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Showing results for tags 'poland'.
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https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2019-01/uu-t2s013019.php https://www.realclearscience.com/quick_and_clear_science/2019/01/31/what_scientists_learned_from_a_trove_of_fossilized_archosaur_poop_and_vomit.html
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- coprolites
- poland
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Tooth. Found in Poland by the river, on the beach among stones. Tooth resembles a predatory tooth "Smilodon", but maybe from a different period, for example jura. Is the marine reptile? Look at its curvature and structure in macro pictures. I am asking for help with ID
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Hi welcome from Poland. Your forum is very interesting - congratulations! Regards Terra
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https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2018-11/uu-gm112118.php https://uk.reuters.com/article/us-science-creature/surprising-elephant-sized-mammal-cousin-lived-alongside-dinosaurs-idUKKCN1NR27O?rpc=401& https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/animals/a25252747/an-elephant-sized-mammal-relative-roamed-among-dinosaurs/
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- dicynodont
- mammal-like
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Scale on photograph. The following classification scheme was adopted: Anderson, J.M., Anderson, H.M., and Cleal, C.J. (2007), Brief history of the gymnosperms: classification, biodiversity, phytogeography and ecology, Strelitzia 20, South African National Biodiversity Institute, Pretoria (LINK).
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- carboniferous
- diplotmema
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Erratic boulder from central Europe. Ordovician or Silurian. Any ideas as for the trilobite group, e.g. order? The ornamentation is quite characteristic, I presume. Librigena?
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Ordovician or Silurian erratic boulder from Poland. Sorry for poor quality photos - I'm not able to get better for now. What are these 8-shaped lumen ossicles? Also, can you spot fragments of calyx?
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Ordovician or Silurian erratic boulder from Poland. Sorry for poor quality photos - I'm not able to get better for now. Is this a chance association or can you spot fragments of calyx, stem, and cross sections through arms? What crinoids are these - crotalocrinitids?
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Erratic boulder from Poland. Age unknown but likely Late Cretaceous to Danian. The silicified concretion is developed around a sponge, visible in view places, like the spot on the photo. This specific spot bears also a ramose feature. Could it be part of the sponge anatomy or a crinoid root?
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Ordovician or Silurian erratic boulder from Poland. It's not the first time I come across this type of fossil. Would you say these are bivalves or some big trilobites' pygidia?
- 12 replies
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- erratic
- palaeozoic
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I found it today in gravel on a parking lot in Poland. Age remains uncertain, as the rocks present were all erratic boulders. What can that be? An asterozoan, perhaps?
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Dear TFF members, I have bought these two on an auction - the seller says they were found in the sands of the Vistula river, in the area of Kraków (south of Poland). Could they be fossilised horns? I will appreciate any suggestions Kasia
- 13 replies
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- horns
- pleistocene
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Cephalon, or more specifically - a glabella, my father found today, here in Poland. It is an erratic boulder and so its age is likely Ordovician or Silurian. Can someone tell the trilobite group or even a genus?
- 2 replies
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- palaeozoic
- poland
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Two colonies found today in central Poland. Erratic boulders, so no data available other than this: Ordovician or Silurian, Baltica. Is there an easy way to distinguish between various 'monticuliporid' taxa actually placed in different trepostome families? Smaller specimen:
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- bryozoa
- palaeozoic
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- campanian
- cretaceous
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Minute fossils (fingers in the background as a scale) from the Campanian of southern Poland. The major element looks similar to bourgueticrinid columnals I know from the site, so maybe a semi-articulated crinoid?
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- campanian
- cretaceous
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Southern Poland. Found in parking lot gravel, so age unknown, although Late Jurassic or Late Cretaceous to Paleocene likely. I quess it's an isocrinid - could anything more be added to that?
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- crinoidea
- echinodermata
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I thought it to be a wood, but was told it's rather a sponge or coral. What do you think? Can you identify the form-genus of the plant if it is one? I found this flint specimen in a parking lot gravel in southern Poland, therefore I'm not sure of the age. There are some other flints there, with possibly a late Late Cretaceous - early Early Paleogene fauna, while nearby outcroups are of late Middle to early Late Jurassic with flints, early Late Cretaceous with cherts and Miocene without silifications. Fossil wood in Poland preserved as a flint, found on secondary deposits, is often of Miocene age.
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A Late Cretaceous - Early Paleogene flint from southern Poland, full of fossils - mainly dasyclad algae and forams, I think, possibly some bryozoans too, and... a sun-shaped object. Any ideas?
- 6 replies
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- cretaceous
- paleogene
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- flint
- ichnofossils
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