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  1. Shellseeker

    Tibia ?

    Hunting a location that is primarily marine, but the fewer land mammal fossils are a narrow group of pre-equus horse, rhino, gomphothere. At the end of the day, this bone fell into the sieve. Comments and suggestions appreciated. I looked at Tibia distal ends of Horse, Camel, Bison and none seem to match and all of those are much larger..
  2. diginupbones

    Unusual leg bone ID help

    Found in North central Nebraska. Miocene. I have a feeling @Harry Pristis and @Shellseeker might be helpful on this one.
  3. diginupbones

    Another large thick mammal bone

    I found this one in the same area of the one I just posted. I wonder if it is from the same critter? @ParkerPaleo
  4. I’ve done quite a bit of looking online but can’t seem to get an ID on this one. It almost has to be either mammoth,mastodon or rhino but I’m not sure which bone it is. Found in North Central Nebraska. Miocene
  5. Hello everyone, I got offered with this "fossil" from Java. The Selle says it's a carnivore canine. But I don't even think it's a fossil but a strange shaped rock, or if it's a fossil it's made of two pieces. What do you think of it?
  6. I recently got a fossil bear canine from a short faced bear. It was found in the Joshua creek. Now Arctodus pristinus and Tremarctos floridanus canines are very similar. I know that Arctodus is an early Pleistocene species while Tremarctos is a middle late Pleistocene. Is it possible to know the age of land fossils from Joshua creek?
  7. I found this skull fragment a few weeks ago in a river n SE Texas. It is approximately 2.75 inches (7 cm) top to bottom and left to right in the first photo. It is roughly deer sized, but looks different than Odocoleus. The measurement across the condyles is 2.1 inches. @garyc saw this just after i found it- (it was good running into him on the river!). It's heavy for its size, well mineralized. The last photo compares Odocoileus . @Lorne Ledger @Harry Pristis @JohnJ
  8. fossilus

    Possible sloth maxilla?

    I found this in a SE Texas river just over a week ago. It is 16cm, 6.5 inches left to right. It looks to me like a partial maxilla with the cheek process on the left side of the photo. The "tooth" just above the center of the photo would have been 1.6 inches wide. Any thoughts? @JohnJ @garyc @Shellseeker @Harry Pristis @Lorne Ledger
  9. Opabinia Blues

    Bunch of Peace River bones

    Hello, I’ve got a good lot of Peace River fossils from Florida that I bought in bulk and unidentified. A few of the pieces I could figure out on my own, but on most of them I’m clueless. I recognize that most of these may not be totally identifiable, but if you recognize something here your help would be appreciated. Below I will post pictures in separate replies. Feel free to ask for more angles/closer photos of any pieces that you might be able to help me with. Thanks in advance!
  10. Hi All, Been a while since I've been out collecting but I just got back from a trip to Matoaka Beach Cabins along the Chesapeake Bay. I found an interesting section of limb bone in the surf and would like your opinion as to if it belonged to a land or sea mammal. Found in the surf piles near the cliffs at Matoaka Cottages, St. Leonard, MD. Most likely from Shattuck Zone 17 (St. Leonard Member) or Shattuck Zone 18 (Drumcliff Member) of the Choptank Fm., Miocene, Neozoic. If you need larger versions of any of the pics, let me know. Thanks! Dave
  11. I need some help. From my new pit location. Eocene Castle Hayne Formation, Comfort Member. A partial Marine Mammal? tooth with root. Archeocete? Sirinean? PPinned? @Boesse @Al Dente @siteseer
  12. JJT3

    Mammal bone ID help

    Hi Everyone, I found this in an NJ stream where I have found other Pleistocene mammal material. Not sure if this bone is modern or not. I think this is half of a large atlas vertebrae. It also appears to have a cut/saw mark.
  13. Two limb bone fragments from the Eocene deposits in the Big Horn Basin. Mammalian, but don't know anything more beyond that. Would really appreciate help!
  14. Brandy Cole

    Sacrum--Bison or Something Else?

    The river has been receding daily, and I found this sacrum two days ago laying in sandy gravel that had just been exposed. Mostly Pleistocene fossils here. Due to its size, I thought it may be from one of the larger herbivore mammals. But due to wear, it's a little hard for me to tell how tapered or straight the original structure was, which seems pretty diagnostic in differentiating between the species. Several examples I've seen look similar, but I'm having a hard time finding any with sizes listed, so I'm a little lost. Can anyone shed some more light on this? Thank you! --Brandy
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