Well I got down to inverloch which is down on the coast and spent a week as a volunteer at a dig. The site is out on the rocks alongside the seaside, literally a rock shelf with all the problems of tides and rock falls from the cliffs behind it.
It was essentially digging up the hole (a 3 x 5 meter hole dug out of the rock with jackhammers to get to the fossil layer dug out over prior years) which filled up with sand and water every night even though there was a system of tarpolins, girders and mesh. So on account of my plough like digging ability I was able to assist. Then in the day rock was taken out of the layer and then layed out, checked for obvious fossils. The pieces taken out are then worked on by cracking it apart until something is found in the rock or it is reduced to a pile of little stones. I cracked open a piece of rock from the hole with my chisel and hammer and there was an edge of jaw sticking out complete with little teeth, and that has been catalogued and will probably be extracted at a point in the future. It was the jaw from a plant eating sheep sized dinosaur, a hypsilophodontidae.