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  1. Hello, I have these three replicas of a Alamosaurus, a Mosasaurus, and a T-Rex tooth in my collection, and they seem to be very old. Has someone an Idea how old they are and how rare they have become? Thanks !
  2. Hello everyone! I'm going to start posting fossils individually, to gain more traction on the forum. I'll post a few fossils I am worried are fake or composite today, then repost any fossils I have yet to receive identification for with higher-quality images in about a week. I bought this Edmontosaurus tooth fossil from a somewhat unreliable website online. Is it real? If any of you need more high quality photographs, please tell me. Also, as I don't know where else to post this, I purchased this Tarbosaurus claw replica a while ago. Do any of you know which digit it comes from? Thank you and hope you have a good day!
  3. Hi, I am on the hunt for fake or synthetic amber with inclusions, and only fake or synthetic. The symposium that my society is hosting is having a silent auction and I would love to find someone to approach to make a donation request for a piece of fake amber with an inclusion. I have tried Google but all the results are for how to avoid fake amber, which is the opposite of what I am trying to do.
  4. Hello together, I am proud to present another one of @lormouths beautiful skeletons I have the pleasure to assemble. At first I intended to build it in the nice quadrupedal position from "Dragons of the air" 1901, but it seems that the shoulder girdle doesnt allow it, especially the right arm that is held closely to the torso. Of course it could be depending on cartilage, but atl east looking at Laurents detailed replica bones, it looks wrong to put it in that pose. I missed the opportunity to take a foto of the neatly packed set of bones I found in my christmas parcel. Thanks again Laurent!
  5. Attached are a few pictures of woolly mammoth teeth. Some of the pictures are real (per the seller) and some are replicas. My question is without additional information (which I think a seller could fabricate) how can you tell the real from the replica?! Thank you!
  6. Hello, here my last skeleton : Dimorphodon Macronyx full size, based on the specimen NHMUK PV OR 41212 discovered by Richard Owen. Enjoy!
  7. A supposed fossil seen on a website, based on my research its probably based off of or is a specimen of the genus Platycephalichthys Thoughts on if its a replica or real?
  8. Quite regularly, questions turn up about the authenticity of Keichosaurus fossil specimens. Until now, most, if not all, were natural, but mostly just very poorly prepped. Would you like to show off "real" fakes, casts or replicas of Keichosaurus? I would like to get a feeling for them, at least from pics. If there already exists such a topic somewhere else in the forum, please put a link in this topic. Thank you very much! Franz Bernhard
  9. i,m joe, a retired welder, i built myself a small workshop in my garden, and as a hobby, i now make replica " dinosaur" skeletons from steel and stainless steel !i thought you might appreciate how much time/ effort goes into making them !,firstly all parts are " hand cut and shaped" on my anvil mostly, going off pictures of the real thing i then try to work out how many bones etc are say in the ribcage and so on, all joints are fully welded/ de burred and polished, and are then sprayed with a protective metal laquer ," the t.rex" i made was heated to a point where the carbon molecules in the steel "exite" turning the steel into the colours you see!, again then sprayed with a protective laquer, i do have more pics of other stuff which i will show later.
  10. This is more something to smile about: The seller claims that this is a (scaled down) replica of a genuine faerie find from Dartmoor (which was even shown on TV!). If this would cost just a few euros I might have even bought this for fun, but the seller is asking about 350€ for it. That is then not worth the fun for me.
  11. Hi guys, I recently purchased this piece from an auction house here in Ireland, apologies as this is a replica display piece and not a real fossil, so I'm not sure if I'm posting in the correct discussion! I'm fairly certain that it is not anatomically correct at all, but if anyone has any information as to what species this replica represents that would be much appreciated! It is labelled as originating from the Devon Zoology Centre and has the dimensions: 92cm H x 155cm W x 55cm D.
  12. Making replicas of my fossils has always been something very interesting to me, but for the longest time I wasn't sure about how it should be done, casting although it could preserve a lot of detail can be pricy if you want to make replicas of multiple different fossils and it is something that I am just very unfamiliar with. From that point my attention turned to 3d printing as this technology can allow us to replicate objects fairly inexpensively, but when I started to looking at 3d scanning for actually making the models I found that scanners were not all too cheap either ranging from about 500 dollars into the thousands. This is when I discovered photogrammetry, which allows you to make 3d models of objects with just a number of regular photographs taken from different angles, no need for expensive tools to scan the object. I found a free program called 3DF Zephyr that allows me to upload up to 50 pictures of a certain item and construct a 3d model from them. Yesterday I installed the program and immediately went to find one of my fossils that would be good to start off with, I wanted something where I wouldn't need to scan it from the bottom and something with good surface that would work well with the software. I thought that my Flexicalymene ouzergui from Morocco should be perfect for this. I read that you should take pictures so that every desired point of the object is seen from at least 3 different angles and so I took the bug and started doing that, I used 3 different elevations for the camera and rotated the bug taken pictures from many different angles, I ended up with a total of 45 photos. I then uploaded all of these directly into the software and it used all but 1 photo. It took a few hours to construct point clouds of a bunch of different points on the bug and some time after to reconstruct a mesh from that. What I ended up with looked pretty good and I was really happy with it for my first attempt, especially since I have heard that it may take several for you to get the model looking correct but nonetheless there were some issues with weird floating geometry around the bug. To address that I first selected everything disconnected from the model and removed that, then I took a lasso tool to select and remove all of the blobs attached to the bug that I didn't need. Here is what the model looked like before and after this: Now I saved the mesh as an OBJ and brought it into a different program to fix all the holes in it, make it solid instead of just the hollow shell I got from the scan and smooth over certain parts. This step was very successful and the model looked great, now it was time to print it. I took it into the next program to scale it properly and slice it for printing, I scales it roughly to the same size of the original bug and added all the needed parts to print it. The first print got disconnected and failed but then I made some slight changes to the model and leveled out the print bed, after that it was very late and I went to sleep but woke up today to a perfect copy of my Trilobite, it had some supports holding it up which were a bit reluctant to disconnect but after a bit of cleanup it looked great. Here is the finished print alongside the original: This has been a really fun thing to try out and now I want to do it with some more fossils, I think the next one I am going to try will be a small crinoid and then a more challenging model like a brachiopod where I will need to do some processing with photos as I will be taking pictures from all sides of the object. I encourage anyone interested to try it for themselves, if you want any help or additional information as to how I did certain things here I would be happy to discuss that with you. Thank you for looking, Misha
  13. Douglas Ripsom

