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Showing results for tags 'teeth'.
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These are all out of the same estate auction as my earlier posts. One of the members, found that much of the collection was posted on this site by the former owner but these weren’t. I sent him a message but doubt I will hear back given the nature of estate auctions. Any help identifying these is as always greatly appreciated.
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Looking for the following fossils (teeth related)
JorisVV posted a topic in Member-to-Member Fossil Trades
Hi everyone, I am trying to find the following stuff someone is willing to trade. - Mosasaurus partial jaws or matrix pieces, not repaired or restored. From Morocco. - Belgian Megalodon teeth - Mastodon tooth - Quality Spinosaurus teeth, larger ones. I got a lot to offer, mostly teeth and jaws from dinosaurs and ice age relater animals.-
- cretacious
- deinosuchus
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Had a good time with my club yesterday when down at Batesford Quarry and got a nice haul for a first time down there. Not to many larger shark teeth in the piles but there were millions of regular fossils (mostly spines) but always a welcome sight to behold either way
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Hello, I purchased a huge box of Badlands mammal stuff a while ago and was able to identify mostly everything. I had some trouble with these two jawbones, though. I'm not really expecting them to be anything surprising but it would help me to put a definite label on them. in both the teeth looked a little like an amphicyonid's but that might just be wishful thinking! Thanks again! #1 #2: For scale
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- badlands
- carnivore?
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I took off yesterday morning an drove to a central Texas creek to fossil hunt. This is not the same spot I visited last week; it's a creek I hunted in September of last year. It is also Wolfe City formation. I'd hunted a gravel bar briefly in that previous trip, but had found all the teeth I brought home in outcrops on creek walls afterward. Considering how many teeth I found in those outcrops, I planned on hunting the gravel bars below them better this time. I first made the hike to the outcrops. I had found all the teeth on my previous trip in a narrow part of the outcrop just above the water level, and had noted to myself that lower water levels would be a better time to hunt this area. I thought that yesterday would provide those conditions, but it didn't. Not only was the water level not lower, but the bank just below the part of the outcrop I needed to hunt was very muddy, making it tough to maintain footing while hunting. In addition to that, weeds and brush up against the outcrops had gotten so thick that I wasn't able to hunt a couple of the previously productive spots at all. But I did find some teeth in the outcrops. Here are some in situ photos.
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- hamulus worm tube
- teeth
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Hello Guys.I live in Greece I really really want to hunt for fossils and shark teeth,but the problem is there arent any knowns spots.Have you found any teethin Greece?If So Where?And anyone that knows any spots in greece please tell me
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Hi everyone, maybe a strange ID. Here is the best pictutes i could take of it. Have no idea where it is from, likely somewhere in the USA. Also have no idea what it is.
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So I'm kind of more focusing on dinosaur teeth. This topic is where I'll post my dinosaur teeth. I'll still post the bones in my other topic though. Here is the collection so far. My Edmontosaurus teeth A couple new additions to this include a partially rooted tooth that I'd found, And an interesting spitter tooth. My tyrannosaur tooth collection And my Triceratops teeth I'll probably be posting some more soon.
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- collection
- dinosaur
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Can ayone help ID this jaw with teeth? It is encrusted with oxidized blue-clay, and was found in a creek here in SW, MS. Tumbling has created the exposed parts.
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I visited an estate sale close to my home. Down in south Central Texas. I picked this "rock" up because it glittered beautifully in the bright sunlight. As I studied the rock, a head began to take shape...
- 12 replies
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- body fossils
- fossils
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Help - How do I remove this coarse tar-like substance?
Mr.dogdad posted a topic in Fossil Preparation
Hello, I am hoping someone can help me! I have a Daspletosaurus tooth from the old man formation. It was found with a coarse, tar like substance stuck around the tooth (shown in photos) that won’t come off. I’ve tried rubbing acetone but that didn’t work. I tried picking a piece off but the enamel came with it. Are there any alternative methods I can use without risking any damage to the tooth?- 10 replies
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- cleaning fossils
- cleaning tips
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Hello everyone, I'm looking for people who have teeth fossils collections to help build a dataset for my graduation project which will be an application that does identify a tooth and extract information from the tooth image. If you don't mind sharing your dataset or a subset of it, please reply to this topic or PM me. Thanks in advance.
