Things You'll Need
Instructions
Prepare
Consider what type of fossils you wish to find and what kind of work you want to do to find them. Research what the sites are like and what the fossils found there look like.
Map out the area you are going to search and contact the landowner. The Birmingham Paleontological Society can sometimes help you find a site.
Put on appropriate clothing. You will be hiking and climbing through woodlands and rocky outcroppings that are home to snakes, bugs and poison ivy. Wear sturdy shoes and a long-sleeved shirt.
Andalusia
Consider visiting Andalusia, below Point-A Dam on the Conecuh River, which is an Eocene Epoch site where you may find shark teeth and other fossils as well.
Search in that area for mixed rock and clay deposits. Dig up the rocks with the trowel or shovel; put them in a bucket. Carry them to the water to wash them.
Fill the bucket with water and rinse the rock mixture.
Dump the rock mixture onto the sieve and rinse it with water to remove most of the dirt. Examine each rock for fossils.
Weiss Lake and Shale
Travel to locations near Weiss Lake and in the mountain road cuts along Interstate 59. Look for outcroppings of shale that contain shells and other fossils.
Search the layers of loose shale for shells, ferns, and tracks and traces left by prehistoric invertebrates.
Look for variations in the colors of the shale rock. Shale fossils were formed from prehistoric layers of mud. Prime rocks for finding fossils are those in which multiple layers were laid down, one on top of the other.