    titanoboa vertebra

    It's been nearly two years since last I posted, but I'm back with one of my latest creations, a lifesize replica of a bone from Titanoboa cerrejonensis. The smaller bone next to it is a vertebra from a(n estimated) 10-12-foot anaconda which I used for reference. Enjoy!
  14. Borrowed this original museum replica of Australopithecus africanus otherwise known as the beautiful Mrs Ples. I'm planning on making a ceramic replica of this positive foam cast. The detail on this replica is pretty amazing, it has the bone texture, cracks and the reconstruction of the missing pieces of the skull. Looking forward to sharing this project with the forum.
  15. I have spent many hours this week scouring all the great meg photos and data on the site, however I have a very large plaster cast of a meg tooth that the Dean wants prepped, restored and made ready for a board meeting in two weeks. Good news is I can make that happen. this is a poor detail cast and has had sloppy grinder work done it in addition to at least three layers of badly applied spray enamel. Good news is I have it in a xylene/toluene/dichloromethane bath to strip the paint and preserve the plaster. bad news is I’m having trouble properly scaling the serrations on my practice runs with monster clay. I’m trying to perfect the technique before I start the apoxy work on Sunday . wondering if anyone could provide some serration macros with a millimeter scale from a meg tooth in the 5-8 inch range, I’d be forever grateful. I’ll post a step by step in the proper part of the forum when I start the actual project.
  16. I saw this while I was searching for Crato Formation fish for sale and I found this turtle that sold quite awhile ago online. On closer inspection it looks carved and painted on, but I wanted to see what everyone else thought!
  17. Resist_Hoarding

    Basement recovery part 2 Reptile Replicas?

