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FINEST
POSSIBLE
PACHYCEPHALOSAURUS DINOSAUR TOOTH WITH FULL CROWN AND ROOT
Hell
Creek Formation - South Dakota, U.S.A.
LATE
CRETACEOUS PERIOD: 72 - 65 million years ago
Collected
from the famous Hell Creek Formation of Northwestern U.S.A., this is
THE FINEST POSSIBLE
specimen of a
very rare dinosaur tooth from the well-known and highly popular dinosaur
group PACHYCEPHALOSAUR. Mostly likely Stygimoloch. Fossils from these bizarre prehistoric
creatures are not common and rarely offered for sale. This is
both, a rare tooth because of the dinosaur from which it comes, but it
also is especially rare because the
FULL UNWORN CROWN AND
COMPLETE ROOT is
present meaning it is not a
"spit tooth" and was in the dinosaur's jaw when it died. This tooth looks even better in person.
All enamel is intact with a natural glossy sheen and is a dark espresso
brown. This is a
GRADE 10
tooth from a dinosaur that is rarely found present in fossil collections!
NO REPAIR and NO
RESTORATION. Found INTACT and exactly as shown
above. VERY
highly recommended!
PACHYCEPHALOSAURS
are most famous for their thick, bony skull caps for which they are named.
They are a bizarre group of herbivorous dinosaurs that lived during the
end of the Cretaceous Period. Pachycephalosaurs include several
different species that range in size from 3 feet to 26 feet in length.
The largest of these dinosaurs is the species Pachycephalosaurus.
All
pachycephalosaurs were bipedal, plant-eating ornithischians that possessed
a very thick-boned dome in the top of their skulls. The height of
the dome varies amongst species as does the ornamentation to the skull.
Variations include spikes, knobs and bony frills to different regions of
the head. All had five-fingered hands, three-toed feet and a long,
stiff tail for balance.
There
are two schools of thought as to why these amazing creatures had the thick
bone dome to the top of their skulls. Some scientists believe
pachycephalosaurs butted heads like modern day rams do. Others
counter that the skull and bones were not designed for such impact.
Mountain
sheep ram each other with their large horns but they have air spaces in
the front of their skull to absorb the shock of impact, pachycephalosaurs
do not and the bony dome is solid all the way to the brain.
Head-butting with such a skull would send severe shocks to the brain that
would likely cause damage to the organ. Possibly, shock was diverted
to the neck vertebra by off-center blows but the overall graceful nature
of the skeletal structure suggests that these were not robust, fighting
creatures.
The
elaborate head ornamentation and bony dome of pachycephalosaurs might have
served as mere decoration for mating and other social behavior needs.
One species known as Stygimoloch, had horns at the rear of the skull that
grew up to 4 inches long. Clearly, these were more ornamental than
practical weapons. One compromising theory is that like bulls, these
dinosaurs met heads in a challenge of pushing rather than ramming.
The most
identifiable isolated finds of pachycephalosaur dinosaur fossils are the
fronto-parietal bone skull domes which are rare but occasionally found.
Teeth are also found in microsites. Post-cranial pachycephalosaur
fossils remains are very rare.
Pachycephalosaur remains have been found in North America, England,
Madagascar, China and Mongolia.
FINEST POSSIBLE
RARE TOOTH - TRUE SCIENTIFIC REFERENCE GRADE WITH FULL ROOT AND CROWN!
THE BEST WE HAVE
EVER HAD!!!
.6"
long
$395 DT20-030 INCLUDES
DISPLAY BOX Actual Item -
One Only
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