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RARE!
EXTINCT SHORT-FACED
BEAR MOLAR TOOTH WITH ROOT
Aucilla River - North Florida, U.S.A.
MIDDLE (RANCHOLABREAN AGE)
TO LATE PLEISTOCENE PERIOD: 300,000 to 10,000 years ago
From the Pleistocene
deposits of the Aucilla River, this is an extremely rare fossil tooth of
an extinct Short-Faced Bear, Tremarctos floridanus. This
species is sometimes referred to as the 'Florida Cave Bear'. It is
an absolutely 100% COMPLETE M3 molar with intact original root. As an
addition to any fossil tooth collection,
this certainly will be
amongst your rarest specimens
as very few fossils of ANY type are found or offered from this
once dangerous and now extinct ferocious bear. Guaranteed NO REPAIR and NO RESTORATION.
Tremarctos
floridanus was a member of the Ursidae or bear family. This
extinct beast is amongst the Tremarctine bears noted for their short
snouts hence the name, 'Short-Faced Bear'. Three genera (listed in
order of their emergence) once lived in North America - Plionarctos,
Arctodus and finally, Tremarctos. The Spectacled Bear (Tremarctos
ornatus) is the only surviving member and lives today in the jungles
of South America. All were active carnivorous predators that later
evolved into the omnivorous bears of today. Arctodus was a
massive and terrible beast, the largest bear that ever lived in North
America and exceeding in size and ferocity living Kodiaks, Grizzlies and
Brown Bears. Tremarctos was a more evolved version of Arctodus
and was not as large but an equally able predator.
A
VERY
RARE TOOTH! AND
IN THE FINEST COMPLETE CONDITION WITH ROOT - INTACT!
.85" long
$165
LM49-004
INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX Actual
Item - One Only
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