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TOOTH AND
VERTEBRA FROM A DROMAEOSAUR
" RAPTOR " DINOSAUR FROM HELL CREEK, UNITED STATES
Hell Creek
Formation - South Dakota, U.S.A.
LATE
CRETACEOUS PERIOD: 70 - 65 million years ago
In the opening scene of Jurassic Park II, a small girl wanders away from
her parents on a beach and promptly gets mauled by a herd of small
dromaeosaurs no larger than chickens. This is a genuine fossil
caudal vertebra and tooth that would have come from a as yet unnamed
dromaeosaur similar in size and type to those depicted in that horrific
opening scene. This tooth and vertebra are well-preserved with
iron inclusions on some surface of the bone. The tooth is complete
with sharp tip and nice enamel. Both specimens have NO
REPAIR AND NO RESTORATION.
Color is natural and each fossil is as found in this famous dinosaur
formation in the United States
The famous Hell Creek
deposit in the Northwestern United States has been immortalized again
and again on numerous TV documentaries as the "Valley of the T. rex".
For its astonishing array of dangerous and large prehistoric predator
fossils, no place has captured more attention or has been featured more
in the news than Hell Creek! Fine grade fossils from this
formation are amongst the most sought after specimens for collectors
around the world. Most of the dinosaurs we grew up learning about
as kids, come from Hell Creek.
The
dromaeosaurs are popularly known (especially in the movie "Jurassic
Park") as "raptors", a group of fascinating extinct
creatures. Raptors ranged in size from the size of a small dog
on
up to 30 feet long! They are therapods that possessed specialized
features: a well-developed slashing talon on their second toe, a stiffened
tail, and large grasping hands.
The
"killing claw" of raptors was a terrifying and incredibly
efficient weapon. As they moved, it was held off the ground.
When the muscles of the toe were contracted, the claw swept down
quickly, providing for a powerful slash that may have been able to
disembowel prey swiftly. The stiffened tail would have been good
to stabilize the body while the grasping arms and jaws held onto the
prey for balance. Although there is no conclusive evidence for
this, it has been suggested that raptors could have performed leaps onto
large prey and used all four limbs to rip wounds in them.
Raptors
were ferocious predators that some scientists believe hunted in packs
and attacked much larger dinosaurs by slashing their
underbellies.
It is also believed that they were similar to lions in predatory
behavior, preferring ambushes and quick chases using their high
maneuverability along with strategic pack-hunting tactics. A human
could be torn to shreds by a pack of raptors in less than 30
seconds.
Recent
discoveries in China have shown feathered species existed. This has
revolutionized paleontologists' view of what not only these creatures
could have looked like when alive, but of possible plumage on other
therapod dinosaurs. Dromaeosaurs share other characteristics with
birds and theories now place these vicious predators as being the earliest
ancestors of birds. Dromaeosaurs first evolved in the Early
Cretaceous and survived right up to the end of the Late Cretaceous
suggesting they were adaptable and capable hunters, surviving such a
prolonged period yet, remaining virtually unchanged in overall design.
EXCELLENT
SET OF TWO PRIMARY FOSSILS OF A
"RAPTOR" DROMAEOSAUR DINOSAUR FROM THE FAMOUS HELL CREEK
DEPOSITS
Vertebra is 1.25"
long and tooth is .35" long on the leading edge
SOLD DT6-129
INCLUDES DISPLAY
BOX
Actual Item -
One Only |