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Showing results for tags 'Tooth'.
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So I found a few things at Myrtle Beach and I'm looking for some help in ID'ing them. I love looking for fossils but am not sure on things and I love the help I've gotten on this site so far. And any help with these is appreciated. The ruler is in inches. . . . 1: I thought this looked similar to a whale ear bone? Admittedly it could just be a rock but I wanted to post here and get some opinions. Getting photos of something black and shiny can be difficult but I could take more if needed, and maybe find better lighting. 2. At first I though alligator tooth but then I learned that mosasaur teeth have been found in this area also, so now I'm not so sure. Either way I love it. 3. I was thinking dolphin tooth but obviously it's broken so I'm not entirely sure. 4. And I thought I'd throw this one here too. When I saw it in the water I thought I was going to be picking up a cucullaea steinkern, but this is what it was. I thought I remembered seeing something like this online somewhere but I really have no idea, unless it's just a piece of some bone. So there they are. Any information about any of these would be much appreciated. And I could post more photos of any of these.
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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
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From the album: Neutache Shoreline
4/5/24 Nice partially rooted m3. Bright orange color on tips of enamel. #VL5© CC BY-NC
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Found on the coast of Hilton Head South Carolina USA. I am quite unsure of what this is, it’s very eroded and might ether be unidentifiable, or just a funny looking rock. However, I find it looks very tooth like, with one wide end, and one pointy end, as well as a cavity that is open at the wide end and gently tracks further into the “tooth” My first thought was a premolar of some sort of primitive whale sans the roots. But that seems unlikely. Please share your thoughts! I’d love any sort input and if you would like a better picture of a certain angle, let me know! Here are the pictures 1. Front side 2.Back side 3.Right side 4.left side 5.Top side 6.Bottom side And here is a video of the specimen rotating! (ignore the sparkling putty, it was the only option I had to get it to sand up nice while still being visible at all angles) IMG_0199.mov
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I found this in the Wind River formation/ indian meadows formation. It was laying on top of the ground I haven't been able to figure out what it could be and It is so cool I need some help!
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My friend has this huge tooth and we want to know what shark it was likely from, no idea where it was found, but hopefully someone can help us!
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Since the topic i am searching for as apparently vanished, ill make a new one . I recall a topic on here a couple of years ago on someone having a wooden cabinet and storing their fossils in it. The issue was the wood apparently was out gassing, and damaging the fossils as a result . Does anyone else have insight on this and what kinds of wood do not mix well to store or display fossils in?
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Hi All, I'm new to this forum and thought I'd send over images of my theropod teeth plus one extremely impressive sauropod from Madagascar. Hope you like them! Paul
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- albertosaurus
- allosaurus
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hi, I have a question about something myself and my daughter found yesterday while walking on garristown beach near kinsale, she think it's a tooth, but I am not quite sure. Ruby would love to find because she loves fossils. Anyone know anything. Thank you for your time
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Hey TFF! First post! Not making my appearance with a bang, but had a decent quick trip to the Potomac, about an hour and 15 minutes. Nice handful of sea glass, decent amounts of ray plates and turritella. A few solid sand tigers. And what I believe to be a small, busted otodus in the palm of my hand. I usually always come away with at least one small complete otodus, so when I don’t, it makes a great day fossil hunting turn into merely a very good day 🤷🏻♂️. Let me know what you think!
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- alabama
- north alabama
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Another hunt recently with more E KS ‘glacial’ material. Posting this on behalf of my hunting partner. My novice guess is equus, but I’m not sure. If it is equus, got any species ideas? Thank you so much, I really appreciate the help!
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Hello, I went searching in the Callovian Lower Oxford Clay at Yaxley, and I found this small tooth, measuring 6mm across. Could it perhaps be Hypsocormus? Aside from the tooth, I found a few crinoid ossicles, annelid tubes and the pyrite ammonites from the Oxford clay are stunning, I think I found several Kosmoceras, possibly Peltoceras athleta and Quenstedtoceras lamberti. I have attached a few photos of some of the ammonites too. Thank you.
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- jurassic
- oxford clay
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Liopleurodon ferox tooth Oxford Clay, Orton Brick Pit, Peterborough, UK Identified by Dr Adam S. Smith (Author of The Plesiosaur Directory) as belonging to Liopleurodon ferox due to the distribution, length, spacing of the ridges which is typical for the species
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- liopleurodon
- liopleurodon ferox
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I found this tooth in the peace river it seems to just be the Crown since the majority of the root is broken off. Wondering if anyone knows what it is. Looks like some type of cetacean tooth, but im hoping for mammal. If anyone needs additional photos please just ask. Thanks
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- bone vally
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- calvert cliffs
- megalodon
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From the album: Eagle Ford Group
Ptychodus decurrens, South TX Cenomanian, Cretaceous Apr, 2024 Today I found my first Ptychodus/Eagle Ford site of South TX! The outcrop is pretty tiny, but there were some shark teeth to be had. The fauna included Ptychodus decurrens, Carcharias saskatchewanensis, Squalicorax sp., and Haimirichia amonensis. -
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!
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Hi. Would anyone be able to confirm what this tooth is? And who would carve it out to use as a decorative personal item? Thank you so very much.