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ONCHOPRISTIS
NUMIDUS ( SAWFISH ) ROSTRAL TOOTH
Tegana
Formation - Kem Kem, Morocco
UPPER CRETACEOUS
PERIOD: 97.5 - 91 million years ago
These are
one of the most fascinating fossil teeth available from a very bizarre
creature that is not widely known, Onchopristis numidus. Onchopristis
numidus is an extinct large sawfish that lived during the days of
the dinosaurs. This particular Onchopristis numidus rostral
tooth specimen has minor repair but it is from a large creature and
sports a beautiful light honey-colored enamel with high natural luster still
present. Excellent specimen and complete.
Intact teeth of fine quality are very rare because these teeth are dug
and often found in hard sediments. They are almost always damaged
during the extraction process. Choice enamel, color and
preservation with perfect tip and barb.
Related
to the modern day sawfish, the Onchopristis had a long, hard
shovel-shaped snout lined on both sides with barbed teeth. This
fascinating member of the shark and ray family
trolled the
murky bottoms of warm Cretaceous seas nearly 100 million years ago. To gain
insight as to how this extinct animal might have lived we can examine
the modern day sawfish.
Sawfishes
are very lethargic animals, spending much of their day nestled in the
muddy sea/river floor. At night, they scull slowly through the shallows,
using their sensitive saw to find buried prey, which are then raked from
the sediment to be consumed. It is useful to view the sawfishes' unique
rostrum like a metal detector combined with a clam rake.
If small fishes, like mullet, swim past a hungry sawfish, this great ray
will launch from the bottom, slashing its toothy weapon rapidly side to
side. Gouged by the snout's awl-shaped teeth, injured fishes tumble to
the sea floor, now immobilized and easy to catch!
Apart from its use in finding and disabling prey, the toothy rostrum is
also a weapon of defense. When threatened, sawfishes will smack this
jagged sword against attackers, whether they be sharks or fishermen.
Generally, though, sawfishes are very gentle animals, preferring to lie
quietly, undisturbed.
Very little is known about sawfish life history, but the late Dr. Thomas
Thorson performed studies on a freshwater species, the Largetooth
sawfish ( Pristis perotteti) from Lake Nicaragua. According to his
findings, this sawfish lives approximately 25-30 years, attaining
maturity in about 10 years. Females give live birth and pup sawfishes
are around 2.5 ft long at birth, reaching a maximum length of 23 ft! A
rubbery envelope surrounds the softened saw at birth to protect the
mother from harm. It is thought that mating occurs every other year,
with an average litter size of approximately 8 pups.
Sawfishes love muddy shallow water, and this is why many people are
unaware of them. Few humans, apart from tribal villagers and fishermen
venture into sawfish domain. These elasmobranchs possess a remarkable
physiological system allowing them to travel from the sea into
freshwater at will. Some species seem to spend most of their lives in
rivers and lakes! It is likely that sawfishes require a variety of
habitats and salinities to complete their lifecycle.
Roughly
40 species of modern sawfishes are known; only a handful survive today. COMPACT
TOOTH FROM LARGE CREATURE WITH PERFECT TIP AND BARB! 1.7" long
on the diagonal leading edge $70
MV17-008
INCLUDES DISPLAY BOX Actual
Item - One Only
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