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Showing results for tags 'baby'.
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Found this in glacial deposits in E Kansas. I understand that it is not a complete tooth, so I’m not expecting a miracle I’ve never found a tooth with whorls like this one, so I’m a little lost. As always, I appreciate the help!
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In 2018 I made a trip to the Jurassic Museum of Asturias (MUJA) and visited the footprint site of Playa de la Griega. The site has footprints of sauropods and allosaur theropods from 154 million years ago. In the same deposit I found a rock with what at first glance seems to be a footprint, even on some finger you can see what I think is a toe claw. Being so small, I thought it would be from a baby Allosaurus. The setting of the site is coastal, at that time the area was a beach. I doubt that the fossil could be from any bivalve but I am not an expert. Can someone who knows about footprints help me please? If you need more photos, do not hesitate to ask! (The size of the footprint is 3cm long x 2,5 cm) Thanks.
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I have this very tiny tyrannosaurid tooth from hell creek formation, south dakota. Im wondering if it's possible to know if the tooth is from a infant nano or t-rex? Distal serration density: about 6/mm Can't see any intact serrations on the mesial side. Crown Height: 4 mm Crown base-lenght: 2,5 mm Crown base-width: under 1 millimeter, about 0,8 mm to roughly estimate (very hard to measure this one).
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Hi there everyone! I thought I would ask for some help in properly identifying this specimen that I recently acquired. This specimen is said to be a baby/juvenile M. Columbi tooth found in North Florida. The specimen is very obviously worn and has pink patches due to algae buildup. I’ve included several photos below: Front, Right, Left, Bottom, Bottom, Top (Chewing surface), Top (Chewing surface). I’m fairly certain this is a mammoth tooth but I’d greatly appreciate a positive ID since I can’t find much information about specimens like this online. My real inquiry is identifying whether this specimen would be considered as a milk tooth and if it’s partial. From my understanding, it’s missing most of its root which would obviously make it partial, but I’ve highlighted a section in red where I would’ve thought the rest of the tooth would go. Thank you guys in advance! You all are always extremely insightful and I truly feel like a part of this community. Cheers!
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Hey all Meet Jethro, possibly the youngest member (by association) of TFF Born on the 1st of February, he weighed 7lb 1oz / 3205g Mum and Jethro are doing well This is a 125mm Megalodon tooth next to him - it was not used to cut the umbilical cord! I did take the tooth to hospital with me though haha, I told my partner a few weeks before his birth I'd take this pic and I am fossil mad enough to do it. His birth and a house move a few days ago means life recently has been very, very busy He has a pair of shark socks and a shark beanie
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Hatched egg with baby/embryonic remains?
FF7_Yuffie posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Before I go further with getting extra photos and details and measurements of it--- a quick question, but are eggs like this, supposedly with small embryonic bone pieces actually available quite widely? I am surprised to have been offered it--like I thought these were like gold dust. But are they a thing and do they come up for sale rather than being museum pieces/studied? Is it worth me inquiring further about it and getting extra photos--or are eggs with embryonic/baby remains so rare that this isn't worth looking more into as it likely isn't actually baby/embrionic (The white clusters in the stone are apparently the baby bones--or are they jsut stones and gravel?). If they are a thing--it can be assumed that the nest/egg was destroyed shortly after birth, rather than the egg being cracked open during predation or something? Or it is impossible to tell. It is first I have seen one with supposed baby remains for sale which immediately made me think it's not worth looking more into. It's from Ganzhou by the way. 1918891949_BoneEgg.mp4 -
This was originally a rock that I thought looked like it was in the shape of a small hip bone or something. I collected it in Marlboro NJ a few years ago, but just recently got the urge to tinker with it. I started to dissolve some of the rock away. After about a quarter inch was removed I thought it looked like the upper half of a newborn or embryotic dinosaur that had been slightly crushed. I have been told it is just a concretion, but I am still convinced it is a baby dino. I have no idea how this would happen. However,. All the pieces are there Eyes, ears, nose, mouth, spinal cord, chest cavity, arms. I believe the large ear looking thing is the crest folded down. You can even make out little fingers and two lungs when looking at it in person. Let me know if anyone else sees this or if I am delusional.
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Baby Megalodons Were 6-Foot-Long Womb Cannibals NY TIMES Soft Paywall Link
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a friend of mine showed this to me and i thought it was fascinating we think it might be a type of flying dinosaur?
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My uncle lived in Davenport, Iowa. He gave me a bunch of items like this 30 years ago when I was like 9 years old. I do not know where this was found, or if it is real. Thanks for any insight! Dan
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I recently found something amazing for sale,it is claimed to be a fossilized dino embryo. It is said that this is fossillized seed or brain but later identified it as a dino.I found something similar but throw it away because mom said that it was just a stone :(.
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I see on every one's favourite auction site there is a baby (young) T-Rex for sale. Not without controversy. A bit more info here: https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/apr/16/baby-t-rex-for-sale-online-paleontology-outcry
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Greetings! I have in my collection what I believe to be a baby Enchodus marchesettii from Lebanon. The fish is about an inch long and bears a close resplendence to my adult Enchodus. I was wondering if anyone else here has a confirmed baby Enchodus and could send some pictures so I could compare! I'll hopefully get around to posting a picture of it soon!
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Hi, I recently acquired this small theropod tooth. It is from Hell Creek, South Dakota. What is interesting about this little tooth is that it has a very rounded base and large serrations compared to tooth size. I tried to have it ID'd but I got multiple answers like Troodon, Dromaeosaur, or even the hatchling of a large theropod (Tyrannosaurus.) The tooth measures 3/16". Thanks! Any help would be appreciated.
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