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Showing results for tags 'spinosauridae'.
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Hello all. I am looking to buy my first fossil, and found this Spinosauridae tooth for sale online. No repair or restoration work was listed but I would love a second opinion. Thank you.
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- spinosauridae
- spinosauridae indet.
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From the album: My collection in progress
Spinosaurus aegyptiacus Stromer 1915 Location: Kem Kem Beds, Morocco Age: 95 Mya (Cenomanian, Upper Cretaceous) Measurements: 7x2 cm Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata Class: Reptilia Subclass: Diapsida Superorder: Dinosauria Order: Saurischia Suborder: Theropoda Family: Spinosauridae-
- theropoda
- saurischia
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Here are two recent publications that provide additional information of Thailand's Dinosaur Fauna This paper describes the fossil assemblage from the Khok Pha Suam locality of northeastern, Thailand from the Early Cretaceous Khok Kruat Formation (Aptian-Albian). We currently see material coming out of this region including Laos so it can be beneficial to those that collect this region https://fr.pensoft.net/article/83081/ The presence of multiple Spinosaurids in the Sao Khua Formation is discussed. Article https:/
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- thailand
- early cretaceous
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From the album: Dinosaurs
Species: Spinosauridae indet. Age: Cretaceous (Cenomanian), c. 95 million years ago Location: Kem Kem Formation, Morocco Probably the most common dinosaur fossil available on the market, a Kem Kem Spinosaurid tooth. At least two spinosaurid species are known from Kem Kem; Spinosaurus aegyptiacus and Sigilmassasaurus brevicollis. As there are no known teeth of Sigilmassasaurus, comparisons between the two are impossible and determining the genus which the tooth belongs to is also impossible. -
Hi everybody! Last month i saw this tooth on sale and it was love at first sight But from the beginning i understood that what it was and how it be presented are not on the same page... Luckily i know the seller pretty well and we trust each other...so i asked info before make the purchase...He told me that his provider (directly from Morocco) told him that the tooth was a Dyrosaurus phosphaticus but that he was not confident about the ID...the moroccan provider told to my friend/seller that was the first time that he saw a totth like that and its first idea of ID was D.
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It's nothing particularly exciting, but I just wanted to share what is possibly the prettiest looking Spinosauridae tooth I've ever seen. The enamel patterning on it is gorgeous, and very different to what I've come across on run-of-the-mill Spino teeth before. Both carinae and tip are also beautifully preserved. There is a pretty smooth enamel texture and no fluting, plus it's even sporting an offset, short mesial carina for an extra bit of personality. (51mm) Anyone else want to shar
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- cretaceous
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I've spoken to Troodon a little elsewhere on the forum regarding this serrated Spino tooth; my main question is regarding the root - can anyone verify whether the root looks to originally be from this tooth? It's obviously been reattached, but sand has been used to fill a gap between the crown & root, which makes me wonder a little. For anyone wanting wider details around this little oddball: • Length approx 48mm long (including the root) • Very slightly recurved • Mesial carina naturally terminates at the midline • Denticles appear to be 2/mm on both
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Hi all, I have another fossil here for your inspection please. It seems to be a Spinosaurid partial neural spine but I cannot be sure. @Troodon @LordTrilobite
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- spinosauridae
- spinosaurus
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Hi all, I acquired a partial Spinosauridae caudal spine recently from the Kem Kem Beds. However, I was told that this is a dinosauria indet. rib. The digger who provided me the fossil is experienced and trustworthy. Still, I would like to hear your thoughts on this fossil. Thank you. EDIT: Two others suggested that this is part of a scapula
- 13 replies
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- spinosaurus
- spine
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From the album: Dinosaurs and Reptiles
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- niger
- spinosauridae
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Here we go, I finally got two nice Sinosauridae indet. teeth (long more or less 8-9 cm). I love the fact that one is pointy and not broken, while the bigger one has the typical ridges along the tooth. What do you think?
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- spinosauridae
- spinosaurus
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Hello everyone, looking for a well-known auction site I came across this tooth of Spinosaurus. At first glance does not seem to have big problems but I'm inexperienced so I ask you. There is only 1 photo so the details are detail of the first one. Thank you
- 1 reply
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- tooth
- spinosauridae
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Spinosauridae indet tooth from KemKem
Abstraktum posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello everybody, I have the chance to get my hands on this Spinosauridae indet tooth from KemKem / Morocco. This is not from any action side or an online shop, I got lucky and saw the tooth by myself since this is sold here in my hometown. The curent seller got it from an online shop. The online shop said there are no repairs or anything. These are the pictures I took by myself. The tooth is 3.3 inches long. Would love to have your opinions on this one. Some repairs? Some fabrications? Is the white part at the end part of the root?- 8 replies
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