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RARE 5.3 INCH LARGE COMPLETE JUVENILE LOWER MASTODON TUSK FROM THE BLANCAN
LATE PLIOCENE PERIOD
Aucilla River - Florida, U.S.A.
PLIOCENE
PERIOD ( BLANCAN ): 4.75 - 1.8 million years ago
This
RARE juvenile Mammut americanum or 'American'
mastodon lower tusk is a fossil that you will rarely find even in the
finest museum collections. It is complete and unbroken as found.
The tip is completely
present with natural wear from when the elephant was alive. This
is the largest lower juvenile Mastodon tusk we have ever offered.
This is a rare tusk and far more scarce than full size tusks of Woolly
Mammoths. If you display any fossil proboscidean
specimens, this lower tusk will be the most
fascinating and uncommon addition to any collection regardless of how
advanced and would look perfect alongside a fine grade baby Mastodon
tooth or alongside fossil Woolly Mammoth or Mastodon tusks of full size
just to show the size range. This is a COMPLETE tusk with the conical
end that would have been embedded in the lower jaw. Superb color from
river tannins. Tusk has been sealed with a consolidant to preserve its
condition and make it safe to handle.
INTACT
and COMPLETE WITH NO RESTORATION.
Only young Mastodons
possessed lower tusks as well as upper tusks. These were very small vestigial
tusks when compared to the prominent uppers. The lower tusks were
permanently lost once the animal reached adulthood. They are highly
uncommon in fossil collections and often damaged or fragmented when
discovered.
Emerging 55 million
years ago, the group of mammals called proboscideans are identified by
the presence of tusks and a trunk and comprise three families:
Mammutidae, Gomphotheriidae and Elephantidae. In Florida, the
mastodon, a member of the family Mammutidae (mammoths are members of
Elephantidae), represents one of two of the oldest known proboscideans
first dating back to the Miocene. They
became extinct 11,000 years ago along with all other proboscideans in
Florida.
When standing aside a
mammoth, the mastodon looks just like a Neanderthal version of the
proboscideans. The body form is shorter, more stout and robust and
lends itself to a much more muscular physique in contrast to the more
graceful and taller mammoth. The cheek teeth of mastodons are also
more primitive with sharp crests and a dramatic lobed surface in unworn
examples compared to the flat and fine ridged surface of mammoth teeth
that resemble the sole of a boating sneaker. These differences
tell us about the types of food that both types of creatures ate.
The mastodon was more suited for forest environments with teeth that
were well adapted for chewing tougher vegetation like twigs, leaves,
shrubs, fruits, pinecones, pine needles and mosses. The mammoth
with its smoother teeth, was best suited for the open plains feeding on
a variety of grasses.
A mastodon, like all
proboscideans, has a system of horizontal tooth replacement whereby new
molars erupt from the rear of the jaw and move forward. The most
worn teeth at the front, are pushed out of the jaw. Sometimes
while still in the jaw, the anterior portion of a worn front tooth is
broken off. These partial teeth are found as fossils along with
complete specimens.
A baby proboscidean at
age 6, will have already had three sets of teeth. By 13 years of
age, the fourth set emerges followed by a fifth set at age 27
years. The final set of teeth come in around 43 years of age and
as it wears away, the animal eventually starves to death and dies on
average between 60 and 80 years of age. Interestingly, the animal's life is
limited by the fact that after the sixth set, no new teeth grow in to
replace the final worn down set and the animal is no longer able to chew
its food. This characteristic is still true of modern
elephants.
LARGEST COMPLETE LOWER MASTODON TUSK WE HAVE HANDLED OR OFFERED
-
RARE IN PRIVATE COLLECTIONS!
5.3" long
$895 LM15-028 Actual
Item - One Only |