carolina and we have spent weeks collecting mid Cretaceous amber in the northern most Tundra of Alaska. Some of our collecting trips have been in October of 2003 to the western Aleutian Islands some 1000 miles west of Anchorage to explore and collect Miocene amber, August of 2004 and April of 2006 we were back in the Dominican Republic to collect Miocene amber from the Palo Quemado amber mines which have recently closed due to the miners finding little amber, we were back to the Dominican Republic in April of 2006 to video in the La Toca amber mines, and in August of 2007 we excavated in La Toca and La Bucara. We’ve collected Eocene amber in western Indian in the Cambay amber formation. We've done excavations in the Dominican Republic in 2012, 2014, and 2016. We did 2 collecting trips to a Eocene amber deposit in the southern United States in 2017 and in late summer 2018 we revisited a historic amber site in the south east that we've collected at in the 1990's. We were at the 8th International Conference on Fossil Insects, Arthropods & Amber in Santo Domingo Dominican Republic in April 2019 where there were many amber/insect researchers from all over the world there and some gave fantastic talks on fossil insects and amber - great stuff! We were last back in the Dominican Republic in September 2019 before the pandemic at the Los CaCaos and La Cumbre amber mines. Most recently we returned to a historic Eocene amber deposit in the southern United States in May of 2021. We have many trips coming up despite the pandemic restrictions.

We have donated many hundreds of amber specimens to museums in the United States and have several dozen new species of insects in amber named after us. We have examined several thousand specimens of rough Burmese amber and have prepped many new Burmese fossil amber specimens. We have traveled to Europe with colleagues to examine unusual spectacular Dominican Amber specimens in private collections and we consider the amber curators of the museums in Santo Domingo, Puerto Plata and New York City our friends. Exploring for and collecting amber along with the examination and research of amber is our passion.

   
    top