Who Collects Pleistocene Mammal Teeth?

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I found this tooth quite a while back while out treking and was hoping that it fit into your thread Harry. I have not been able to place it, but maybe one of you may help. (If it doesn't belong here let me know.) It is an inch wide, by an inch high.

<img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1142824"/> <img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1142825"/>

<img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1142832"/> <img src="http://www.treasurenet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=1142833"/>

The bottom/inside has a bluish tint to it.

I have no idea if it is or isn't but the first closest looking tooth that came to mind was dugong

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Looks like deer or camel teeth in a section of jawbone.
By the color of the matrix stuck to it I'm going to guess camel.
 

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I beg to differ, but it is a tooth and not a geofact or cone. This tooth most likely pre dates your Pleistocene items.


If it's a tooth, Digger, I don't recognize it. My best guess is that it is a geofact.
 

I'll tell you what I'll do, I really just want to know what animal it may have come from, so I will send it to you so you can make an assessment as to what it species it may have come from. It looks like a pre-molar tooth without the root attached. I appreciate your knowledge and am looking forward to hear what you think.
 

I'll tell you what I'll do, I really just want to know what animal it may have come from, so I will send it to you so you can make an assessment as to what it species it may have come from. It looks like a pre-molar tooth without the root attached. I appreciate your knowledge and am looking forward to hear what you think.

A bold proposal, Digger . . . I'm up for it. I'll send it back to you with an opinion.
 

I found this tooth quite a while back while out treking and was hoping that it fit into your thread Harry. I have not been able to place it, but maybe one of you may help. (If it doesn't belong here let me know.) It is an inch wide, by an inch high.

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The bottom/inside has a bluish tint to it.

I experienced a failure of imagination, Dennis. It IS a tooth . . . It's the front half of an upper second molar from a Sus scrofa (a domestic pig)! The individual died young, before this tooth had erupted. It is basically an enamel cap with undeveloped roots. Score for Old Digger! :headbang:
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This is a modern pig tooth that you identified for me Harry. Erupted correct? My next question would be, were there modern pigs during the Pleistocene epoch? It was found in the Peace River Florida.
 

No failure of imagination if I was able to ID the object as Sus from this image alone. It does have the outline of a P4, doesn't it.

No domestic pigs in the North American Pleistocene. Those pigs arrived for the first time with Spanish explorers. There are many, many feral pigs living along the Peace River. They constitute an ecological liability.
 

I screened this out of the Peace River two days ago I was pretty sure it was white tailed deer but not positive now looking closer

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