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Showing results for tags 'tricertops'.
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Howdy, I hope everyone’s having a great week! I was wondering if I could get yalls quick opinion about this specimen I came across. Seller claims ankylosaurus scute or triceratops frill fragment from Valley County, MT North of Hinsdale. I haven’t contributed to my collection very much recently and I think an ankylosaurus scute would make a great addition. However, the grooves of the specimen remind me of the vessel grooves I usually see on ceratopsian frill fossils. I know this one may be a bit difficult to identify but I’d love to hear your guy’s thoughts. Thank you all!
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- ankylosaur
- fossil
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I got a big box of unprepped material from the lance formation here are a couple pieces I started cleaning off. First piece Approx 6x5cm
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A piece of bone or frill from Shandong province in China, Sinoceratops zhuchengensis?
coollll posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hi guys! Happy 2023 and wish you all the best One of my Chinese friends just purchased a nice collection, and the seller said it might be from a sinoceratops zhuchengensis but not pretty sure. I tried to help him with that but I don't know much about ceratopsian. So we are now wondering what it really is. We are 100% sure that this collection was found in Shandong province. Thank you so much for your time- 5 replies
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- china dinosaur
- tricertops
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As a follow up to my last topic, i've included some of the other dinosaur teeth that I acquired at an annual fossil show. The first tooth pictured is claimed to be Triceratops, no locality was included but he claims it was found in North Carolina. however I cannot find any information to which Triceratops material has been found in NC. The second tooth pictured is claimed to be a Leptoceratops tooth from Hell Creek, however it seems they are often misidentified as Triceratops teeth. The third tooth depicted is Labeled as Richardoestesia, also from the Hell Creek formation. I am grateful for any identification and information that can be provided! Please feel free to ask for more adequate photos.
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- dino teeth
- dinosurs
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Hi, I bought this fossil at a flea market but am having trouble identifying what it could. I believe it to be the brow horn of a triceratops but i'm not too sure.
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- horn
- tricertops
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