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Fossil Turtle? Placochelys
Lucid_Bot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello, I'm looking to purchase some more specimens and was really curious about this one. It is supposedly placochelys from China and Triassic. The price just seems way too low for a specimen such as this. All help is appreciated.- 14 replies
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another chinese bird, is it real?
Microraptorfan posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Real Dinosaur Egg? Macroolithus
Lucid_Bot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Keichousaurus fossil
Microraptorfan posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Chinese bird fossil
Microraptorfan posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
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Hi, Can someone shed some insight into what this could be? They are from the Guanshan biota (Cambrian Wulongqing Formation, Yunnan, China). 5-6cm. My first thoughts were a Vetulicolian "head", but if the tail was lost I see no sign of previous attachment. It has a smooth, unbroken border all-around.
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Hello there! trying to find out what these are. I posted to a Facebook group and they all are saying gomphotheres possibly platybelodon and I would really appreciate a confirmation on this if possible. I’m thinking they are juvenile or baby teeth. The label says mastodon/China. My dad bought these in the 90’s so I’m trying to figure them out. Is there a safe way to clean them up more? Also if you could tell me if they are upper or lower I would love to know that also. Thank you.
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This is an Enantiornithes bird found at Liaoning of China. Note the chest region in which it looks like remnant of skin (and feathers around the body too). Also, there is a pair of long tail feathers. What do you think about its authenticity?
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No fossils found, but picked up a 10,000-year-old relic. Anyang river, Henan, China
hiposong posted a topic in Fossil Hunting Trips
Long time no see! How are you everyone?! Here's the story.On June 20, we had just stopped raining, it was cloudy, and I thought it wasn't too hot, so I went to look for a fossil that I had found earlier. It suddenly looked like a spindle worm. But the structure is different. I don't know what it is. Who can tell me? Trapezoid, 2cm long, 1cm wide.Found in the Anyang River. Wow, let me start by sharing with you what I had for breakfast. This kind of food is only available in our city. It's called 'Bian Fen Cai(You know KFC, we jokingly call it BFC)'.Transparent noodles are made of sweet potatoes.Green vegetables, tofu and pig's blood are added and stewed in bone broth.Why don't many regions eat animal blood? Difficult question, but we have a lot of blood food here, and there's a legend that goes back a long time.During the hunting days here, blood and guts were difficult to preserve, so the men turned them into food, bringing easy-to-preserve meat to the women and children of the camp. Digress, this is delicious. Why have I been missing for so long? In 2021, we had a lot of rain here, and my car went for a swim like this. So I can't go far away.So I went by bike. It only took me an hour. Digress again,I miscalculated. There was no sun, but the earth was steaming.When I was frustrated at not finding such a fossil, I casually picked up a rock with the stone skipping.I suddenly realized that the Anyang River had no such stones. It was covered in mud, but I could tell it was flaky mica sandstone.Between this rock source and the Anyang River, there are other rivers that isolate the sediment.So it has to do with Cultural relic. Yes, its edges are ground. There are perforations on both sides, but they're not pierced. Found some information, it should belong to the Xiaonanhai culture.Carbon-14 dates this civilization to about 13,000 years ago.This civilization is on the Anyang River, and interestingly, the earliest writing in China is also on the Anyang River.As for the fate of the stone, of course, it is donated to the museum. Ah, our city is really Historical cities. Have a good day. Wait, who's gonna tell me what that fossil is? -
This is an ichthyosaur skull found at Xingyi, Guizhou of China (the type locality of Keichousaurus hui). The snout is very short and the eye socket is quite big compared to other species of ichthyosaurs found in the area. Could it be the skull of Shastasaurus liangae? The article on S. liangae is attached. ? pone.0019480.pdf
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I went to a local fossil show and saw some highly priced insects too good to be true. They were. Some were done quite well but my $15 30X loupe (magnifying glass) really made the fakes obvious. I took these pics at the show. Pic 1 is presumably a Neuroptera on matrix. Pic 2 is the same Neuroptera though the loupe and you can see it is an obvious forgery. It has been painted. Pic 3 is an obvious painted insect on a piece with 2 cretaceous Lycoptera fish, raising its selling price at least 50 fold. The abdomen in this case is especially badly done. Pic 4 is a different kind of fake, it is an Odonata that has been finely printed onto the matrix. With the loupe, I can clearly see the pixels of ink, but I couldn't get a convincing picture at the show. Walk softly and carry a big......................loupe. sorry, pics are not in the order I uploaded them, but you can figure it out
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This was sold to me as a piece of Miocene feline jaw - potentially pristifelis.
GarethGP posted a topic in Fossil ID
This was sold to me as a piece of Miocene feline jaw - potentially pristifelis. The seller didn't have a firm ID and I understand because it's so fragmentary that it might just be impossible. He believed it was likely from Asia somewhere. Thoughts? Does it at least look feline? -
Marine Lizard Skeleton--KEICHOUSAURUS Guizhou Province
Lucid_Bot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello, I'm currently looking to purchase reptile material and found this Keichousaurus fossil from the Guizhou Province of China. It is being offered on a popular auction site. It is supposedly Triassic. Is this fossil genuine? Restored? Thanks for the help. -
Hello! I bought these Cambrian soft tissue fossils supposedly from Yunnan in china off of online auction site. I won them in a bid for suspiciously cheap. They seem real to me, but I’d be interested in confirmation of that. I’m also interested what you guys have to say as to what these are. Thanks! One is listed as Naraoia spinosa, the other, fainter one is listed as Vetulicola.
