Shellseeker Posted July 30, 2021 Share Posted July 30, 2021 Here in Florida , we can have driving Thunder storms followed by Sunshine.. One areas get 3-4 inches of rain, another 5 miles away gets a trace. I frequently check the water depth gauges. One of my locations opened up and I tried with a friend for some deeper water hunting. First, I found a small horse incisor consistent with the Blancan age of fossils from this site. The most common small horse I find here is N. peninsulatus, and I think this is likely from that horse. Then a switch to modern, and I am thinking this is wild pig / boar, but not positive whether it is an incisor or a tusk. and finally, what I believe to be a fossil incisor but I am just not sure the mammal.. It looks to be the size and shape of an Equus incisor, BUT I have not seen that enamel texture, the horizontal lines on the enamel tip, the dual tower nature of that enamel tip in the normal Equus incisors I find. Most of my Equus incisors are just bigger versions of the N. peninsulatus incisor I showed above. Thanks for any any all comments. On this last tooth, width of chewing surface is 11 mm, length of tooth is 43 mm. The White Queen ".... in her youth she could believe "six impossible things before breakfast" Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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