    Part 2 of my Fathers basement I have 2 crocodile skulls and one turtle. I believe they are Replicas? but the teeth on the crocodile are Fossils? once again I believe these are out of Morocco in the 70s or 80s? Thank you
  18. Hey there, before I found this forum, I had hopes and dreams of collectiong an affordable Droaeosauridae collection. Teeth are Teeth so they can't be very complicated and I found so many deales who were selling "Raptor" Teeth. After a few discussions with you guys I know now, that you basically need a doctorate to spot the genuine teeth and that 95% of the dealers are selling snarge. Since then, @Troodon is known to me as "Destroyer of Dreams" . So, before I fling myself in the Art of "don't buy fake teeth", I wanted to start with a few replicas. This opened the door to a lot of new horrors ... and questions. So if it's ok with you, I'd like to ask a few of those based on two replicas I already bought by highlighting questionable terminology. I roughly understand how a fossil replica is made (mold and cast method), but not really the context of the description. It seems to contradict itself. So, first of all, I talked with the "DreamDestroyer" about this replica and he stated that the skull doesn't look right. I bought it nevertheless, because I liked it as Art. What exactly is this? A life sized "actual" skull with reconstructed elements? On the claw replica: So a X-Generation cast? The reconstructed part confuses me. Thanks again and best regards Sebastian
  19. Dino1

    Replicas vs real

    Hey guys, has anyone here bought a fossil replica? If so does it look like the real thing? Does it feel the same? I’m thinking of buying some replicas because I can’t afford some real fossils.
  20. Hi I found this with the rest of my fossil replicas and was wondering if it could be a Rex tooth or another type of Tyrannosaur tooth. I don’t know if I can post this here or get an ID on it since it’s a replica but I got it at the Royal Tyrell Museum in Drumheller, Canada it’s a replica of one of there specimens. And I just wanted to know what it could be since it seemed strange to me on how skinny and long it is, Thank you!!
  21. Aloha, here is the best of my collection. Since I moved together with my girlfriend, only the small and nice samples are on display, one showcase out of three. Looking forward to the day when we will have some more space. So it is a crowded mix of fossils, minerals, recent beachfinds and mosty selfmade or altered skeleton models. Sadly, only a small percentage of my fossils is selffound, although nearly all of the beach stuff is. There is the "poultry showcase", dedicated to Birds and pterosaurs (Parrot skull is a replica of course, as is the Pterosaur plate regrettably) The big showcase is a composite image because I could not get all into one foto. The whales you may know from the Palaeorecreation thread. Best Regards, J
  22. Douglas Ripsom

    Thylacoleo partial-skull replica

    Greetings, all: I'm new here, so I apologize if I did something skewy on my first submission. Anyway, I'd like to share an image or two of a thylacoleo carnifex skull replica I've been working on (well, OFF and on) for the past two years. It's a partial skull, but I did that to enhance (what I thing) may be the "realism" of the sculpt, since it's not common to find a "perfect" specimen in the field. Anyway, enjoy!
  23. After the Velociraptor skull, I finally finished another very long project: the baby T. rex skull designed by Inhuman Species, a 3D printed museum quality fossil replica of a 2-3 years old Tyrannosaurus rex. I really love this project and I made a video of the making from the 3D printing to the painting - I hope you like it. If you're wondering, I 3D printed the skull with the Alfawise U30 in PLA plastic; please watch the video and turn on subtitles to learn more about the tools and the making processes. If your're addicted or interested in 3D printing, you can't miss those topics:
  24. Zenmaster6

    Fake or Real Megalodon?

    I work at a fossil and mineral store and they own a 3.5 - 4.0 inch megalodon tooth (the basal of the tooth is broken slightly but its still beautiful) The serrations are smooth but visible, the bourlette is defined and a darker color than the enamel. However I have my doubts about buying it. They went to a fossil show in Colorado years ago and bought it from someone at a stand (none of my employees or boss are "fossil savvy".) I'm worried about spending $ on a fake megalodon tooth. I work this Saturday and will upload photos of me holding it from the case before I decide to buy it. I saw no seams on it from a possible mold but it just seems too cheap for the size. Its color is all black, which is a good sign but those can be easily faked too. I know, nobody can determine until I post a picture, However I did want to ask if there was any specific way people use to identify if a megalodon is fake or real? I heard megalodon teeth are cold to the touch and the plastics are slightly warmer.
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