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Hi everyone! One of the goals for my collection is to eventually own a keichousaurus fossil as they’ve come to really fascinate and captivate me. I’ve done some research externally and on the forum about how to identify real or fake or restored keich fossils and I wanted your guys’ input on this specimen I’ve recently come across. Admittedly, the prep work on this keich fossil, if real, is pretty bad and is definitely not something I’d go after, but I wanted to see if my bit of research has payed off. My guess is that the specimen is real, however, it seems to me like it’s had a very unpleasant acid prep done to it with some sort of restoration in the distal bones, possible in the tail too. What do you think? I’d love to hear your guy’s thoughts.
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I purchased this as a supposed Silurian Megalograptus from Yunnan a while back. The seller gave me additional information that it came from the Devonian Cuifengshan Formation in Qujing, Yunnan, China. However, the genus Megalograptus is Ordovician in age. I'm not really familiar with eurypterids, so maybe it's not even a sea scorpion. It certainly looks like some kind of invertebrate though. But maybe it's just indeterminate debris. Image 1 - Measurement is in millimeters. Image 2 Image 3 Image 4
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New to the collection, added last week. Nest of 5 oviraptor sp. (Elongatoolithid?) from the Nanxiong Fm in China.
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benthic phototrophic macroalgae indicate taht 'Snowball Earth' might have been 'Slushball Earth'
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
'Snowball Earth' might have been slushball by University of Cincinnati, April 9, 2023 The open access paper is: Song, H., An, Z., Ye, Q., Stüeken, E.E., Li, J., Hu, J., Algeo, T.J., Tian, L., Chu, D., Song, H. and Xiao, S., 2023. Mid-latitudinal habitable environment for marine eukaryotes during the waning stage of the Marinoan snowball glaciation. Nature Communications, 14(1), p.1564. Researchgate PDF Yoru, Paul H.- 1 reply
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This is a partial skull of an ichthyosaur from Yunnan of China. There is a big circular part below the skull, is it a detached eye socket?
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Hello, Could I get an identification for this fossil from the Cambrian of Yunnan, China? It was described as a "Chancelloria", but I don't know if that specific genus is described from this locality and the sclerites aren't star-shaped. It may be a related Chancelloriid, and it seems there are several described from China. My best guess is something like Allonia: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/316342674_Chancelloriid_Allonnia_erjiensis_sp_nov_from_the_Chengjiang_Lagerstatte_of_South_China http://www.paulselden.net/uploads/7/5/3/2/7532217/zhaoetal2018small.pdf I wish I could get higher-res photos of the sclerites but unfortunately I don't have a camera besides my phone. PS. Also, what could that grey+orange conical object next to the Chancelloriid be? Part of a trilobite genal spine?
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Partial Jurassic Neuroptera Insect with Beautiful Wing Preservation
Biotalker posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
Here is my recent acquisition from Inner Mongolia of China in the Jiulongshan formation, more commonly and famously known as Daohugou, which dates to middle Jurassic around 165 mya. The part and counterpart partial insect fossil appears to be a neuropteran, perhaps related to the family of Grammolingiidae (a group of lacewings that include “Jurassic butterflies”, so named on account of their huge spotted wings). Only one of the wings and a small part of another were found in the fossil. The wing, however, is slightly more than two inches (5cm) long. The head and thorax but not the abdomen are intact. I am sharing these images because I think the fossilization is remarkable. Dense tissue like the head and thorax are harder to interpret than the thin wing. But wow, the details that can be seen under the scope are amazing! No ambiguity as we sometimes see with dragonfly fossils!- 8 replies
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New Fossil Analysis Reveals Dinosaur With 50-Foot Neck
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Long Island Scientist Discovers Dinosaur Neck Longer Than a School Bus. The neck measured to roughly 49 and a half feet long, or big enough to stretch across five parking spots — and then some By Greg Cergol, 4 News, New York, March 16, 2023 New Fossil Analysis Reveals Dinosaur With 50-Foot Neck SciTechDaily, March 17, 2023 The open access paper is: Moore, A.J., Barrett, P.M., Upchurch, P., Liao, C.C., Ye, Y., Hao, B. and Xu, X., 2023. Re-assessment of the Late Jurassic eusauropod Mamenchisaurus sinocanadorum Russell and Zheng, 1993, and the evolution of exceptionally long necks in mamenchisaurids. Journal of Systematic Palaeontology, 21(1), p.2171818. Yours, Paul H. -
So I purchased 19 assorted Miocene-aged teeth from (according to the American seller) China a few years ago. The seller had given most of them a vague label (which I've labelled the pics with) - but wasn't able to get more specific. Could anyone help me narrow down which species they might be? Are there resources people are aware of that could help point me in the direction of being able to ID these teeth? Or is it very unlikely I'll get any definitive ID on these and I'll just have to accept a broad family-level description of what they are? I attached an extra picture of a giraffid tooth from the same collection - I reached out to a Chinese expert on miocene teeth from china and he believes "that it's a lower right canine and that it might belong to Palaeotragus or Palaeotragus-sized giraffid based on size". I thought FF members might find some interest in that.
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May I ask your opinion ? hadrosaurus egg (of course.. :-)
Apollo 15 posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello from Switzerland. I'll be happy to write some lines in the member introduction forum this week-end, but I must admit I need help regarding this egg asap. It'll be offered in a auction house in France next week. Provenance China, Xixian, Hunan, 6.6 inches long. I read here all the pages regarding fakes, but it's hard when you're a newbie (I'm an amber collector) regarding dino eggs.. Thanks in advance, Jacques.- 6 replies
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