Our coach strictly adheres to the list, so for testing this week it would be 50-56 and 67-81. What should I say?Unome wrote:Honestly, I wouldn't worry about it. If you're able to ID them anyway, it's a moot point.dxu46 wrote:On a related note to the Ammonoidea problem a week ago, why does Superorder Selachimorpha have specific genuses and is numbered? Furthermore, why is Genus Carcharocles numbered when it has a specific species under it? The note at the bottom of the fossils list says that "numbers indicate that members of that taxon rank should be identifiable to that level." Because genuses under Selachimorpha are numbered, doesn't that mean that the 52) Superorder Selachimorpha is redundant?
Fossils B/C
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Re: Fossils B/C
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Re: Fossils B/C
No idea. The decision is his/her concern, and not all that relevant to you if you already know them all.dxu46 wrote:Our coach strictly adheres to the list, so for testing this week it would be 50-56 and 67-81. What should I say?Unome wrote:Honestly, I wouldn't worry about it. If you're able to ID them anyway, it's a moot point.dxu46 wrote:On a related note to the Ammonoidea problem a week ago, why does Superorder Selachimorpha have specific genuses and is numbered? Furthermore, why is Genus Carcharocles numbered when it has a specific species under it? The note at the bottom of the fossils list says that "numbers indicate that members of that taxon rank should be identifiable to that level." Because genuses under Selachimorpha are numbered, doesn't that mean that the 52) Superorder Selachimorpha is redundant?
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Re: Fossils B/C
The most notable difference is size. Carcharocles is huge, like really huge. That said, I can't really think of another way.dxu46 wrote:Question: How does one distinguish Carcharodon and Carcharocles?
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Re: Fossils B/C
But how do you distinguish if you're just given pictures?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:The most notable difference is size. Carcharocles is huge, like really huge. That said, I can't really think of another way.dxu46 wrote:Question: How does one distinguish Carcharodon and Carcharocles?
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Re: Fossils B/C
Carcharodon teeth are straighter and slightly narrower. The teeth are by far the most preserved part of Carcharocles megalodon, so this should work in the majority of cases (unless you just have a vertebra).dxu46 wrote:But how do you distinguish if you're just given pictures?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote:The most notable difference is size. Carcharocles is huge, like really huge. That said, I can't really think of another way.dxu46 wrote:Question: How does one distinguish Carcharodon and Carcharocles?
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Re: Fossils B/C
I also remember seeing (don't quote me on this as it was a quick google search months ago) that there was something to do with the serrations as well as the shape (that Unome mentioned)Unome wrote:Carcharodon teeth are straighter and slightly narrower. The teeth are by far the most preserved part of Carcharocles megalodon, so this should work in the majority of cases (unless you just have a vertebra).dxu46 wrote:But how do you distinguish if you're just given pictures?UTF-8 U+6211 U+662F wrote: The most notable difference is size. Carcharocles is huge, like really huge. That said, I can't really think of another way.
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Re: Fossils B/C
You can tell the difference between the two if you are given the teeth by looking at the cutting edges, Carcharodon lacks serrations on the cutting edge while Carcharocles has these serrations on the cutting edge. Further the teeth of Carcharocles have a space above the root where dentine is exposed (also called a bourlette) while Carcharodon lacks this feature.dxu46 wrote:Question: How does one distinguish Carcharodon and Carcharocles?
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Re: Fossils B/C
Thank you for this! I am helping my son's SciOly team this year and am grateful for all the help!Unome wrote:For those interested, UGA posted their invitational tests, which include the Fossils test that I wrote.
Link to tests folder
The high score was around 70 points, with the typical quick drop-off near the top.
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