Search the Community
Showing results for tags 'Teeth'.
-
This spot keeps putting out, between three of us, the running tally is 26 megs, 1 Chub and 3 makos..I wish i was younger, id still be digging 🤣
- 7 replies
-
- 8
-
- florida
- Peace River
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
This mosasaur tooth was labeled as "Mosasaurus anceps" from Morocco, which probably was supposed to read "Prognathodon anceps" but I'm not sure how accurate that is. The tooth has very prominent ridges and super tiny serrations. It's around 2.5 centimeters long.
- 4 replies
-
- morocco
- mosasaurus
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Well....I am really trying my best to figure out this Cretaceous Fish Tooth thing vs Reptile Tooth but I keep getting stumped, So here is another tooth that I am not sure if it's fish or maybe reptile? Plus a couple of shark teeth that I would like confirmation on my ID. PLUS a really cool little sawfish tooth that just seems....different...than the usual Ptychotrygon. Any thoughts are appreciated! Eagle Ford Formation 1. Size 1/4 inch 6 mm It does seem to have a carina ridge but it also has one side slightly sheared off. 2. I have tentatively ID'd the top tooth as Cretodus semplicatus due to the striations on the blade. The second tooth looks so similar, but no striations so is it Cretolamna appendiculata? Size 1/8 3mm 3. Is this a pathological Scapanorhynchus? 4. This tiny little sawfish tooth is one of the most beautiful things I've ever found. The little decor on it is amazing. Is it a Ptychogrygon triangularis which are so common in Post Oak Creek? Plus I just want to show off this amazing piece - I think it's a Gastropod Baniformis that has been entirely replace by crystals!
- 8 replies
-
- 4
-
- cretaceous
- post oak creek
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hello, I've posted about my collection quite a bit by now, but now I decidet to make this topic. I will show here every piece of my collection, but not together. I'll upload pictures of every piece with infomation separatly in the replies. You can expect new pieces daily. So lets start, with the start of my collection ! A Spinosaurus tooth. Well, technicly not my first piece, that was a brachiopod that was stolen in kindergarten while I showed it to the other kids... Whomp Whomp ! If I should stop posting daily here, I either forgot it, or I ran out of pieces to show you. In this case, i'll respond when I got something new. Any opinions, suggestions, ID's are always welcome ! So, here goes the tooth : Species : Spinosauridae indet. Age : 96 million years Formation : Kemkem beds, morocco Sice : 6,5 cm
- 62 replies
-
- 3
-
- Collection
- skeletons
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
I recently found a few shark teeth on the beaches of Ft. Pickens (Gulf Islands National Seashore) on the Gulf of Mexico. The tooth in the top left corner is from a Great White. The second from the right on the top row is from a Bull Shark (I think), and I believe the tooth on the bottom right corner is from a Lemon Shark. Can anyone help me identify the rest? Many thanks in advance!
- 4 replies
-
- 4
-
- Florida
- Gulf of Mexico
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Hi, I found these teeth a while back and just never could find a solid match, does anyone know the species? They were found on the Kaw river in Kansas. Thank you!
- 4 replies
-
- fossil
- fossil tooth
-
(and 7 more)
Tagged with:
-
Im feeling quite industrious..have some 1" PVC , noodles and hardware cloth laying around..do i want to go big "24? or do the normal size, like this one "16..feedback appreciated.
- 14 replies
-
- florida
- Peace River
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Found today can any one please shed some light on this please thank-you
mick Rushforth posted a topic in Fossil ID
- 5 replies
-
- Fossil reptile
- Plant
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
So to piggy back on my ID post, I did a door knock and got permission to dig in a creek on an expansive cattle farm, this was a trip just to scope out the lay of the creek using my 👀 and it totally didn't disappoint. Deer Pedicle Tooth/Frag of unknown origin Fish Vert perhaps? Creek worn Horse tooth Holmesina scutes? Broken posterior meg Honker of a puffer plate
-
I’d like to clean up the micro/macro fossils I’ve been finding so that the the pics will look good. Can they be soaked in vinegar or will that destroy them? Here’s an example of what I’m dealing with.
