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Hi everyone! Long time lurker, first time poster haha. I’m still kind of new to this so sorry if this is a super obvious ID, but I was wondering what kind of tooth this is exactly. I was thinking crocodile, but it seems to have a slightly different shape so I wasn’t sure. I found it at Ginnie Sprints in High Springs on the Santa Fe River in Florida. It’s about 2 1/4” long. Thank you in advance for your help! :)

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Looks pretty crocodilian to me. I think typically you'd be able to see some striations going up the length of the tooth, but it seems pretty waterworn. 

Edited by Neanderthal Shaman
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    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  

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

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Crocodilian teeth are pretty hollow in the root and have either 2 carinae for gators or a dozen or so for crocodile. Not really looking like either of these types of teeth. Let's see what others have to say.

 

 

Cheers.

 

-Ken

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That’s crazy exciting! Thank you so much for your help everyone :)

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12 hours ago, Harry Pristis said:

I think this is a proboscidean tusk, either a juvenile upper or a juvenile lower.

 

Harry,  I was considering that also,  along with Kogiopsis.  I think you are correct, because I can not detect banding.  @digit Did I not see a Montbrook photo with 2 small tusks sticking out of the matrix?

 

TuskSantaFe.thumb.jpg.b91e93114c829671720f628bb21f434a.jpgTuskSantaFeCrop.JPG.77441e891f3897237d7d40c97dfa9e09.JPG

Edited by Shellseeker

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

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1 hour ago, Shellseeker said:

Harry,  I was considering that also,  along with Kogiopsis.  I think you are correct, because I can not detect banding.  @digit Did I not see a Montbrook photo with 2 small tusks sticking out of the matrix? 

 

I believe there are no Miocene whale fossils to be found in the Santa Fe River.  If there were any Miocene fossils to be found, they would almost certainly be land animal fossils freed from river-eroded sinkholes.

 

http://pristis.wix.com/the-demijohn-page

 

What seest thou else

In the dark backward and abysm of time?

---Shakespeare, The Tempest

 

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8 hours ago, Shellseeker said:

@digit Did I not see a Montbrook photo with 2 small tusks sticking out of the matrix?

Possible--even quite likely. But not from me. Previous years we've only been able to attend Montbrook for a few days each season (due to living in South Florida). We've been out at least 2X per week for the fall and spring sessions since we've moved up to Gainesville so we've put in more time this year than we have in the 4 years previous. We've run into lots of gomphothere bones over the last several months but there haven't been any tusks found in 2020/21.

 

We're just now back from Montbrook and cleaned-up with the truck unpacked and ibuprofen coursing through out veins. Today was the final day of the spring 2021 volunteer season at Montbrook. The site will be tarped and sand-bagged over the next couple of days to keep it from melting into a sand puddle over the summer rainy season.

 

 

Cheers.

 

-Ken

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