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- fossil
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Hello everyone, I'm looking for a professor in this field or someone with any sufficient knowledge in the matter of question, what can we obtain from looking at a tooth of an animal? The purpose of the question is to learn and design an Image processing algorithm that shall do the work for non-experts who would find a tooth of a fossil. So far, I've come to know it is easy to determine if the animal is carnivorous or herbivorous. But I don't know how to do it myself yet. Any help?
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Hello! Is this a Tyrannosaurus Rex tooth? Found in Hell Creek Formation of Garfield County, MT Tooth measures 1.75 inches, see picture with caliper Thanks in advance!
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Hi Total novice here! This is what we found yesterday at Bawdsey Suffolk. We cannot be 100% sure on any of them, so any help in ID ing would be most appreciated. Thank you
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- bawdsey id
- suffolk
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Differentiating Centrosaurine from Chasmosaurine tooth crowns?
Opabinia Blues posted a topic in General Fossil Discussion
I recall reading on the boards somewhere before that hadrosaur tooth crowns can sometimes be assigned to either the Lambeosaurinae or the Saurolophinae if enough of the crown is present. I was wondering if the same can be said for ceratopsid teeth? Can ceratopsid teeth from localities in which members of both subfamilies are known ever be identified down to subfamily? This question was prompted by both general curiosity and by the fact that I occasionally see isolated ceratopsid teeth sold down to the generic level (ie, one seller who has listings for Avaceratops, Judiceratops, and Medusaceratops spitters), and although I am almost certain you cannot make a generic-level identification of isolated teeth it does make me wonder whether or not these "identifications" could be based on subfamily designation? And if so, what's the diagnostic character/s for each?-
- centrosaurinae
- ceratopsidae
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Trading my Aguja Fm dromaeosaur tooth for another rare dromy tooth
-Andy- posted a topic in Member-to-Member Fossil Trades
Hello, I am trading my Saurornitholestes sp. from the Aguja Formation of Brewster County, Trans-Peco region, Texas for another rare dromaeosaur tooth. I do not mind an indeterminate genus or species as long as it's from a rare locality, preferably Two Medicine Fm I already have dromaeosaur teeth from the following localities: Hell Creek Fm Judith River Fm Horseshoe Canyon Fm Lance Fm Kem Kem Grp So ideally, I'd like a dromy tooth from another formation. Thank you-
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- dromaeosaur
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I found this shark tooth in a shell pit near Orlando Florida. Was hoping someone could help identify it, and possibly an estimated age. This is my first large and perfectly intact tooth, so I'm pretty excited to find out what it belonged too.
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- fossil identification
- shark
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Sarcosuchus and Timurlengia teeth for trade
Carcharodontosaurus posted a topic in Member-to-Member Fossil Trades
I have two teeth up for trade. A 30mm Timurlengia tooth from the Bissekty Formation of Uzbekistan and a 40mm Sarcosuchus tooth from the Elrhaz Formation of Niger. I'd be willing to trade one or both of these teeth for any of the following: Postosuchus tooth Dimetrodon tooth Tylosaurus tooth (Preferably North Sulphur River) Deinosuchus riograndensis tooth Aguja tyrannosaur tooth I live in New Zealand but am willing to send these anywhere in the world I can. Thanks in advance.- 1 reply
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Hello everyone! Got this interesting find from Myrtle Beach that I could use some expert opinions identifying. Any and all help is greatly appreciated and thanks in advance! I think it might be a small fractured crab claw.
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- myrtle beach
- south carolina
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First of all - sorry for bad and rude language)) So, I need some help with identification of this teeth. All was found in Russia, Trans-Urals region, in a few different rivers: Belyakova, Sugatka and Derney. There must be Eocene period, probably lutet or barton layer, but I can't be sure, because there is no bedrock, only fossils that river stream brings. Sometimes me and other people found there more old fossils, back to cretaceous even. I showed this photo to few reptile specialists from Saint Petersburg, but they sure that is no crocodile teeth, and insist that is a fish teeth. But i have fish teeth from this region, and they looks different. There we can found Palaeocybium, Scomberomorus, Eutrichiurides and even Sphyraenodus species teeth, and all they looks like different to this teeth. So, what is it? Some new fish species, crocodile of some another reptile?
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Hey everyone, does this look like a tooth? I found this during my rock hunting trip in northwest Missouri near Grand River. It's approx 1.5" tall, 1/2" wide.