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Showing results for tags 'well preserved'.
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A well prepped keich? Must be fake.
JBkansas posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
I haven't seen keichousaurus with hollows in the matrix like in this specimen (but they don't look like the bubble defects from a replica mold). I'm guessing it's real but I've never seen one without all of the prep damage that is typically present.- 7 replies
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Is this a real complete Dromaeosaurus
Fissiletag posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
I recently saw a listing of a complete Dromaesaurus or some other Dromaesaurid. It is extremely complete, and I've never seen something like it for sale. Is it real?- 3 replies
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- theropod
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I really like the shape to these. I have come across sites with photos of these but I can't seem to find any info about them such as what period they may be from. These microfossils are harder to research than they are to find...phewww.
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Out of the Deep - Marine reptiles at the Oxford University Museum of Natural History
The Amateur Paleontologist posted a topic in A Trip to the Museum
Hey everyone - hope you're all doing all right For the past few days, I was for a short holiday in South England - and while I was in Oxford, I had the chance to see at the Natural History Museum a new, amazing exhibit called Out of the Deep. The display consisted of two remarkable, nearly complete skeletons of marine reptiles - both of them from the ~165-million-year-old Oxford Clay Formation of southern England. One of the skeletons was of a pliosaur (otherwise known as a short-necked plesiosaur) called Peloneustes, which had been discovered in 1994 in Yarnton (Oxfordshire). The other skeleton (nicknamed "Eve"), discovered in Peterborough (Cambridgeshire) in 2014, was of a longer-necked plesiosaur. According to Roger Benson, the skeleton might represent a new species. Both skeletons are really beautiful - and I'd recommend all of you to check them out The Out of the Deep display, with its two plesiosaur skeletons in all their glory Photo credit Oxford University Museum of Natural History Well-preserved mandible from the Peloneustes skeleton The nearly complete skull of "Eve" the long-necked plesiosaur... The Out of the Deep exhibit is truly a must-see!! -Christian