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Rarest Amber Fossils of the week March 13
Rarest Amber fossils sales of the week March 13th 2026 1) Spider in Burmese amber slab Origin: Hukawng Valley, Kachin State, Myanmar Age: ~98–100 million years Geologic Period: Mid-Cretaceous 2) Museum-Grade Mosquito in Dominican amber bracelet. Origin: Dominican Republic Age: ~15–20 million years Geologic Period: Miocene 3) Museum-Grade Assassin bug in Dominican amber Bracelet Origin: Dominican Republic Age: ~15–20 million years Geologic Period: Miocene 4) Museum-Grade wa
Mar 202 min read


Best Amber sales of the week March 3
This blog tell about our best sales of the week which are highly collectable material
Mar 201 min read


Tardigrades in amber
Hunting for Tardigrades in Amber by Adam Newirth If you’re like me, you excitedly log into the Amberbugs live stream teeming with anticipation and excitement while another wrapped treasure is unveiled, prompting the chat to erupt with “tk.” Maybe you’re first, maybe you’re not, either way, the excitement is palpable. Every live stream feels like a treasure hunt. Will the next piece be a snail? Or a pseudoscorpion? Or maybe something even more rare! Rare Praying Mantis in A
Mar 185 min read


Best Amber sales of the week Feb 27th
This blog is about our best selling amber of the week from 24 feb to 27 feb
Mar 121 min read


Best Of The Month February 2026!
Hello Amber lovers! We've had an exciting month. We got and sold some really great pieces. Both on our website and our Tiktok Live feed (Schedule: M, W, TH 4PM PST @Amberbugs). And we've got 35 members to our website! It is growing fast. I'll have to be more aggressive claiming pieces for our members! Remember, our members section is for the best pieces from the live feed that I take for our members. Prices all stay the same, it's just the best of the best for our members for
Mar 14 min read


Can We Make Dinosaurs from DNA in Amber?
Can we make Jurassic Park in real life? Imagine this: Millions of years ago, an insect, for the purposes of our blog: a tick, found its way onto the back of a dinosaur. The tick did what any tick would do: sank its mouth into the terrible lizard’s skin to enjoy a meal of blood. Satiated for the moment, the tick began to look for another spot. Suddenly, it found itself knocked off its giant prize and fell into a sticky pile of resin from the tree above. Try as it may, the ins
Feb 166 min read
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