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Bought as T-rex but want to confirm here it is not Nanotyrannus.
FossilsAndStuff posted a topic in Fossil ID
Hi, I got this beautiful tooth recently of wich I am pretty sure its T.rex, but I would realy like to have that confirmed here! Hell Creek formation, Jordan, Montana. This specimen measures 5.6 cm Thanks alot in advance! -
From the album: Dinosaur Teeth
Tyrannosaurus rex tooth from Hell Creek Formation, South Dakota.-
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Hi guys, I made this post about this small theropod tooth from the lance creek formation, Wyoming, USA. I bought it years ago and it was sold to me as belonging to a dromaeosaurid. It doesn't seem to me that it corresponds to any "raptor", but to a baby of Tyrannosaurus rex/Nanotyrannus lacensis. What do you say? Thanks in advance! Ps: the tooth is 1,2 cm/0.47 inch long and 0,6 cm/0.24 inch wide.
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So after Tyrannosaurus Rex WIP thread, i have made some renders. ZBrush screen In Houdini with Karma Please tell meif something is a ittle off, i will recreate it. My sculpting process:
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Any ready to bid ? https://www.sothebys.com/en/buy/auction/2022/maximus-rex/tyrannosaurus-rex-skull (Hope its not old news and posted in the right place - New user still learning )
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Hi, Any thoughts on this? It is from Garfield, County, Montana. 1.8 cm so it's quite small. The serrations are a bit battered and have matrix stuck on them, but are present. Any thoughts would be appreciated. The white marks, am I right that this is from plant roots wrapped around the tooth? Thanks
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Here is my new wood grain Tyrannosaurus rex tooth. Found in Hell Creek, South Dakota and just shy over 1'40 inches. I really like the split with the serrations. Makes it extra special for me.
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Hi, This one is a real kicker for me and I'm eager to hear what you think. Before studying it, I thought it might be a small T Rex, but the serrations are too fine. I don't believe it can be Nano for a few reasons, base shape being a big one (zero pinch). But it'd be unusual for a DR I think too, mostly for the mesial carina, but not sure. I wonder if much of the oddity is due to it possibly being an anterior tooth...? It's: From the hell creek formation CH: 16.6mm CBL: 8.8mm (1.88 ratio) Mesial serration density: about 6 per MM Distal serration density: about 4 per MM Serration shape: Hard to tell with the level of wear, but the stumps are perfectly round--not boxy or rectrangular, as I'd expect if chisel Base cross-section: Oval, no pinch whatsoever Mesial carina: Here's a tough part--it's very offset to one side and it hard for me to tell whether that means twist or not. Both the distal and mesial carina are fairly extremely to opposite sides (anterior?). So the mesial can look like it has twist, but, from the right sideways view, the two carina are both visible and parallel from top to bottom--they don't seem to converge with a twist at the lower mesial portion. THANK YOU!
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Hi, Seller doesnt know if this is Rex or Nano. He says its worn by feeding and rubbing on other tooth and is complete. It is from Hell Creek, Montana. Ive asked for a county/town. Thanks
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Real Carcharodontosaurus claw?
heZZ posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Is this real, is there any? Found in Tegana Formation, Kem Kem Beds of the Northern Sahara, Morocco. It measures 9 1/4 inches long. -
This should be a Tyrranosaurus Rex Tooth. Correct? Info regarding the Tooth: Fossil information : Hell Creek Formation, Jordan, Montana, VS. Size: 58mm, Cretaceous (66 - 70 mil y) The tooth been left as found. Just some cleaning. Has a very nice natural wear on the tip. I have seen some other Tyrranosaur Rex tooth trough searching, they were much rounder and thicker towards the lower end. Perhaps those are located differently in the jaw more to the back to crush meat. Looking forward to your thoughts
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Hey guys, I bought this tooth as T.Rex from a reputable seller and a couple people have said it’s Rex but one also told me it’s nano because of the serrations. If I could get confirmation that would be very helpful thanks. Size: 1.18 inches Location: Garfield County Montana (hell creek)
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These are all found in what I believe is the scollard formation at roughly the same elevation. The black one is what appears the least "Rex-like" to me. @Troodon
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Hey guys, I purchased this T. rex premax partial tooth and I just wanted to confirm it is indeed Rex. The serrations seem to match. From Hell Creek, Montana, Usa. Size is 3cm. Thank you for all imput.
