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Showing results for tags 'aurora north carolina'.
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From the album: MY FOSSIL Collection - Dpaul7
Sinistrofulgur yeehaw Gastropod Aurora, North Carolina, USA Lower Pleistocene (2.588 ± 0.005 and 0.781 ± 0.005 million years ago) Sinistrofulgur is a genus of large sea snails with left-handed shell-coiling, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Busyconidae. Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Mollusca Class: Gastropoda Order: Neogastropoda (Superfamily: Buccinoidea Family: Busyconidae Genus: Sinistrofulgur Species: yeehaw-
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I am hoping I have these correct: #1 - Pleuromeris decemcostata #2 - An oyster, but which one? #3 - A bivalve - Unio?
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Hello everyone, I'm sorry I haven't posted this before now but things never seem to slow down around here. I made the trip to Aurora for the festival and took a few photos of their new mine room and the auction.
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I was going through some bags of fossils that I found several years ago at the PCS Lee Creek Mine in Aurora North Carolina and I ran across this tooth. I'm guessing it is a Dolphin tooth but I was hoping for confirmation. The odd thing about it to me is the straight, peg like profile. It measures 1-9/16" long with a small portion of the tip of the tooth missing. It is just an odd shape tooth for my experience but not sure what else it would be other than Dolphin. With such a long root, would this tooth be from towards the back of the jaw and possibly explaining the peg like shape?