Coming Soon
Triebold Paleontology, Inc. is consistently adding new fossil replicas to their inventory. Below you will find the most up-to-date list of what TPI currently has in progress.
Terminonaris robusta
This specimen, nicknamed "Big Bert", was discovered in 1991 by Royal Saskatchewan Museum paleontologist Tim Tokaryk then excavated the same year. It is one of the few times dynamite was used in an RSM excavation. TPI expertly reconstructed this specimen for the RSM and is pleased to offer it to the world.
Discovery Location: East-Central Saskatchewan
Age: Late Cretaceous
Formation: Favel
Hesperornis regalis
One of the strangest early finds of the Victorain Bone Wars was the discovery of toothed birds in the chalk of Western Kansas. O.C. Marsh and his crew discovered this large, flightless, diving bird which was evidently a strong swimmer based on how far from shore its fossils are found. Its toothy beak likely helped it snag fish and cephalopods as prey. This cast was reproduced from a specimen at the Yale Peabody Museum
Discovery Location: Kansas
Age: Late Cretaceous
Formation: Niobrara Chalk
Megacerops
coloradensis
Brontotheres, aka "thunder beasts", were large mammals with extravagant nose horns that lived in the early half of the Ceozoic era. This specimen was discovered in the early 1970's by a local grader operator, and excavated by the RSM in 1973. The specimen's nickname is "Thor" as an ode to the "thunder" in "thunder beast".
Discovery Location: Near Eastend, Saskatchewan
Age: Eocene
Formation: Cypress Hills