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  1. These were sold to me stating they came from the East Bluff area in Newport Beach, California. But research into fossils from that area comes up with late Pliocene material that doesn’t look anything like these. The serrated tooth is especially confusing. Any ideas?
  2. Are Trex teeth hard to find? I see they are very expensive on the market.
  3. Fossilssk

    Kem kem id help

    Hello, Can you help me with ID of this tooth? I am not sure whether it could be Carcharodontosaurid or something else? I bought it at a fossil show, Its supposed to be from Morocco, Kem kem group, Taouz. Scale is in cm. Measurements: CH - 2,8cm, CBL - 1,6cm, AL - 3cm and CBW - 0,8cm. Thanks in advance.
  4. Cartoonfossil

    Is this Deltadromeus? Help please tell me

    xDELTA6582.jpg.pagespeed.ic.D7TazFBavN.webp
  5. Hi, I’m wondering if it would be a difficult task to remove the matrix/dirt layer off this carcharodontosaurid tooth. I have no experience, but might seem like a cool project? Would a dental pick, brush, and needles suffice?
  6. ThePhysicist

    Lightning strike trike

    From the album: Dinosaurs

    Plant roots often intrude upon a fossil's resting place, leaving behind white streaks when removed.
  7. ThePhysicist

    Ankylosaurus tooth

    From the album: Dinosaurs

    A rare tooth from the Hell Creek formation. Curiously most Ankylosaurian teeth you see online are actually Nodosaurid. This one is the Ankylosaurus.
  8. ThePhysicist

    Juvenile Tyrannosaur premaxillary teeth

    From the album: Dinosaurs

    These strange, incisor-like teeth were originally thought to have belonged to a large Cretaceous mammal. Later discoveries showed that these teeth matched the front teeth of young Tyrannosaurs quite well. Given closely spaced, parallel feeding traces on bones, these "incisorform" teeth likely were used to scrape meat from bone.
  9. ThePhysicist

    Pectinodon teeth

    From the album: Dinosaurs

    These small teeth come from a small theropod (a Troodontid) closely related to the Dromaeosaurids (the "raptors"). They likely fed upon small food items like mammals, lizards, insects, etc.
  10. ThePhysicist

    Judithian Theropod

    From the album: Dinosaurs

    A theropod tooth I recently acquired from the JRF. Sold as a juvenile Tyrannosaurid, but I'm not fully convinced.
  11. ThePhysicist

    Ankylosaurus tooth

    From the album: Hell Creek / Lance Formations

    The denticles and enamel of this Ankylosaurus tooth are exceedingly well-preserved.
  12. ThePhysicist

    T. rex tooth

    From the album: Hell Creek / Lance Formations

    It's remarkable that the minute features of this tooth can be preserved with such clarity after 66 million years!
  13. Sergiorex

    Theropod dinosaur tooth id

    Saw this tooth for sale, it’s from Judith river formation and from the upper Cretaceous part of the formation according to the seller. I was wondering if it could be put in a more specific group. Don’t know much about the dinosaur species that live there but maybe a small Dromaeosaurid or tyrannosaurid tooth? I understand if it can’t be put in a more specific group, anyways thanks in advance for any help with id.
  14. Guns

    Yixian formation tooth

    Hello everyone , need some help in ID of this tooth from Liaoning Province , Yixian formation , China Size : 0.6 " Thank in advance Guns
  15. I'll keep it in my collection, so I want to know what ID for dinosaur tooth I got so I can identify the correct ID in my collection. Please help, I really don't know what ID. Thank you .
  16. I recently bought this Spinosaurus tooth but I noticed the back looks a bit different to other teeth I've bought in the past just wondering if it's been repaired or restored?
  17. folsom2012

    Tooth, or something else?

    Hello everyone. Just trying to see if I can get some idea of what this may be. Top of the fossil seems to be a tooth but the lower part looks more like bone material than tooth. I know it’s well worn, and I don’t expect any kind of classification. Just trying to figure out if it’s actually a tooth or something different.
  18. Hi ! . need a bit of help ID this tooth from hill county , Judith river formation I am not sure if its pachycephalosaur or ankylosaur tooth . Best regard Guns
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