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Showing results for tags 'identify'.
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Can you help me identify this? Found on the shore of Bras Dor Lake in Nova Scotia. Whole specimen is about 9 inches across.
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- cape breton island nova scotia
- coprolite
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Hello! I am stumped trying to Identify this piece my neighbor gave me. I'm a genetic molecular scientist....not a lot of geology experience! Thought it could be texas holey rock, but there is quite a bit of color. Possibly limestone, but again, the color?! Maybe coral, but I'm not finding any definitive shapes that resemble coral. The majority of the piece has tiny holes. One side of it doesn't have any at all. Any and all ideas are appreciated!
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Hi All, My son picked this up at a garage sale from an amateur collector. A megalodon tooth perhaps? Many thanks!
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Location is kem kem beds, seller said less than 5% restoration. I know nothing about claws but this one almost looks too good to be true and too perfect but I’m not sure how to definitively tell if it’s real or fake
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Hello everyone ! I have these two fossil vertebrae from the Kem Kem formation from Morocco (no exact location) and I can't identify them. Can someone help me please? They are very different from each other. The red vertebra n.1 has an oval shape and has mirrored holes on both sides, while above it has a larger some. I initially thought it was Hybodus or Onchopristis, but I'm not sure, it could be many other shark species. The white vertebra n.2 does not have any type of hole on the edge and is almost perfectly round, I believe it is a completely different species from the first. Thank you.
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hi guys, I am asking your help.... It is quite eroded but im confident that the expertise in the forum could help me identify. It was found in a Jurassic stratification in the south of Europe. Thanks
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Found this on the beach today... At first I thought it was a screw. Seems to be the stem of a Crinoid, but totally surrounded by this white, chalky, calcium like substance. What exactly is going on here? Also, I live on Long Island NY which I know is not home to any native fossils due to its geology, so are most limestone fossils like this basically washed here from other locations?
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I purchased this quite a few years ago and have since forgotten what It is, can anyone help?
rick Dubea posted a topic in Fossil ID
I purchased this in Tucson 1990 and would like to know something about it .The fosil dealer told me ,but I do not remember . Thanks , Rick- 1 reply
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- 5 inch
- fossil tooth
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- holden beach
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I found this at holden NC. I was told it was a possible rib bone. I'm curious if that's the case. Thanks!
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- holen beach
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I know this tooth is not a fossil. I found it at Holden beach. I have shared it on every reddit and facebook forum and page I could. I have been unable to receive any definitive answers. I've had people say it's everything from a dog tooth to a fox, bear, to a sperm whale. If this is not appropriate to share because its not a fossil. I apologize. Please let me know and I'll take it down. I know there are a tremendous amount of well educated and experienced people on here. So my hopes were this would be a great place for a possible id. Thanks so much.
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- holden beach
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- bone
- hokden beach
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Location: Southern Nevada, USA ■weight is noticeably heavy for its size ■Very porus; sticks to tongue.
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Found these (and much more) in a Peace River trip. I’m relatively new to fossil hunting, and would greatly appreciate any help in IDing these. The last 2 pictures are the same but at different angles. Best guess for those are, starting at top left and going clockwise, vertebra, dolphin ear bone, deer tooth, alligator tooth,???. Thanks!
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Hi this is my second preparation project I’ve ever done, I also need some help identifying something. Original fish vertebrae Finished Original mosasaur vertebra, but might need help on ID Finished. Original, and finally my favorite. A Mosasaur jaw with mosasaur bone. Finished. here are the tools I used
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Fossil Shark Teeth - Collected in Green Mill Run, Pitt Co., NC
Southeast Fossils posted a topic in Fossil ID
Length <1" Since the locality contains lag deposits from Cretaceous-Neogene, age & formation undetermined. Hard to see in pics, but the lingual region is very concave and root highly arched.- 1 reply
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- identification?
- identify
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Found this on the beach in Ostend today, we were looking for shark teeth but found this instead no idea what it is but it looks like a fossil About 10 cm long, 2,5 cm wide, 1,5 cm high
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This is a sandy rock with what looks like a little dinosaur with scales trapped within. Thanks in advance! Any help appreciated I wet the fossil in some pics. On the back you can see clearly 3 triangle toe prints. I am thinking this animal was stepped on and trapped in the mud millions of years ago, until I dug it out after a heavy rain exposed a bit.
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Hello, I was rummaging through a rock pile in stevens county, Minnesota today and found these. These are the first fossils I’ve ever found and admittedly were quite exciting to see. Could anyone help me identify what they are? I have a feeling the fourth and fifth photos could be a clam? Or is it possibly just how the rock broke? Thanks!
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Found this today on a beach on Lake Huron, is this a tooth? And if so, do we know what it may have come from?