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Showing results for tags 'spike'.
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Hello and thank you for your assistance. Can anyone identify this fossil? I found it in SC , Cooper River. Tooth? Horn? Spike? Again, thank you!
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- horn
- south carolina
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Hello, I have seen this Stegosaur spike for sale from the Atlas Mountains of Morocco. Boulahfa. Is it Stegosaur or is it something else such as a Spicomelus spike? thanks for the help
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- adratiklit
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This was found in Honduras in a field it is about 8lbs , top is round like a turtle shell but bottom is flat except the indent in the center with what looks like a strange bone structure with spikes. it has a burnt look to it, and may I note that this area is known for many Mayan artifacts.
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Pachycephalosaurus skull fragment, also known as Pachy spike cluster, from Hell Creek Formation of Carter County, Montana. I was surprised by its weight and size when I received it. Slightly bigger than 2.5 inches diameter.
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This is being sold as two dinosaur dorsal spikes. One is 50x76x97mm and the other is 45x55x85mm. No locality or other information mentioned. Kinda fishy, but no idea what it is.
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Found this tooth/spike/claw/antler in Van Zandt county Texas. It was found amongst petrified wood similar in color. The piece is of similar feel and weight as petrified wood. The petrified wood context is of the Wilcox Group (Eocene). Attached are pictures for identification. Anyone have any idea what this is?
- 4 replies
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- claw
- east texas
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Triceratops frill ankylosaurus scute, raptor claw fossils
Dinobot posted a topic in Is It Real? How to Recognize Fossil Fabrications
Hello let me start of by say you all are awesome! Amateurs like myself have got a lot more confidence because of the help you give us. It was great day when I discovered this site I had bought these a ways back and I was going thru my collection and it would be great to get an opinion if I these are what they were described as. The "raptor claw" was the first ever fossil I bought! (Fingers crossed haha) The COA said it was from the Taquiz, kasar-es-souk, region in Morocco. I believe the seller told be the red lines we blood grooves? It was probably 10 years ago so I dont recall much else about the ad. The other two were bought from the same seller, who did not have much reviews so I took a chance I guess. He described them as a "tricertops frill spike" and an "ankylosaurus armor scute" all i have regarding these ones is that is was found on private land in Wyoming in Lance creek formation... Any input would be greatly appreciated! I tried to follow the posting etiquette sorry If I missed something. Thank you!- 6 replies
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- anykylosaurus
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Going through some chunkosaurus boxes tonight and found this piece that looked fairly pachy right off the bat. Maybe it’s a stretch because I’m still a little depressed that I traded away the pachy dome we found earlier in the year, but this piece sure looks like a worn spike to me. Am I right or am I wrong? Only the one angle shows the “spike” but I wanted to show all angles. The backside looks very pachy as well. thanks guys judith river formation of Montana - milk river
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I am obtaining this 2.6 inch pachy horn spike. Is there anyway to tell what particular specimen? Pachy vs stygimoloch vs Dracorex? Thanks all.
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- pachychephalosaurus
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Does anyone have, or can find, a picture of a fossil of the head horns of hybodus? Not the fin spines, but their "devil horns". I can't find any pictures of them that include visible horns...or at least that I can make out.
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- judith river
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I purchased it from eBay. It's from the Lance Formation of Eastern, WY. The exterior surface of the bone is pitted and has grooves just like a Triceratops brow horn. However, all of the Triceratops horns I have seen are conical, meaning they are round in cross section which this fossil is not. The cross section looks more triangular or diamond-like. This fossil has no compression or cracks in it which leads me to believe that the true cross section is more triangular or diamond-like than round in shape. The only other horns/spikes that would have surface bone texture like this and have that shape would be a large Ankylosaur side/shoulder spike. The fossil is partial so I cannot make a 100% definite ID either way so it is possibly a strangely shaped Triceratops brow horn section or a partial Ankylosaur side spike.
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Hello everyone! I found this one today, and I remember finding another similar years ago. Is this some kind of tooth? in the same place there are a lot of marine fossils, as far as I know it is not a tooth of shark. Maybe a cetacean? Not far away I have found a vertebra of a whale. The moment (epic) when I found it: The old one: Salutes from the south, below latitude - 45. Chao!