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Found 18 results

  1. Fullux

    Cave bear fossils

    Hi all, does anyone know why fossils from Cave bears usually are very lightly colored? The dentin and enamel in their teeth also look like they've hardly even been fossilized.
  2. I'm interested in this Cave bear proximal phalange but I'm unsure if it's authentic or not, or if it is indeed U. spelaeus or another species of Ursus. Found in Austria.
  3. Kikokuryu

    Ursus spelaeus

    Stabilized with Paraloid.
  4. Hi! I would like to know the specie of this skull that I´m thinking to purcharse. Seller tell me it belong to a Ursus spelaeus from Urales Mountains in Rusia but I don´t know if it could belong to Ursus uralensis or Ursus ingressus. I have the opportunity to buy it but I don't know what a fair price can be. Could you help me and give me advice? Long size: 50 cm aprox. and high 25 cm aprox.
  5. Humans pushed cave bears to extinction, their DNA suggests Washington Post, By Ben Guarino, August 15 2019 https://www.washingtonpost.com/science/2019/08/15/humans-pushed-cave-bears-extinction-their-dna-suggests/ Gretzinger, J., Molak, M., Reiter, E., Pfrengle, S., Urban, C., Neukamm, J., Blant, M., Conard, N.J., Cupillard, C., Dimitrijević, V. and Drucker, D.G., 2019. Large-scale mitogenomic analysis of the phylogeography of the Late Pleistocene cave bear. Scientific reports, 9. (open access) https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-47073-z Yours, Paul H.
  6. Hello together, I am interested in all things cetacean, but also sirenians, desmostylia, pinnipedia or maybe marine reptiles. What I can offer are some carpatian cave bear bones including a complete paw of which I dont know if its composite. mammut jaw fragments, big bovine and cervid skull fragments and similar stuff. i could also offer to custom build skeletal models, although I can´t guarantee for quality or fast delivery (depending on what you may want) I also could offer an yet unpainted (or painted, if you wish) resin model of dunkleosteus terelli, bought from dinosaur corporation. If there is anything else you may want for your sea critters, just ask me, there is a lot of fossils that I may be able to part from. Thinking about shipping costs trading in europe would be easier, but as a friend of mine ships a container once a year, there may be a possibility for overseas trade also. Aloha J
  7. RyanDye

    My Display Overview

    Hello there paleontologists, fossil enthusiast, and everything in between. If you couldn't tell this is the first content I've ever made on the fossil forum so please excuse errors and, or inexperience I apologize in advance. Here is my collection of display fossils as well as modern bones keep in mind this is purely what I have on display I keep the vast majority of fossils I posses in storage with lots of support such as bubble rap and various other materials to ensure complete security of precious peeks into our planet's history. If you have any questions or comments feel free to ask as you please. These are all authentic fossils 2 have been directly seen by a professional (Ursus sp. & Unidentified Dinosaur Cretaceous Rib) The Dactylioceras sp. is very clearly a real specimen however there was no authority on it's authenticity the two Hadrosaur fragments are authentic as well one purchased with it's card of authenticity by D.J Parsons and the other was purchased from the very same hunter whom discovered the Cretaceous rib section. (Note: individual specimen content will be released in time)
  8. ElToro

    Ursus spelaeus paw.

    From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    Ice Age Cave Bear (Ursus spelaeus) paw from Mixnitz. With my hand as scale! Massive!
  9. ElToro

    Ursus spelaeus paw.

    From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    Massive Ice Age Cave Bear (Ursus spelaeus) paw from the caves at Mixnitz, Austria.
  10. ElToro

    Cave Bear collection

    I've laid out my Austrian (and a couple Romanian) Ursus spelaeus collection on my desk. Lots of stuff! I've been trying to assemble a whole paw but am missing several bones of the right size. I'm finding it very hard to find bones from that site, so a friend is sending me a whole paw from Mixnitz, Austria. Among this collection are an ulna, 2 jaws, teeth, canine, top of fused radius and ulna, ball and socket joints, intervertebral disks, rib sections, wrist and hand bones, phalanges, claw cores and other unidentified small bone pieces.
  11. ElToro

    The whole Cave Bear collection.

    From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    My whole collection of Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) bones from the Pleistocene of Austria. With a couple small bones from Romania. Most of these are from the Dachstein Mountains in Austria but the big jaw and ulna are from the Drachenhöhle in Mixnitz, Austria.
  12. ElToro

    Cave Bear teeth

    From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) incisors, molars and a canine from the Dachstein Mountains of Austria.
  13. InsectariumPlus

    Vertebrae close-up.

    From the album: Ursus Spelaeus

    © InsectariumPlus

  14. InsectariumPlus

    Vertebrae back view.

    From the album: Ursus Spelaeus

  15. InsectariumPlus

    Vertebrae front view.

    From the album: Ursus Spelaeus

  16. From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    Ursus spelaeus finger bones and claws. I'm using my finger as scale so you can see how powerful these critters were! From the Dachstein Mountains in Steiermark, Austria. Pleistocene.
  17. ElToro

    Ursus spelaeus teeth.

    From the album: Ursus spelaeus (Cave Bear) collection.

    Ursus spelaeus teeth (molars, premolars and incisors) from the Dachstein Mountains in Steiermark, Austria. Pleistocene.
  18. ThePrehistoricMaster

    My Own Cave Bear

    Just wanted to share a new fossil I bought some days ago. It's the right side of a mandible from a cave bear (Ursus spelaeus). It's about 40,000 years old, 30 cm (12 in.) long, and was found in Romania. I find ice age mammals really interesting, so I'm happy I got this!
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