The yellow Pietra Leccese building stone of Italy's heel preserves a famous Miocene marine fauna — including Otodus megalodon. Outcrops appear in road cuts, quarries, and coastal cliffs around Lecce, Cursi, and Melpignano. Italian heritage rules govern collecting.
Most material comes from active building-stone quarries during cutting, often donated to Museo di Storia Naturale del Salento. Authorized academic teams work the units with Soprintendenza permits.
Casual collecting is restricted. The MUSA Museum (Lecce) and Salento Natural History Museum (Calimera) are the public-facing window. Quarry visits arrange via Salento universities.
Italian D.lgs 42/2004 (cultural heritage code) governs fossils. Collecting requires Soprintendenza authorization; significant finds belong to the State.
Trophy = headline find · Rare = real score · Uncommon = some trips · Common = most trips.
The beachcomber's bonus round — what else the geology gives up.
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