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CETIOSAUR SAUROPOD DINOSAUR TOOTH -
Tegana Formation - Kem Kem, Morocco
EARLY
CRETACEOUS PERIOD: 145 - 112 million years ago In
dinosaur teeth, sauropod teeth are rarely discovered in the same fine
condition as therapod teeth. Unlike meat-eating therapods that
needed strong teeth to endure the force of attacking prey and tearing
flesh, sauropods were herbivorous and simply stripped branches of
vegetation. Their teeth lacked the same structural strength as
therapod teeth. Because of this, finding intact high-grade
fossilized sauropod teeth is more difficult than fine quality fossil
therapod dinosaur teeth.
This
specimen came from a cetiosaur sauropod dinosaur
that once roamed what is now the Sahara Desert in North Africa. This
nice juvenile example is
WITH NO REPAIR AND NO RESTORATION,
very rare for these teeth. This is a classic pencil-shaped tooth
with virtually no wear. It is much nicer in person than appears
in photos above! Even a portion of the root is present. Fine
quality dinosaur teeth from this massive plant-eating monster are less
common compared to fragmented examples.
The
Cetiosaur was the first sauropod to ever be discovered in the
world. In 1841, huge bones were found in southern England, 32
years before anyone had ever heard of "dinosaurs".
People thought the bones belonged to some great marine animal, hence the
name "Cetiosaurus", or "whale-lizard". Later,
a similar sauropod was found in the Late Jurassic rock of Colorado in
western North America. It was then that scientists began to appreciate the magnitude
of this massive beast.
In
1979, a skeleton of a Cetiosaur was unearthed in Morocco. The
animal's thigh bone measured over 6 ft/1.8 m long and one of the
shoulder blades measured over 5 ft/1.5 m long.
Cetiosaur was
enormous. It's neck and tail were shorter than many other sauropods.
It's weight is estimated at well over 10 tons. From tail to head,
this monster grew up to 60 ft/18.3 m long. Cetiosaur was an
herbivore, or plant-eater.
The teeth
of the Cetiosaur were long and rod-shaped, designed for raking and
stripping leaves and foliage from tree branches. The Cetiosaur did
not chew it's food, instead it swallowed it whole. Once inside the
huge stomach, gastroliths (stones swallowed by the dinosaur that remained
in the stomach) would grind up the plants into a digestible form.
A possible
relative sauropod Jobaria, was recently discovered in 1997 in the Sahara
Desert in Niger. One specimen was an amazing 95 percent complete
making it one of the most complete sauropods ever found. Studies of
the skeletal structure have led some scientists to theorize that these
giant dinosaurs could stand on their hind legs despite their weight and
size, and reach tall treetops for food where no other herbivore could
reach. With such enormous size, Cetiosaur must have spent the
majority of it's life feeding it's never-ending appetite.
Cetiosaur
remains have been found in England and Morocco.
NICE
COMPLETE JUVENILE SPECIMEN MUCH NICER THAN PHOTO SHOWS
1.1" long
SOLD
DT9-014 INCLUDES
DISPLAY BOX Actual
Item - One Only
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