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Showing results for tags 'proboscidea'.
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Hello together, here I have 4 fragmentary teeth and only a slight idea what they could be. Nr. 1 is the only one I found myself, in the gravel at teh rhine river. its relatively heavy and colourfull what makes me think it could be (sub-)fossil. Looks like a bovid or cervid to me. Any further ideas? Nr. 2 I bought on online, together with nr. 4, they where supposedly found in lignite. Nr. 4 looks like a tiny proboscidean to me (only a layer out of a tooth), with nr. 2 I have got no idea.(small piece of similar layer? Nr. 3 seems to be a carnassial, I think its from china. The texture may tell something to some of you? Thanks in advance for any information you can give me. Aloha, J
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- proboscidea
- carnivora
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A reconstruction of the biotope of Sansan (Miocene, Gers, France)
archeo posted a topic in Paleo Re-creations
I begin the reconstruction of the biotope of Sansan in France (Gers). https://books.google.com.sv/books?id=7s8yAQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&hl=fr&source=gbs_ge_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false https://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/fr/collections/memoires-du-museum-national-d-histoire-naturelle/la-faune-miocene-de-sansan-et-son-environnement https://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/fr/collections/memoires-du-museum-national-d-histoire-naturelle/mammiferes-de-sansan https://www.mnhn.fr/fr/paleosite-de-sansan.- 35 replies
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does anyone know which gomphotherium species lived in europe ? and what time period it was ? thanks in advance for your reply!
- 9 replies
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- proboscidea
- gomphotheriidae
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From the album: My collection in progress
Mammuthus primigenius Blumenbach 1799 Location: Hatvan, Heves County, Hungary Age: 2,5 - 0,01 Mya (Pleistocene, Quaternary) Measurements: 7x15,5x14 cm Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Mammalia Subclass: Theria Superorder: Afrotheria Order: Proboscidea Suborder: Elephantiformes Family: Elephantidae -
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- 1
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- testudinae
- proboscidea
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I found this digging in a phosphate mine in Florida 20 years ago when I was pretty young. I don’t remember exactly where. Although, I do still remember we found a mammoth thoracic vertebrae and someone else found an equus mandible in the same general area. I’m not the best with carpals and tarsals. I can only regularly recognize calcanei and astragali. I was under the impression it was from a mammoth or some other Proboscidean. It wouldn’t surprise me if I was completely wrong. Anyone know what it is?
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- 2 replies
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- proboscidea
- washington
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Isolated, essentially intact molar tooth (missing tiny portion of root at rear of specimen). Note the relatively small number of enamel plates (7 to 8 in a 100mm line) compared with the Woollly Mammoth (M. primigenius).
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- mammoth
- elephantidae
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At the time of finding the root structure of this specimen was soft and quite brittle. The root of the tooth was stabilized with the addition of butvar.
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- 1
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- mastodon
- north carolina
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From the album: proboscidea collection
Tusk tip from Bosnia. Repaid in the middle. Tip is perfect. -
From the album: Mammal Fossils Collection
Collection of Proboscidea specimens: Mammoths, Mastodon & Gomphothere -
From the album: My Cabinet of Curiosity & Geological Art
Assorted dinosaur eggs and proboscidean fossils collection -
From the album: Mammal Fossils Collection
Proboscidean Fossil Teeth: (Left) North Sea Mammoth, (Middle) Southern Mammoth & (Right) American Mastodon-
- Proboscidea
- mammoth
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From the album: Mammal Fossils Collection
Assorted collection of Proboscidea fossils