8 beaches
Best Beaches for Fossil Hunting Beaches
Maryland's Calvert Cliffs run 30 miles along the western Chesapeake and contain one of the world's richest Miocene-era fossil deposits. Erosion constantly drops new material onto the beach — sharks' teeth (Carcharocles megalodon chief among them), whale bones, crocodile scutes, and 600+ other species date back 10-20 million years. The fossil hunting season is technically year-round, but winter and spring storms expose the most new finds. Bring a sieve, low tide is your friend, and never chip fossils out of the cliffs themselves — that's both illegal and dangerous.
What to look for
Look for beaches south of the Chesapeake Beach area where the cliffs are tallest. Low tide, just after a big rain, is prime.
Ranked by Today's Conditions
Lakeport State Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Brownies Beach (Bayfront Park)
Ideal for a beach walk.
Flag Ponds Nature Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Westmoreland State Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Dares Beach Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Purse State Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Petoskey State Park
Ideal for a beach walk.
Calvert Cliffs State Park
Ideal for a beach walk.