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Showing results for tags 'northsea'.
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Hi there, I recently found this on the beach in North Yorkshire UK, I believe it’s a fossil but I’m not too sure of what kind. What do you think?
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Mammuthus primigenius: authentic tusk fragment?
mr.rod posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello dear collectors & experts, I have purchased two beautiful new Mammuthus primigenius fossils, which I will describe in two separate topics. Here comes my very cool and huge fragment of a tusk. Key figures as by seller 39cm (15") long, circumference 47cm (18.5") 5.1kg (11.2lb) 20,000-50,000 years old North Sea, Netherlands I very much like it and would love to get your expertise about Authenticity More precise age estimate Your quality rating. Any restoration done? Thanks a lot.- 18 replies
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Hello dear fellow forum members, I found this pebble at the north sea coast, quite sure there are fossil structures, but thats as far as I got. Any ideas? Scale is in cm. Thanks, J
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- flint
- invertebrate
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Hello fellow fossil enthusiasts, In the pictures included in this post it shows a molar I have found last summer. I found it within a bed of shells on a Dutch beach. I can’t remember the name of the beach, It however was rather close to Zandmotor, which is famous for its ice age mammal bones. I have shown this molar to a fossil buyer/seller and he has told me its possibly an unused molar of a woolly rhino. I thought I’d put it on here too however to see if anybody agrees. thanks for looking, AnyArthropod
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Greetings everyone, Recently I have fossilhunted on Zandmotor. A man made Beach thats known for its meiocene aged fossils. I have got some interesting finds, however since im very inexperienced im having some trouble identfying them.
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My Woolly Rhinoceros collection. New to this forum but I think I'm making a start with my collection of Woolly Rhino bones. More items from my collections will follow, also different kind of fossils. I still working on my collection inventory to photograph and Categorize. Here are some photos of bones I own. They come from the North Sea.
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- coelodonta antiquitatis
- my collection
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...and I found absolutely nothing, except for this mammoth astragalus bone with gnawing marks of probably hyena? regards, Niels
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These pieces come from sediments from the bottom of the Northsea and could be from the late pleistocene or early holocene. The big one looks recent, but the sediment hints a higher age. This sediment is usually found on mammoth bones from the same spot. The smaller one is very mineralized and heavy. As I have no experience with fossil wood, I wonder if it is possible to id these kind of pieces. Please let me know if better pictures or close-ups are needed. Regards, Niels