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For ungulates like deer and elk etc. the preferred tooth is the lower central incisor (I1). If you don’t save those then we can age any of the upper premolar or molar teeth. The morphology of those teeth is such that the crown comes down to where we trim the root off so there isn’t much left to put back in the mount. I tried doing this with a bison skull we found in a river bank a few years back. I decided not worth the effort of trying to get it back in the skull. Same thing with ivories in elk. Trimming and putting the crown back in the skull really only works well/easily with the canine teeth of carnivores.Since I didn’t see it asked already, is the tooth returned, in case one wants to do a Euro, and not have a gap?







I guess I’d rather look at my euro mounts with all the teeth they had when they died, and not know their age, rather than know how old they were, but at the cost of looking at missing teeth.
So the verdict is in. Sounds like they tried and reached out on how to get a gift certificate and no one got back to them.… guess I do need to be in the mix.Welcome to the forum and thank you doing yeomans work! I have a mule deer that I pulled out of WY that must of survived the harsh winter im curious about. I also happened to ask my family for a gift certificate to your lab for my birthday which is today, tbd on if they came through! Again welcome, it’s long overdue.
That’s pretty unusual. Only thing I can think is if they used the online contact form on our website it’s in our spam folder but we haven’t had that issue for several years that I’m aware of. I can check tomorrow but the best bet is for them to call in and give cc and address to send to over phone. 406-258-6286 should be someone there that can help 830-4pm MST, M-F.So the verdict is in. Sounds like they tried and reached out on how to get a gift certificate and no one got back to them.… guess I do need to be in the mix.