Skip to content
South Dakota Fossil Leaf Impression fossil specimen

South Dakota Fossil Leaf Impression Identification

Fossil Leaf Impression is a realistic South Dakota fossil profile built around leaf compression or impression preserved in fine lake or floodplain sediments. In this state, success usually comes from learning chalk beds, badlands mudstones, and river gravels, then timing runoff, reservoir drawdown, surf cuts, or road work that exposes fresh fossil-bearing rock instead of hunting blindly.

Key Traits

  • vein pattern
  • thin carbon film
  • flat bedding-plane preservation
  • Check chalk beds, badlands mudstones, and river gravels

Era

Paleogene-Neogene

Type

plant

Route stack

Turn South Dakota Fossil Leaf Impression into a month, law, metro, and ground plan.

These links move the page out of taxonomy mode and back into trip planning, so users can answer when to go, where to start, and what legal layer to check before they leave the main species or find guide.

Law layer

South Dakota state guide

Fossil collecting rules in South Dakota vary by land status and fossil type. Common invertebrate fossils may be collectible on some public lands, but vertebrate fossils, protected park units, tribal lands, and cultural sites require a much higher level of care and often a permit. This is especially relevant in Hell Creek fossils, ammonites, and Oligocene mammals.

Open the law layer →

Metro layer

City hubs in South Dakota

No city hubs are published for this state yet.

Take TroveRadar into the field

Carry the plan, the species notes, and the access checks outside.

Use the mobile app for offline reference, private find logging, route memory, and the working notes that matter after the browser window closes.

Get App Details

Explore More