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Showing results for tags 'abingdon'.
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Hello everyone! My little brother made this nice find near Thrupp Lake in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, UK. The lake is close to the Thames river. It looks like some sort of shell fossil? The rock is about 8cm wide and 5cm tall. We'd appreciate any help identifying it! Thank you.
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Hi Any thoughts on this? Sold as uk stegosaur (Dacentrurus?) 14 x 11 x 6. From Abingdon, Kimmerisge Clay. I think it is actually a marine vert, but figured Id post in case im wrong. Thanks for the help
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Hi, anyone able to help with this? It's sold as Theropod, from Abingdon. 10.5 x 8 x5 cm. Unfortunately it's very weathered and has been squashed and distorted during fossilization, so it seems difficult to ID. Personally, I think it's been misidentified. At 5 cm, it seems much too thin. Secondly, I'm looking at some drawings of theropod and megalosaur verts and they seem to bend inwards a lot in the middle (not sure of the actual term for it) with large centrums and going narrow in the middle. But if someone else can take a second look, just to confirm I'm right, that would be great. Thanks for the help
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Hello, I am interested in these, sold as Cetiosaur. From Abingdon. Sauropod fossils are found there, but a lot sold are plesiosaur/pliosaur verts that are misidentified. So if anyone could take a look and give your thoughts on these, that would be great. The centrum shape doesn't resemble the shape of the sauropod vert I have from that fromation, but it could easily be from a different species or something. Anyone, two verts. 1st one -- 7.5cm by 3.5 cm.
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Hello, if anyone can take a look at this, that would be great. I know most from Abington I've posted have turned out to be plesiosaur, but hooefully this is as described and is preserved enough to get an id. And is easier to identify being sold as theropod rather than sauropod Theropod/carnosaur vert Abingdon, Oxfordshire, Jurassic 11cm x 9.5 x 5.3 Many thanks