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Showing results for tags 'Morocco'.
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Is This "Scabriscutellum Furciferum" Trilobite Legitimate?
MrBones posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello, I saw this while looking for affordable trilobites. The seller said that the trilobite is around 1.5 inches long. To me it looks like the real deal, however, I am no expert, and would like some confirmation. -
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- ammonite
- desmoceras?
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https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2023/10/358110/us-repatriates-250-million-year-old-fossils-of-3-different-species-to-morocco
- 18 replies
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- basilosaurid
- heritage
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New Trilobite Acquisition - Real?
RodX posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello all, I've just got a Coltraneia effelesa from Ma'der, Taharajat, Outfaten, Morooco, app. 410-390 mio. years. Is this ok? It's glued (you see with UV), a hot needle cold not penetrate it and acetone did nothing to the little bugger. Rod @rew @piranha @Kane- 5 replies
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- coltraneia effelesa
- devonian
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fossil identification while shopping
thereptileguy5432 posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
I live in morocco and everytime i got to Marrakech,i would go buy fossils from shops and i always recognize 50 percent of the time if it's fake or real but that is the problem,i can never know if it's real or false with teeth and i was just wandering if anyone knows a way to identify a fossil while buying it and not seem suspicious to the seller. And also this is a tooth i bought last week of the mosasaurus family.the mesurement is in cm.- 4 replies
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- fake?
- identification
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Hi, This is only photo until the tooth I arrived--I bought it when I saw it because of the low price and the fact it is quite unusual. And this was the only pic on the site. A tooth, sold as crocodile from Kem Kem. 9mm in height. It looks a bit like Hamadasuchus, but with that ridge down the center. A different positional Hamadasuchus tooth? Or a juvenile? cheers I will post more pics when I can.
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Hello everyone ! I have these two fossil vertebrae from the Kem Kem formation from Morocco (no exact location) and I can't identify them. Can someone help me please? They are very different from each other. The red vertebra n.1 has an oval shape and has mirrored holes on both sides, while above it has a larger some. I initially thought it was Hybodus or Onchopristis, but I'm not sure, it could be many other shark species. The white vertebra n.2 does not have any type of hole on the edge and is almost perfectly round, I believe it is a completely different species from the first. Thank you.
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Hello Everyone, It feels like Deja Vu .. but it is that time of year again .. again. Wait, have I posted this already. A photo dump, of the few photos I snapped, of some of my more interesting finds. The Crowne Plaza had some enourmous mineral specimens and some fantastic fossils on offer this year. Though most were way outside of my budget. But photos are FREE ! The cutest fake fossil ? Yes ... and I almost bought one. I kick myself still for not pulling the trigger. Selfies with minerals anyone ?? .. yes please. Children for scale. I like it and I'm sticking with it, because I'm a rebel. Who needs a proper scale anyway. 1 FINN Height Unit (well, you can't see his feet) My daughter found her favorite, but alas we could not roll this one home. Moroccan tooth. Most likely Auriculatus. Fantastic price for such a nice tooth. They are normally quite beaten up. My other Moroccan finds. I love these for stocking stuffers The dealer I frequent from South Carolina. They are black water divers and have the best cetacean teeth and other bits and pieces. Great for school visits etc ... this stuff is sold by the pound. A sloth tooth partial. Mastadon (or Gomphothere ? .. probably a Gomph tooth) Tooth Cusp Extinct Billfish Vertebra Cheers, Brett
