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Showing results for tags 'Teeth'.
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- 13 replies
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Hello, im new to the forum and wanted to introduce myself. Im 13 years old but would consider myself decently knowledgeable about fossils for my age. Im from Charleston South Carolina and have grown up hunting and collecting sharks teeth with my dad since I can remember. Recently I have become very interested in learning more about all kinds of fossils. I would even like to follow this passion in the future. My goal is to gain experience, knowledge and help from the forum. Thanks!
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I've found lot's fossils of, I think are teeth, in a site with also many shells located in Portugal. They have different sizes and are cilindrical and straight. Can someone identify what was the animal that had these teeth. Thanks
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I got some marine mammal teeth from Kallo (near Antwerp) Belgium. I've tried to identify these, but find it difficult. Who knows more about this and wants to help me on my way? Squares in centimeters! I think the first three teeth are Delphinodon dividum (True 1912). Clear serrations and striking ''teardrop-shaped tooth crown''
- 12 replies
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Hi, I'm brand new here. I enjoy being out in nature and collecting bones and rocks I find. Just the other day I found this jaw bone on the banks of a creek near my house in El Dorado County California. It looks to be the size of a cow or horse jaw. I would love to know what animal you all think it is from and especially how old it looks. The blueish color of the teeth has me really intrigued. Thanks for any ideas.
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Nothing too crazy in the collection yet just some theropod teeth mostly from HC MT. ID'd (when I bought them) as a nano, a Acheroraptor, Dromaeosaurs and a little bitty tooth I'm not sure of. I have a few ceratopsian bones and teeth, amber and such. There's a few Spino teeth and some low quality Carchardontosaurus teeth I want to get replaced with better ones.
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These were all found in southeastern Oklahoma. I find these occasionally while working in rivers. These were found in a sand bed river. I just want to be able to put a face to these teeth. I have several other shark teeth that I have found in the same area, but will hold off on posting for now. Thanks a lot!
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I have problem with this enigmatic shark tooth. Location- Poland, Zabierzów (Cracow Area) Age- Cretaceous. Turonian Size- 2mm
- 2 replies
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- cracow
- cretaceous
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Working on an Archaeotherium jaw. It is in pretty rough shape and wish the teeth were in better condition, still a neat specimen. It still needs work but what do you guys think so far??
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So I own 4 Spinosaurid teeth from the KemKem beds now between 79MM and 116MM. As looking closer, they can vary a lot between the teeth. Is there any explanation. As most of the people call it the regular Spinosaurus Aegypticus. Looks to me there could have several big spinosaurids lived during the time? I am not as educated as most of you are. Hence the question I'm asking out of curiosity.
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Hello everyone, I have gotten really into meg diving this last year to the point where I am driving down to Venice from Orlando twice a month to dive for teeth. I have started to look into getting black water diving and I am not really sure where to start. Does anyone have any rivers that are good for black water diving? I have heard talk that people do it in the Peace river and the St. Marys and I didn't know if that is where most people go or if there are other rivers people dive that hold a good amount of teeth. I don't want to sound like the guy who is asking for your super secret spots but I'm just trying to find out where I should start to get into this. If anyone does black water diving and ever needs someone to go with I would be very interested in going with you and I would certainly throw in for gas money. I also have my own boat so we cold take it out also if that is an issue you have. Thank you for any information you can give me, Parker
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Found this in Bandera County, Texas. Seems like teeth coming out but bone structure is present. Measures 3” long by 1.5” wide by 2” high.
- 1 reply
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- cretaceous
- fish
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I have two teeth that I found previously somewhere in the Summerville area and stuck in a riker mount. Looking through them today, I noticed one that I did not recognize. In comparing it to others in the mount, I noticed another one that has similar enamel on the root (labial side), although the root is much more curved overall. Can anyone help with these? My areas are heavily Oligocene but some have either an overlying Pliocene formation or Pleistocene lag deposit that produces some megs, great whites, etc. Tooth 1: * 14 mm slant height x 14 mm across * Root is very "built up" on the lingual side * Has strip of enamel over the root on the labial side (similar to the "shelf" on Isurus retroflexus) * Has very small cusps * No nutrient grove or foramen My best guess would be a thresher of some sort, but I could be way off. Tooth 2: * 13mm slant height x 11mm across *Very curved root, not as thick as first tooth *Enamel "ledge" on root on labial side * Has very lumpy tiny cusps * It either has an off-center nutrient grove, or just a conveniently placed line of wear Thank you so much!
