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Showing results for tags 'China'.
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Hyphalosaurus lingyuanensis
Mart1980 posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
I recently bought this fossil.. What to think about my Hyphalosaurus lingyuanensis from the Yixian Formation of Liaoning province, China. Has some restoration including a the right side being secured back on not that it damaged. Hope for some I hope for honest answers and opinions. I can have some bad news if that is the case ;).- 9 replies
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Hi every! I got this one from an old Chinese medicine store, the owner said they came from Gansu province, China. After I prepared, it turn to be a mammal vertebrae bone but I don’t know exactly the species or at least the family or order. Could anyone help me to have a look about this one? Thank you guys!
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Hello, I see these pieces being sold as apparent precambrian Ediacarans from Guizhou, China. My question is, how does one determine if these are even fossils and biological in origin as opposed to just some random smudge or geological oddity? Is anything known about these sorts of specimens? Thank you.
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Hello everyone , need some help in ID of this tooth from Liaoning Province , Yixian formation , China Size : 0.6 " Thank in advance Guns
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I've never seriously done paleoart before. I have been wanting to try my hand at it for years but passed on it for one reason or another. Recently I fell in love with looking at fossils of keichousaurus. I also love lizards. So I decided yesterday to just do it. So here are my results. If I messed up on the anatomy in any way, please don't hesitate to let me know.
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Keichosaurus real, condition?
Mochaccino posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello, I was wondering if these chinese Keichosaurus looked real? How much reconstruction/restoration if any, and how is their condition? Both slabs are about 9 inches long. First looks ok to me, second's body looks a bit weird. Thank you! 1. 2.- 13 replies
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A diner discovers dinosaur footprints in a restaurant (China)
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
A diner discovered 100 million-year-old dinosaur footprints in a restaurant Erika Ryan and Christopher Intagliata, NPR, July 23, 2022 Yours, Paul H. -
As the title says, I have this partial skull being offered to me and was wondering if any or all of it looked faked? Those teeth set off my alarm a bit as they look awfully big for ictitherium, or am I incorrect in that assessment?
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Dromaeosaurus from China?
patrickhudson posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Your Middle Ear Evolved From Fish Gills, Rare Chinese Fossils Prove Stephen Lunz, IFL Science, June 20, 2022 The open access paper is: Gai, Z., Zhu, M., Ahlberg, P.E. and Donoghue, P.C., 2022. The evolution of the spiracular region from jawless fishes to tetrapods. Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution. vol. 19, May 22, 2022 Yours, Paul H.
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Here is a tail of a marine reptile from the Triassic period. It was found at Fuyuan, Yunnan Province of China, at the same strata with Keichosaurus. Does it look like the tail of Yungguisaurus liae or Placodus inexpectatus? It is 56cm in length.
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First Dinosaur Belly Button Discovered in Fossil From China
BullStrong posted a topic in Fossil News
First Dinosaur Belly Button Discovered in Fossil From China Link: First Dinosaur Belly Button Discovered in Fossil From China | Smart News Science| Smithsonian Magazine -
From the album: My collection in progress
Lycoptera davidi Sauvage 1880 Location: Western Liaoning, China Age: 150 Mya (Upper Jurassic) Measurements: matrix 13x6 cm, fish 7,5 cm long Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Superclass: Osteichthyes Class: Actinopterygii Superorder: Osteoglossomorpha Order: Lycopteriformes Family: Lycopteridae-
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Hi, Does anyone know what these eggs are from? I haven't seen any like these. They are very small--2 inches. From XiXia, Nanyang City,Henan Province. Unfortunately, the condition is poor--with shell missing from one side. But they are quite unique and unusual. They are the first ones like this I have seen for sale. They seem too small to be Dendroolithus. They also appear to be too big for turtle. Edit: Also smaller than Spheroolithus eggs. An offshoot of Dendroolithus/spheroolithus, perhaps--a smaller species that which usually lays those types of eggs. I have seen a similar egg, but slightly bigger, also sold as Segnosaur--but I assume that may be a case of just slapping a probably species name rather than actual scientific basis. Any help would be great.
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We have a nice fliy in our collection, coming from lower cretaceous of Liaoning-Region / CN. Really from an old collection..., got it from a dealer who importet it around 1980. I am a bit unsure what it is..., think it might be a plecoptera, but.. Does someone has a name for it? thanks
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
Decently preserved Asaphid that I purchased from Marc Haensel a while back.-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
I’ve heard lots of suggestions, from Tentaculites to a fragment of a larger organism - I’m not sure what this is.-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
A really cool piece of three Cyclopyge? These trilobites were thought to be pelagic.- 1 comment
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
Cool brach!-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
A close up of one of the Cyclopygid triplets.-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
My favorite Pupiao bug in my collection, an undescribed species of Remopleurides.- 1 comment
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
A small Harpetid trilobite in decent shape.-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
Not sure on the ID for this bug. As stated earlier, these guys are formally undescribed - though I’m sure there’s a genus out there that matches this blind trilobite.-
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From the album: Pupiao Formation Collection
The head of the Phillipsinella. See other images for the body.-
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