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Who can it be?


Flgirl

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Welcome to the Forum. :) 

 

I took the liberty of brightening your pictures. 

 

IMG_0608.JPG.66c6cfbbbebe2a317805dcc2646c6ece.JPG          IMG_0609.JPG.62bb880d0778ee10429a0f82e65ac0ce.JPG

 

The photo on the left looks like it may have been cut, or sawed, to me. :headscratch::unsure: 

Possibly a part of a pelvis?

Wait for some more opinions, ... one of the bone guys should be along soon.

Regards,

    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."

John Muir ~ ~ ~ ~   ><))))( *>  About Me      

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Turtle shell, maybe softshelled turtle.  Welcome to the forum and especially south Florida fossil hunting opportunities.

I stopped at the Arcadia boat ramp yesterday on the way to Horse Creek.

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

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With the sawn sides, it looks like an old 'pork chop' bone to me.  :)

The human mind has the ability to believe anything is true.  -  JJ

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Looks like T-bone steak, minus the steak.  Or pork chop.

It does not take as long as people may think for bone to take on that mineralized look in tannin-rich water.  I have collected sawed cow bone that had the same color as mosasaur vertebrae, side by side in an Alabama creek.

 

Don

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