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Bone identification


Monica Huebner

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Femur? Cow?

'Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.'

George Santayana

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1 hour ago, Monica Huebner said:

Any ideas on what type of bone this is? I found it at Twelve Mile Coulee today.

Monica,

Welcome to TFF... it is a good place for bone identification and fossil hunters...

You might look at this TFF Thread.. It has good photos of Bos/Bison Femur and Humnerus

 

Edited by Shellseeker

The White Queen  ".... in her youth she could believe "six impossible things before breakfast"

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Hi,

 

Please don’t send your ID request in two different posts!
You already have answers in the other one. A little patience is needed for the specialists to give their answer.
 
Coco

----------------------
OUTIL POUR MESURER VOS FOSSILES : ici

Ma bibliothèque PDF 1 (Poissons et sélaciens récents & fossiles) : ici
Ma bibliothèque PDF 2 (Animaux vivants - sans poissons ni sélaciens) : ici
Mâchoires sélaciennes récentes : ici
Hétérodontiques et sélaciens : ici
Oeufs sélaciens récents : ici
Otolithes de poissons récents ! ici

Un Greg...

Badges-IPFOTH.jpg.f4a8635cda47a3cc506743a8aabce700.jpg Badges-MOTM.jpg.461001e1a9db5dc29ca1c07a041a1a86.jpg

 

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I did not mean to post twice. I’m happy to delete this if I could find a delete button. I am actually very patient. Just made a mistake posting this as I created an account yesterday and I did not realize.

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TOPICS MERGED. 

 

Newbies make mistakes, and we need to allow for that. ;) 

 

All is well on the Forum.  :zen:   

  • I Agree 1

    Tim    -  VETERAN SHALE SPLITTER

   MOTM.png.61350469b02f439fd4d5d77c2c69da85.png      PaleoPartner.png.30c01982e09b0cc0b7d9d6a7a21f56c6.png.a600039856933851eeea617ca3f2d15f.png     Postmaster1.jpg.900efa599049929531fa81981f028e24.jpg    VFOTM.png.f1b09c78bf88298b009b0da14ef44cf0.png  VFOTM  --- APRIL - 2015  

__________________________________________________
"In every walk with nature one receives far more than he seeks."

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I agree with the others in that this looks like the distal end (lower articulation) of a bovid femur (upper leg bone). The preservation is consistent with a sub-recent specimen - in other words, not a fossil - while the fracture appears to be a dry bone one, meaning the bone was broken post-mortem. This is significant, as that means this is not the bone of a butchered animal, but rather indicative of something else having happened to the bone. As most of the bone in engrained with dirt, but the fracture is not, for example, it looks like the fracture is a very recent post-depositional change to the bone. As such, it seem very well possible, also given its size, that this is a bone of a bison.

'There's nothing like millions of years of really frustrating trial and error to give a species moral fibre and, in some cases, backbone' -- Terry Pratchett

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