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Happy Fossil Friday


Troodon

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And everyone thought the Cubans invented the Conga line

 

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Twitter: Shaena Montanari

 

 

Ceratopsid footprints from Utah’s Blackhawk Formation.

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Twitter: Riley but spooky @Laelaps

 

Reconstruction of the skull of the horned, bizarre allokotosaur archosauromorph Shringasaurus indicus from the Middle Triassic of India.

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Twitter: macn.pv @MacnVp

 

 

 Here’s the type skull of “Tetrabelodon” osborni, a Miocene gomphothere (elephant relative) from Nebraska.

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Twitter: Advait M. Jukar, Ph.D. @amjukar

 

 

Super rare locality 

How about some of the coolest fossils from Dinosaur Park (Muirkirk quarry) in Maryland?  Here's an Acrocanthosaurus-like tooth and a really big, rooted nodosaur tooth:

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Twitter: Ben Miller

 

Pictured is the skull and jaw of Stegoceras validus, or “horny roof.” This North American pachycephalosaur, a type of thick-skulled dinosaur, was a small plant-eater that lived during the Late Cretaceous some 75 million years ago.

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Twitter: AMNH

 

 

The idea of sauropods having a turtle-like beak is intriguing after hearing news about it in 2019svp.

Additional read

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2019/10/sauropods-grew-big-munching-superfoods-sturdy-beaks

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Twitter: Evan Johnson-Ransom @EJR_Paleo

 

Yanornis a cretaceous bird from China

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Twitter: Thomas Holtz

 

It's a pareiasaur, a large, end Permian reptile that ate plants - an absolute Palaeozoic unit. The name means 'cheek lizard'. Making head frills cool long before ceratopsians got in on the action, Smooches

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Twitter: Dr Emma Louise Nicholls

 

 

Beer commemorating the 'Monsters of Maastricht', the huge Late Cretaceous mosasaurs found close to this city in the Netherlands

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Just finished reading about that line of trilos, it's so interesting how we can see such things about the behavior of animals from them being fossilized.

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Gotta be careful with the foam-up from the Gorilla Glue™ on that pareiasaur skull.  Had no idea they used that in professional paleontology!

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1 hour ago, HamptonsDoc said:

Love that coal mine track!

Agree my favorite.  About 8 years ago there were 2 of them for sale at Tucson.  They were huge and at that time I was living in the east so I had to pass.   They would not fit in the overhead compartment :shakehead:  Have never seen them again but I do have one in my collection.

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6 minutes ago, Troodon said:

overhead compartment 

You would have had to purchase a ticket for it and ordered it a veggie meal. Beautiful fossil btw do you have a photo of yours.  :D

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18 hours ago, Troodon said:

Agree my favorite.  About 8 years ago there were 2 of them for sale at Tucson.  They were huge and at that time I was living in the east so I had to pass.   They would not fit in the overhead compartment :shakehead:  Have never seen them again but I do have one in my collection.

There was one last year at Tucson but I passed on it for the same reason. Regret I did. 

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Found yesterday, S.W.Michigan. Does this qualify as a Fossil Crinoids graveyard plate. 150 mm x 101.5 mm. largest face 1 mm back 0.5 mm

Calyx 62 mm long. shown wet. 

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