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Showing results for tags 'Hip'.
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Found this bone in Peace River, FL.... Looks like a hip or leg fossil.... Any ideas??? Thank u for ur time...
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I found this rock a few years ago buried in the ground. She looks like a hip. The rock weighs about 2-3 pounds and is the size of an adult hand. You can see scratches on it (as if someone had scratched it with a sharp knife). There are also small holes (see photo) and the rock is red/orange in color inside these cavities. I think it's a fossil, but I don't know much about it. Ideas ?
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I finally got my new PC set up, so I can now delve into, add to and share my data with you all once again. It was a bit of a wait, but I managed to survive the absence by visiting the "Fossilien Boerse", the yearly fossil show near Stuttgart and also by taking a couple of trips to my currently favorite site in the Callovian. Here are a few of my finds. I'm particularly fond of the two Cadoceras ammonites, since I hadn't found any from this species in nearly as good condition as these in the past. Finding two of them within a week was really something special for me. Cadoceras cf. elatmae #1 Cadoceras cf. elatmae #2 Choffatia sp. #1 Choffatia sp. #2 Choffatia sp. #3 There are still a few more to prep, so I'll show some more of them here later on.
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Hello all! First post here; please forgive me if I'm not doing something right. I found this fossil in a creek in Summervile, South Carolina and I believe it's part of a hip bone. I have no idea what it could be from and I am hoping somebody on here could help me out! Thank you so much! (My photos are too large and if I made them smaller I will lose detail, so I will be adding photos as posts asap)
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I'm having a hard time finding any images of anything other than the outside/side view of a spinosaur pelvic bone. I'm trying to see what the bone looks like in general, but all too many times...WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAY too many times I'll spend forever unsuccessfully trying to come across pictures, images, or diagrams that show what a bone looks like from other angles than what you see be looking at the skeleton from generic angles, like this one. In some cases it's not TOO difficult, but even those common bones have areas that you can never see, unless you get totally lucky and happen across it, OR if there's maybe, hopefully some site/database that specifically shows what entire bones look like. I doubt that, but I know there's perfect diagrams floating around on the web, but I can't seem to find any *im just talking about dinos and other extinct animal bones. I'm sure there's plenty of sites with images of every conceivable angle of every bone from humans and common living animals, but I'm not looking for that kind of thing.
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Partial hip of a turtle.
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A fragment of the right hip of a woolly rhino.
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A fragment of the left hip of a woolly rhino.
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Hi new member here... trying to ID this bone I found. I actually caught it fishing in the Mississippi river in St. Paul MN. No idea how old it is or what it came from. I've got some nice pictures though! Thanks for any help I can get.