- 7 replies
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- shark
- south carolina
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Hello! I found these two teeth while fossil hunting at Point A Dam in Andalusia, AL and noticed that at least one appeared to be more reptilian than shark. Sizes are ~1 cm each Though it was hard to get a decent image, this tooth is extremely flat. This tooth is very round, which led me to believe it may not be a shark’s tooth. Thank you for your time!
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Hello together, I just acquired some little bone and tooth(?) fragments from the rhaetian bonebed near Bebenhausen. Whoever collected them in the seventies wrote "Psephosaurus?, Schmidt page 411" on the label. I think that was rather wishful thinking. There are some bowl-shaped elements of 3-5 mm with a concave side that may show enamel. I tend to think those are some kind of fish teeth, Who can tell me more? Best Regards, J
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Buonasera ! Browsing online looking for KK teeth, I came across a site that sells several products, including these "raptor teeth" from KK. Is this plausible? I don't think I've ever read about dromaeosaurids found in the KKB, furthermore some would seem to have the appearance of being small carcharodontosaurus teeth...
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- dromaesaur
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Hello everyone Thanks for looking. I found these yesterday at a Savannah River Dredge Spoil Island after fairly heavy rains and tides. Unfortunately the dredging and river action damages pretty much everything. Most of what is found is Pleistocene to Miocene. These have me stumped. The following are my guesses as to what the following 5 items are: #1 Camel or Horse Canine? Doesn't look like others that I've found or google image searches-Doesn't have a color/texture change from root to crown-Has a ridge on the back side and sharp edge at the end-Looks too symmetrical to be just phosphate #2 Fish Skull Plate? I've seen one of these before but it isn't a ray crushing plate or sea robin skull #3 1/2 of a Mammal Tooth-Doesn't look like a horse tooth from the chewing surface and doesn't have the angled crown of a tapir tooth-May not be able to ID as too fragmentary #4 Broken 1/2 of a Sloth Tooth-Had sea lettuce growing in it and is badly beaten up-Looks like other sloth teeth that I've found there before but has a little rougher interior structure than the others and is not quite as smooth on the exterior #5 Medium sized bone that looks vaguely jaw like-Thick and tapered to a narrower point-beaten up a little-No tooth sockets visible Any ID's or thoughts would be much appreciated Thanks a bunch
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- 7 replies
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- new fossil id
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Hi all, These two teeth came from the same seller and were put up for sale at the same time. They're so odd, that I thought it might be helpful to post them together since, if they come from the same animal, perhaps they provide more information as a pair than either would alone. Ricardo premax? Pterosaur? Acheroraptor? From the Hell Creek formation in Garfield, Montana CH: About 10mm (both) CBL: Tricky enough that I didn't measure, but can try if needed CBW: Tricky enough that I didn't measure, but can try if needed Mesial Serration Density: about 15/mm Distal Serration Density: about 15/mm (one of them is worn to the point of no serrations on one side, but the other side is about 15/mm, so I assume the missing side would have had serrations and been the same). Strong fluting on one or both sides. Thank you!! TOOTH 1 Possibly smooth side: Ridges: TOOTH 2
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- montana
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How’s the quality of he Spinosaurus teeth
Cris Tang posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hi everyone, May I know how’s the quality of the teeth, please? Is there so many repair? Thank you so much.- 2 replies
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How variable are Hell Creek/Lance Formation crocodilian teeth?
Jurassicbro238 posted a topic in Questions & Answers
I've had these crocodilian teeth from Niobrara County in the Lance Formation for a while now, but I'm not sure how if its possible to ID them beyond "Crocodilian tooth." I've generally heard that the "sharp" morphology are Borealosuchus teeth and the short bulbous teeth are Brachychampsa. Is that a safe rule to follow? I've also noticed that there are some slight differences in the teeth I have (hopefully the pics make it visibile). They're small, but the two on the lower left have noticeable raised striations (not sure what to call it). However, the one on the lower right and on the top are smooth. Is this just a difference in preservation? Identifiable traits to the species level? Positional characteristics? Individual variation? I'd like to hear any opinions on this. Thank you for your time- 16 replies
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Many of the folks here know that I used to be a fossil dealer. I quit about 21 years ago one day when I realized it had become a job. Well, just the other day while I was looking for my Eurypterid stuff, I ran into this box literally full of fossilized teeth and some other things. Here is a short 3 minute video of that find. Enjoy https://youtu.be/4fZgEW3QGEs
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