-
Found both these teeth near the peace river i've never found this kind of tooth shape. Im pretty sure its a type of mako but was wondering if anyone could an ID it or give any type of information.
- 5 replies
-
- 2
-
- Bone Valley Formation
- creek
-
(and 8 more)
Tagged with:
-
From the album: Neutache Shoreline
My first non-ptychodus shark tooth. Unique shape on these 'Crow shark' teeth. 3/10/24 #VM1© CC BY-NC
-
From the album: Neutache Shoreline
My first mandible with teeth. Complete incisor with nice colors. I labeled it as Ondatra sp. since differences between zibethicus and cinnamonius teeth/mandibles are basically nonexistent. Molar pattern on Muskrat molars are very similar to Meadow Vole molars. However, Muskrats are much larger than meadow voles, so Meadow Vole teeth/mandibles will be much smaller than muskrat. Here is a close up picture of the molar on this specimen: 4/5/24 #VL4© CC BY-NC
-
- 1
-
- cinnamonius
- incisor
-
(and 6 more)
Tagged with:
-
I know it's not teeth but I just used that in the description. it goes all the way around the rock so I assume it goess through it, too. but it might not.
- 1 reply
-
- brownish rock
- driveway gravel
-
(and 1 more)
Tagged with:
-
Could someone tell me what these are (first photo)? They were found on late eocene sediments near Vic, Catalonia, Spain. The only other fossil around were corals/sponges (would also appreciate if someone could confirm) like the one in the second photo attached so these stood out.
-
Hello beautiful people, I would like you to help me label the following specimens, which come from Morocco. In theory, the 3 teeth in photo "A" are from juvenile spinosaurs. Those in photo "B" deltadromeus. And finally those in the photo "C" Tylosaurus. As always, very grateful for your responses!
-
I found both of these in a creek near the peace river just wondering what they were? Find 1 I think is a camel tooth, or cow but im not entirely sure especially since its some what white near the top. Find two im hoping is a sloth tooth but i don’t have enough experience to be sure. Any help would be appreciated.
-
So, no Kem Kem dromaeosaurids after all?
BirdsAreDinosaurs posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
Hi all, I just recently had the time to thoroughly read through this recent paper, which describes, amongst other things, how machine learning was used (in combination with other techniques) to identify a possible Deltadromeus tooth. The authors also suggest the presence of a second noasaurid species in the Kem Kem beds, based on a small sub-adult partial vertebra. In the discussion, the authors discuss individual teeth found in the Kem Kem beds that were previously referred to Dromaesauridae by Amiot et al. (2004), Richter et al. (2013), and Ibrahim et al. (2020a). The authors believe all of these teeth do in fact not belong to Dromaeosauridae. They say some are most likely abelisaurid, and others noasaurid (those with strongly distally recurved crowns and those with a non-serrated mesial carina and/or a faint constriction between tooth and crown). All of the dental features used to refer Kem Kem teeth to Dromaeosauridae, are in fact also present in noasaurids and juvenile abelisaurids. To be honest, I never really believed the teeth described in these older papers belonged to Dromaeosauridae. Having said that, there are still some tooth types from the Kem Kem beds that have never been described in scientific literature, which are "dromaeosaurid-like". For example, the ones in Troodon's overview having a twisted mesial carina. However, when you look at lateral teeth of the noasaurid Masiakasaurus, some also have a twisted mesial carina. I think there is still a possibility that some of these small dromaeosaurid-like Kem Kem teeth are in fact dromaeosaurid, but it is quite likely that they all turn out to be noasaurid or abelisaurid. What do you think?- 1 reply
-
- 1
-
- dinosaur
- dromaeosauridae
-
(and 3 more)
Tagged with:
-
Does anybody else go to mines in the summertime because of the river levels are too high
-
Hello everyone, another ID-question. We found this at the southern side of the Danish island of Møn, right next in the area of neolithic settlement. I have a hard time identifying this particular part of a tooth/fossilized set of teeth. As we are staying here for our holidays, I have no other scale with me. Any idea, of what we found here, would be greatly appreciated. Best wishes, Jens