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Found 6 results

  1. D.N.FossilmanLithuania

    Which part of skull is this?

    Dear Guys, Few months ago I found this specific skull part in Varena town, South Lithuania. It is 4 mm diameter and the central line is protuberant, I would think it is something like squamosal or quadrate, it was inside dolomite erratic boulder. Please help to know which part of skull is this and maybe which animal this bone could belong to. Best Regards Domas
  2. Dear Guys, I recently made better pictures of chimaeroid tooth fossil, I think this remain belongs to Psephodontidae family but maybe I am wrong so I need the professional ID. This chimaeroid shows the Late Paleozoic (Carboniferous or Permian) age of some lagoonal dolomite erratic boulders in Lithuanian territory but if someone knows the genus of this chimaeroid remain then I could know the precise age of the erratic (stage or epoch) and could use this find in my scientific articles to German magazine. The remain is 4-5 mm length so the tooth is small. Please help to know the taxonomy of this remain if someone works on Paleozoic sharks here. Any help will be very appreciated!
  3. D.N.FossilmanLithuania

    Chimaeroid tooth? Found in South Lithuania

    Dear Guys, I recently found this thick perforated chimaeroid like fossil in lagoonal dolomite, it is 5 mm length. It is found in erratic boulder of Varena town, South Lithuania. The perforations in Tremataspis scales are the same thickness in all surface but my find has much thicker perforations by the one edge and I would think it is dental plate of chimaera. The fossil is thin but I saw the gastropod fauna in these dolomites and some species can speak about Carboniferous- Permian age although very similar dolomites in Northern Estonia are Silurian in age and they also have orthogastropod and bivalve fauna. Please let me know- is it osteostracan scale or is it chimaeroid tooth, and what species are the most possible then? Any help will be appreciated! Best Regards Domas
  4. D.N.FossilmanLithuania

    piece of fin spine- Onchus or acanthodian?

    Dear Guys, Several years ago I found this piece of fin spine that is 3.5 mm width and by me it looks more similar to primitive shark like Onchus problematic fossils. Here is visible vertical groove texture and also oblique area of little oblong tubercles. The fossil is found in Late Silurian limestone erratic, the location was Varena town, South Lithuania. Please help me to know, is it more like acanthodian or Onchus chondrichthyan? Best Regards Domas
  5. D.N.FossilmanLithuania

    Lizard osteoderm, help to identify family

    Dear Guys, I found this 2 mm length lizard osteoderm in small dolomite erratic about 1 year ago in Varena town, South Lithuania. It has some rounded tubercles, by me seems quite similar to helodermatid. I think the age is probably Cretaceous or Paleogene. Please help to identify family by its shape and ornamentation. Any help will be appreciated! Best Regards Domas
  6. D.N.FossilmanLithuania

    Some kind of flat tooth or osteoderm?

    Dear Guys, I recently found one rectangular tooth plate or osteoderm like fossil with tenuous canals and even poorly visible rough pointy texture in one area, it is 5 mm length. From the first impression it looks more like osteichthyan tooth or tetrapod osteoderm, it is found in pink dolomite erratic. I had versions about stingray or Lagarodus chimaera earlier but shark teeth always have thicker ornamentation like thick canals, glossy porous dentine and many canals in root especially talking about chimaeras, the stingray tooth elements have parallel grooves and tuberculae that are very thick in appearance. I also saw some osteichthyan teeth- puffer fish dental elements are triangular in shape and only one tooth in Darwin county page from Jurassic was the same in shape (but not in surface texture!) and was named as "shellfish eating fish tooth" with no taxonomic determination. The tetrapods like reptiles also have some similar osteoderms- rauisuchians and other primitive archosaurs or maybe lizards but crocodile related osteoderms have the web of tuberculae with oblong and deep pits between it and lizard osteoderms in my opinion should not be so protuberant in the central area like my find. This fossil talking about shorter edges in the ends is low and it becomes tall in thickness in the center including the same central part of longer lateral boundaries. I told everything about the features of fossil I found, I actually do not know its age because it was found in small erratic boulder of dolomite. Dolomite in the prequarternary surface of Baltic States is usually Devonian, Permian or Triassic but I even have confirmation of polygonal lizard scutes in dolomite so the age would be known if I would find out which taxon this skeleton element belongs to. Pleasehelp me to know about the taxon of this remain and also- tooth or osteoderm it is? Any help will be very appreciated! Best Regards Domas
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