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Showing results for tags 'Teeth'.
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A little art project I’m working on. The teeth are all real, no restorations - all found by myself and my daughter. I get that the teeth aren’t t-rex but I just liked the skull replica (bought online). I also get that the teeth aren’t necessarily in the right position or arch, but I figured 99.999%of people would never know. The original skull had horrible looking teeth before I broke them all out Feel free to tell me what’s blatantly wrong and I can fix it, or replace with other teeth I’ve got. Next up is working on a frame to hang it in. I was thinking a sheet metal backing with a wood frame and some led lights behind the skull? Any thoughts or ideas in a display? thanks
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Hi Everyone, I will be grateful for helping me with identification of shark and stingrays teeth found in Korytnica clays in Poland (miocene-badenian age). I'm searching for genus and species names rather than common names (for example "Galeocerdo aduncus" instead of "tiger shark") but every information will be useful. Thank you!
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Found these teeth and am wondering what they are. Found in a creek an hour south of Mandan ND in the cannonball formation
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- fossil teeth
- shark teeth
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I decided to stop by and check out a few road cuts while traveling through the St. Louis area and found what I believe are a couple of fish teeth. I'm not certain, but all of their features lead me to believe they are fish teeth. They were both found loose of rock and close by each other as seen in the first photo. While they very in size and shape, I believe it is probable they are from the same type of animal. The rock seems to be Mississippian in geologic age, though I'm unsure of the geologic formation they eroded out from. This isn't territory I am familiar with, so I appreciate anyone's expertise on the matter!
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- mississippian
- roadcut
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Ive been trying to "assemble" a "set" of Serratolamna ascheroni. I have based the dentition on a blue shark/Hemipristis dentition. I would like some advice about, the difference in uppers and lowers. In the pics on the bottom row I have tried to show the two versions I think are viable. The left is Prionace, the right Hemi based "set" Which one looks right? Open to advice, critique, or refrences.
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- dentition morphology
- moroccan
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What species could this tooth belong to and is it actually a fossil?
nika posted a topic in Fossil ID
As far as I can tell, this is a single rooted tooth. I am not sure if this is old enough to count as a fossil, but since it is so dark in colour I suspect it is at least not brand-new. It is not very pointy, so it doesn´t look like a carnivore tooth to me. On the picture I think the sequence of the the positional relationship from front left to bottom right is labial, palatinal, mesial, distal. I'm leaning towards a mandibular incisor. It was found on a glacial freshwater lake in Germany. The right side of the scale is in cm. I would be grateful if anyone has an idea about the owner of this tooth, or could point me in a good direction on how to further narrow it down.- 1 reply
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Hello everyone, I found some mammal teeth on a recent trip to the Peace River. Help in identifying would be appreciated! Tooth #1 The first tooth I believe could be from a peccary; however, I know that peccary teeth are similar to wild boar teeth. Are there any indicators that would allow me to tell the difference? Tooth #2 I do not know the species this tooth comes from. Any ideas?
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- peccary
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Hi everyone, While hubs and I love nothing more than to seek out teeth and fossils when coming to the beach each year, we chose to head down to Charleston to both John's Island and Folly Beach and found quite a bit. Unfortunately, we're still learning how to ID them so I thought I would ask you knowledgeable people. Could you let me know what these teeth are and for the lightest one, curious how old this one is! thanks for any help!
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- shark
- south carolina
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Good morning everyone, I think a couple of people of this forum already posted some of their finds from the Arabian peninsula (Saudi Arabia/Qatar) here but here are some shark teeth that I’m struggling to ID. mom thinking that those might be some kind of Brachycarcharias? Thank you guys for your help!
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Hi, I found these teeth sticking up through the dirt near a tree in Charleston South Carolina, USA this week. They are approximately 4 centimeters in length. I have not been able to identify what animal these are from and I do not have any idea on age. Any help available would be greatly appreciated. Thanks very much and Best Regards
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- charleston south carolina
- identify
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Hello everyone, I went to visit family this past week in Gilmer County, West Virginia and found these mammal teeth in a creek. They were found pretty close to each other, which makes me wonder if they were from the same animal. They appear to be old, but I don’t think they are completely mineralized. They remind me a lot of the bison teeth I find down in Peace River, FL, but this is weird considering there are no cow or buffalo farms very close to the area I found these (that I know of). Anyone have any idea what these are, why they’re here, and how old they could be?
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Ciao a tutti! Potete aiutarmi per favore a identificare i denti di questo squalo? Provengono da Ypresian del bacino di Ouled Abdoun. Dimensione circa 1 cm. Hi everyone! Can you please help me identify this shark's teeth? They come from Ypresian in the Ouled Abdoun basin. Size about 1cm.
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This is a very nicely preserved Pliosaur tooth from Goulmima apparently. It has the details of a Pliosaur tooth. Only question is the color. Lots of them are brown to red colors. This one is grey/black. Could this be from a different location?
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Finished a fossil hunt at Big Brook, NJ! Need help with some ID.
75millionyearsago posted a topic in Fossil ID
The first images are of a bone i am almost certain is non-fossilized but i could always be wrong! can anyone ID the species? Next images are of what i assume may be petrified wood, any chance it is? Its quite heavy for its small size, and has a wood-like texture. Then i have this black shell-like thing, unsure of it’s species but it is certainly something. Lastly i ID’d this tooth as a cretaceous thresher shark tooth- am i right? thank you for your help!- 9 replies
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Hey!! These teeth have been found in north of france and are probably cenomanian, maybe albian. Are these really dwardius ?
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- middle cretaceous
- northern france
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Hi. I would like to ask does anyone have ideas or tips how fossil teeth could be safely displayed? Im soon able to display some of my fossils and planned to get glass showcase, but realised that it might not be efficient for showing small-medium teeth. Most my smaller teeth are individually packed in clear cases and some are in riker cases. Any thoughts? Thanks for answers.
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Not quite sure if this piece of fish jaw is X-fish or Pachyrhizodus. What do y'all think? Found in the Ozan formation of Fannin County, Texas.
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- fannin county
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Hi all! New to the site, new to fossil hunting, and new to the UK! I was taking a walk earlier today at Shingle Street, not looking for fossils. I happened to look down and found this gem! Can anyone help me identify it and tell me how old it is? Thanks!
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- identification
- shark
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I’m not sure if some of these are shark teeth, or teeth in general. Is it possible to identify what these are? I’m particularly enthralled by the dark grey flat tooth in the top row. Found these at Calvert cliffs the other day, can you help identify if these are shark teeth and if so what species they belong to?
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Greetings, found on southern North Carolina coast. Subject E resembles a tooth but not sure, subject f is hollow like a tooth, and subject g looks like bone perhaps marine mammal? Thank you for your time.
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- marine fossil
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