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Taxonomy from Taverne et al. 2015. Palaeobalistum gutturosum, originally described by Arambourg in 1954 from the Cenomanian deposits of Jebel Tselfat in Morocco, was doubtfully ranged in the genus Nursallia by PoyatoAriza & Wenz in 2002. Taverne et al. 2015 established the new genus Paranursallia for "Nursallia" gutturosa. Etymology. — From the Greek para, near, close to, and the generic name Nursallia. Diagnosis for the genus Paranursallia from Taverne et al. 2015, p. 2018: "Nursalliinae with a large head, a wide orbit and a very short snout. Paired broad prefrontals present. Short mesethmoid. Parasphenoid short and straight. Mandible triangular and as deep as long. Wide dermosphenotic. A large and deep “V”-shaped notch at the ventral junction between the skull and the cleithrum. First neural arches fused in a large synarcual articulated on the rear of the skull. First 7 or 8 neural spines autogenous. 27 to 30 vertebral segments before the epichordal series. Neural and haemal arches interlocked by two pre- and two postzygapophyses. Dorsal and anal fin with about 70 pterygiophores each." Line drawing of the head from Taverne et al. 2015, p. 223: Identified by Prof. L. Capasso, Università degli Studi G. d'Annunzio Chieti e Pescara, Italy. References: Arambourg C. (1954) Les poissons crétacés du Jebel Tselfat. Notes et mémoires du Service Géologique du Maroc, 118: 1-188. Poyato-Ariza F. J. & Wenz S. (2002) A new insight into pycnodontiform fishes. Geodiversitas 24 (1): 139-248. Taverne L., Layeb M., Layeb-Tounsi Y. & Gaudant J. (2015) Paranursallia spinosa n. gen., n. sp., a new Upper Cretaceous pycnodontiform fish from the Eurafrican Mesogea. Geodiversitas 37 (2): 215-227. http://dx.doi.org/10.5252/g2015n2a3 Capasso, L. (2020) SEGNALAZIONE DEL PICNODONTIFORME PARANURSALLIA GUTTUROSA (ARAMBOURG, 1954) NEI CALCARI DOLOMITICI DEL CRETACEO SUPERIORE DI GARA SBAA, MAROCCO SUDORIENTALE. Atti Mus. Civ. St. Nat. Trieste 61, p. 153-162.
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- akrabou formation
- gara es sbâa
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Every year at the Denver fossil show it seems like I pick up some unidentified Kem Kem material. This is because for one it’s cheap, but also because it’s kinda fun to investigate this material. Here are eight pieces I picked up as a bulk set. I have some idea about identification on each of these but would love to hear other’s input. In the following pictures I have the top row being archosaur fossils and the bottom row being fish fossils. My guesses: 1. Caudal(?) vertebra centrum. Croc or theropod, but probably croc. 2. Croc dorsal vertebra 3. Croc centrum 4. Theropod pedal phalanx. Specifically, the distal-most phalanx of toe 1 (the “dew claw”). Narrowest ID I think I could guess we would be Ceratosauria indet., should probably be labeled as Theropoda indet. 5. Two fused fish vertebrae. Are these identifiable any more than this? 6. Gar or gar-like vertebra 7. Chondrichthyan fish vertebra. Maybe Onchoptistis numida? Can that determination even be made? 8. A gigantic ganoid scale. Any guesses just based on size? I’m unfamiliar with all the monster fish in this rock unit. Thanks :)
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- abelisaur
- abelisaurid
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Recently I received from my girlfriend a supposed Acanthoceras Ammonite. We both would love to know if it's faked in some way or real. We are already very grateful.
- 2 replies
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- acanthoceras
- ammonite
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Hiya everyone I bought a small collection of trilobites last week. most are labelled, except these 3. They're Moroccan, and my guess would be Cambrian or Ordovician.
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I've had a few e-mails and PMs, so thanks for those everybody, but just a message here to let you all know the latest. Last night, a little after 11 pm, the sofa started jiggling about, so I asked wifey if she was bouncing around and she asked me the same thing. Then we noticed that the pictures on the walls were flapping about and there were ripples in the coffee. We knew what was happening and after a couple of minutes, it stopped. Fes has been spared as we are a considerable distance from the epicentre, though places further south and west have been badly hit. I've spent today confirming that the people I know down there are okay and, thankfully, they are. wifey and I went and gave blood, there's not much else we can do. Thousands are dead, injured and missing down there. It was completely unexpected and terribly sad.
