During your play on Animal Crossing: New Horizons you can get various types of animals and collectibles to be entrusted to the Blatero museum. In this guide I will talk, in particular, about fossils, explaining how to get them and which ones will need more pieces to be completed.
For more information on what to exhibit in the Blatero museum, I refer you to our guides on Volpolo fish, insects and works of art, as well as our guide with all the solutions of the game.
- Where to get the fossils
- All the fossils in the game
- Single fossils
- Ankylosaurus
- Archelone
- Brachiosaurus
- Grumbling
- Deinonic
- Dimetrodon
- Diplodocus
- Iguanodon
- Mammoth
- Megalocero
- Ophthalmosaurus
- Pachycephalosaurus
- Parasaurus
- Plesiosaur
- Pteranodon
- Quetzalcoatlus
- Smilodon
- Spinosaurus
- Stegosaurus
- Tyrannosaurus
- Triceratop
Where to get fossils and how to make the most of them
Mainly you will get the fossils from the "cracks”That you will find on the land of the various islands. Just equip a shovel and press the X button below them to unearth its contents.
Every day at 5:00 in the morning they will be generated 4 slots, and if you don't unearth any the day before they will increase to a maximum of 6.
The cracks will also be found on the islands accessible with Nook's miles coupons, so between one search for the perfect inhabitant and the other it won't be a bad idea to dig all the ones you find.
Each fossil you will find can be donated the first time to Blatero to exhibit it at the museum, while the duplicates will be sold by Mirco and Marco or exhibited wherever you want on the island.
All the fossils in the game
In total you will get 73 fossils, some singles and others composed of multiple pieces.
In the museum, however, they will be organized in dirty 3, with the first dedicated to most of the "single pieces", the second to dinosaurs and the third to large mammals.
Single fossils
Ankylosaurus
Archelone
Brachiosaurus
Grumbling
Deinonic
Dimetrodon
Diplodocus
Iguanodon
Mammoth
Megalocero
Ophthalmosaurus
Pachycephalosaurus
Parasaurus
Plesiosaur
Pteranodon
Quetzalcoatlus
Smilodon
Spinosaurus
Stegosaurus
Tyrannosaurus
Triceratop