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Hi- I found this today at Lake Benbrook, Tarrant County Texas. I was looking for newly exposed large ammonoids. I believe that it is possibly from the Woodbine formation because I also found some nice Gryphaea- looks like maybe Parasmilia but it also looks like has a shell- 3.5 inches x 1 inch. Your expert help appreciated- Thanks-
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I saw this little lot of small teeth and instead of guessing I decided to seek some help on the ID. I do not have a lot of information. They are from the Dallas area, near the airport. The original collector believed it was Woodbine formation. most of the pictures were similar angles as well. My knowledge on Texas sharks is fairly limited. I do think the larger one is Scapanorhynchus. Outside of that, I really have no clue. Any help would be much appreciated.
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A new paper is available online: Christopher R. Noto; Stephanie K. Drumheller; Thomas L. Adams; Alan H. Turner (2019). "An enigmatic small neosuchian crocodyliform from the Woodbine Formation of Texas". The Anatomical Record. in press. doi:10.1002/ar.24174. Scolomastax constitutes the youngest record of Paralligatoridae from North America, indicating that paralligatorids spread to Appalachia prior to the Western Interior Seaway forming.
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My sister and i were out scouting the freshly laid down gravel bars on Iron Ore Creek in Grayson County Texas this week, and I found this tooth. Is it... gulp... human? With the tooth root still attached, it can't be a "baby" tooth which brings me to think that there may be more. out. there... First I thought that maybe it is from a Native American, since there are points, tools and stuff commonly found in Iron ore; but it doesn't have the scoops that are associated with them. It doesn't have a lot of patina either, which really freaks me out. upper cretaceous, wood
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Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas Guidebook
Oxytropidoceras posted a topic in Fossil News
Early- and Mid-Cretaceous Archosaur Localities of North-Central Texas. Guidebook for the field trip held October 13, 2015 in conjunction with the 75th Annual Meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology in Dallas, Texas https://www.researchgate.net/publication/283711331_Early-_and_Mid-Cretaceous_Archosaur_Localities_of_North_Central_Texas https://figshare.com/articles/Early_and_Mid_Cretaceous_Archosaur_Localities_of_North_Central_Texas/1608173 http://chrisnoto.com/publications.html Yours, Paul H.-
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Possible NEW Texan Pterosaur being formally described.
fossilized6s posted a topic in Partners in Paleontology - Member Contributions to Science
I'd like to announce that i have donated two pterosaur humeri to a Pterosaur expert in Dallas, Texas @ SMU (Southern Methodist University). Dr.Myers has described many of the Lone Star state's flying reptiles, so he seemed to be the best man for the job. Here's how i "found" these. I frequently will find myself on eBay trying to find good deals, fossils to prep and/or misidentified fossils. These happened to be the latter. A man had found these near Grapevine, Texas. And needless to say, he had no clue what he had found, but i did. I thought it would be a great opportunity to make- 18 replies
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