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- earthquake
- moroccan earthquake
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I bought this tooth on impulse a few days ago. To me it looks like a fully rooted Plesiosaur tooth. It has all the characteristics of being from the Kem Kem Beds aswell. I've not seen any other rooted teeth to compare it to. So, did I score, or did I buy a crocodile tooth?
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- aquatic reptile
- crocodile
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True Starfish or Fake Starfish?
Lucid_Bot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Howdy! I'm just wondering if this is real. I've never seen one like this. It's Moroccan, Ordovician, Asteroidea or true Starfish. Thanks for the help.-
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- asteroidea
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Does anyone have recommendation for website, forum page or book to id fossilised shark teeth? Im hoping to add some shark teeth for my collection but I would like to study bit more about them. I think I most likely encounter Moroccan and US ones. Thanks for the replies.
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A shark tooth from my collection: a Cretalamna maroccana specimen
gond posted a topic in Member Collections
Hello everyone, it's been a while since I last posted on the forum In the last year my collection has reached 33 specimens, so I guess that "road to 35" is extremely close! Today I wanted to show you a specimen I acquired very recently, specifically last March! Species: Cretalamna maroccana (Arambourg, 1935) Size: 2.5 tall, ~3.0 cm long Age: 72-66 mya (Late Cretaceous, Maastrichtian) Origin: Ouled Abdoun basin (Morocco) About this fossil: a nicely preserverd shark tooth, with only a small hole on the front part of the tooth's root; I especially appreciate the two lateral cusplets, which are extremely nice to admire. Definitely one of my favorites!- 8 replies
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- chondrichthyes
- cretaceous
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https://www.moroccoworldnews.com/2023/08/357255/discovery-of-ancient-dinosaur-offers-glimpse-into-moroccos-diverse-prehistoric-ecosystem
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- abelisaurid
- late cretaceous
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Mosasaur jaw, Morocco: Real or created?
hemipristis posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
hello everyone, I came across this, and the price is fair. Thought it would make a nice office conversation piece. Of course the question is whether it's real or Memorex---sorry, dating myself there, lol---not. I don't see anything glaring, but this isn't my forte. So, thoughts: From Morocco or Made in Morocco? I appreciate any thoughts or recommendations -
Currently working on cataloging my fossil collection as best as I can, and am uncertain on this one. I don’t doubt the authenticity of the fossil itself or stated region based on other examples, but the “Spinosaurus sp.” given by the plate it came with feels awful presumptuous, so I’ve currently settled on a sweeping “Spinosauridae” classification. Does anything about this point to something more specific, or something more vague? Can provide more/better images if needed.
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Possible Globidens phosphaticus tooth?
Othniel C. Marsh posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
I recently saw a globular mosasaur tooth up for sale labelled as Globidens phosphaticus. I am conscious, however, that a number of teeth labelled as Globidens are in fact from Igdamanosaurus, Igdamanosaurus aegypticus in particular, so is this tooth actually a Globidens? Thanks in advance for any guidance Othniel -
Spinosaur-tooth: keep your eyes open for finest details
rocket posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
We have a lot of Spino-teeth in our stock, most of them are nice and "common". Some show fantastic details like fine folds and very difficil structures. I show some pics of one I did pics last days showing this structures better than all the others complete tooth has approx. 15 cm or a bit less- 3 replies
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- cretaceous
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we have a hugh collection of vertebrate-fossils, many of them come from the KemKem-Beds in Morocco. One of this cenomanian remains is a bit strange and other than all the others. Reminds a bit to a croc, a bit to a Pliosaur. But, never seen a similar one... what do you think? Lenght is approx. 7 cm, no restaurations
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- cretaceous
- crocodylomorph
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Hi all, Wondering if you could help me identify these teeth found from the Kem Kem group. The top row I believe are Pterosaur teeth (am I correct in saying that they can only be identified as Ornithocheirid indets.?) The second row, I'm not too sure. Could they be fish? Thanks in advance, Josh
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Came across this tooth on the internet. Although not my own interest, it does make an interesting conversation. How much of this tooth is real? It's 7,5 inches in length. Spinosaurid.