Mahnmut Posted November 2 Posted November 2 Sorry @doushantuo, I did not catch the irony in your comment. Still wonder what exactly makes you think Panthera, still think its worth asking if this piece is jurassic or neogene infill, while I do not question rockets experience here. Best regards, J Try to learn something about everything and everything about something Thomas Henry Huxley
rocket Posted November 2 Posted November 2 Southern Germany has many sediments full of fossils. Beginning from triassic as oldest (I only name the biggest ones) you can find lower, middle and upper jurassic sediments, cretaceous at some places, bit tertiary and lot of pleistocene. The upper jurassic sediments are (normally there) white or grey, like most of the pleistocene stones from caves and karsts. There are many sites in southern germany to find pleistocene fossils. The one you have, @Howon, it not a pterosaur at al. It is a kind of mammal, small one. I would expect something like a ?deer or small bear. Hard to say. As this fossils were often found together with jurassic fossils some people sell them as "jurassic fossil". @Howon: Where are you based? Might be I can recommend a person lives close by to you or a researcher to support
doushantuo Posted November 2 Posted November 2 (edited) Frank< nobody postulated a reptilian affinity for the OP's miscellanea osteologica The name I gave the OP is from someone who works at the Altmuhl museum Edited November 2 by doushantuo
Howon Posted November 2 Author Posted November 2 Thank you @rocket I live in Korea And I heard this specimen was part of a museum collection https://bspg.snsb.de/?lang=en Unfortunately it doesn't have a label I have heard all the informations from the seller and this fossil was built by his father So, it might be mixed up since this fossil is collected years ago and the owner kept changed 1
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