Neat. Kinosternids (mud and musk turtles) and Emydids (pond and river turtles) actually lay oblong eggs. Chelydrids (snappers) and Trionychids (softshells) lay spherical eggs.
Thanks - I'll try to post a photo. They were not as round as most turtle eggs I've seen. About 3cm long submerged in 8cm water. No sign of a ripped open nest.
Watersnakes actually bear live young. As do Garter and Ribbon Snakes, Queen and Crayfish Snakes, Pit Vipers (excluding the Bushmaster) and many others. Could have been turtle eggs that were snatched up by a predator and dropped, or flooded over. Mud and musk turtles will often lay their eggs under a log rather than burying them, and occasionally the make-shift nests flood.
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