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Showing results for tags 'coniasaurus tooth'.
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From the album: Post Oak Creek
When I initially found this I was hoping it was Mosasaurid, however upon some reading, I decided it's more likely to be a sister group squamate. In particular, the labial sulcus convinced me it is probably C. crassidens (see Caldwell 1999). It is however much larger than any Coniasaurus teeth I've seen published.-
- coniasaurus
- coniasaurus crassidens
- (and 7 more)
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From the album: Squamates
When I initially found this I was hoping it was Mosasaurid, however upon some reading, I decided it's more likely to be a sister group squamate. In particular, the labial sulcus convinced me it is probably C. crassidens (see Caldwell 1999). It is however much larger than any Coniasaurus teeth I've seen published.-
- coniasaurus
- coniasaurus crassidens
- (and 9 more)
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From the album: Squamates
A small tooth from a small aquatic reptile that lived during the Turonian of North TX. They are small, squat teeth with textured enamel, and possess only an indistinct distal carina (no mesial carina).-
- arcadia park
- coniasaur
- (and 6 more)