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A very popular site has some "Tyrannosaurus rex" teeth. Here are two pics of one. Description does say Morocco yet also says T. rex. I see a repaired carcharodontosaurus tooth ( a dino not mentioned in the posting). Anybody have a different opinion? This person also has incredibly small hands for a 5.85 inch tooth!
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Hello. A friend of mine has a fossil tyrannosaur and spinosaur tooth and was looking to confirm the identification. Unfortunately, he doesn't have much locality information. First, the tyrannosaur tooth. He says it comes from around Red Deer, Alberta. No other information. Next the spino tooth. Comes from "Morocco, I think." Is it spinosaurid? The tooth doesn't have the usual Kem Kem colors. Thanks for your help.
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Sales just concluded a min ago. I definitely wasn't expecting it to reach this insanely high amount. No word yet AFAIK on whether he's going to a private collection or museum Is this the highest a dinosaur has ever been sold for? I wonder what precedence it'd set for fossils and paleontology moving forward On the pro side, it'd encourage more folks to go out there looking for fossils and possibly finding rare and important finds. On the con, more fossils might be priced out of the reach of museums
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First Tyrannosaurus Rex Tooth, Scollard Formation, Alberta
dingo2 posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
I took a trip out to the scollard formation in Alberta the other day for the first time. I've been hunting in Alberta for years now, but only recently decided to try and branch out from our old hunting grounds. I was unaware that there were T-Rex fossils in our province, but I read through a few old posts on this forum about some massive teeth being pulled out of Alberta so I decided it was worth a shot. I told my dad about it and we decided to drive out on his birthday. I ended up finding a few broken T-Rex teeth, one would have been well over 3 inches. My dad easily had the find of the day with this intact tooth. Probably the best birthday present one could recieve. We will definitely be going back soon, but I want to educate myself on the scollard more before we go again. I was planning to be able to identify the whitemud, battle formation, and kneehills tuff, but failed in practice. If anybody here has explored the scollard in the past, I'd love to get some pointers on navigating, as you can only run up and down the hoodoos so many times before you're done for the day.- 10 replies
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I hope I'm not breaking any TFF rules by discussing fossil sales outside the sales forum. Does anyone know what is happening with Stan the T. rex? It looks like he is being put up for auction. Why did they suddenly decide to sell him? https://www.christies.com/features/The-life-of-Stan-a-T-rex-excavated-in-1992-10872-7.aspx?sc_lang=en&PID=en_hp_carousel_1
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Hi Fossil Forum, I’m hoping you could help me with a tooth ID. It’s from Hell Creek and I believe a Tyrannosaur. I’d love for it to be a T. Rex, but I’m hoping you could confirm either way. Thanks! Also, this is my first post, so if it’s in the wrong discussion, just let me know and I’ll delete and re-post.
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Picked this up off the auction sight. Hell creek tooth out of Powder river county Montana. Not expecting a perfect ID. It's small and I know that makes em hard to ID. This guy is just shy of an inch and heavy for his size. I have meg teeth of comparable size that weigh nothing compared to this specimen. It does have some remaining serrations but not much. Anyway, regardless of nano or rex status I thought it was an interesting tooth.
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I think this is a Rex tooth because it has a thick base and the tooth is wide, but I’m not expert and was hoping someone could reaffirm for me.
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The base is giving me some trouble with this. Wanted to know if I can get some help on ID, rex or nanotyrannus? Lance Creek Formation, Wyoming.
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