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ULTRA RARE
INTACT CRANIUM OF A THE EARLIEST KNOWN SEA COW FROM THE EOCENE
Waccasassa River - Florida, USA
EOCENE
PERIOD: 40 million years ago
This is one of the rarest
Sirenian fossils we could ever offer. Even as our company is based
in Florida and having the privilege of seeing the richest deposits of
these creatures, this is the FIRST TIME we have ever encountered such a
scientifically important and rare specimen as this. This is a
complete intact parietal-supraoccipatal skull cap of an early dugong from the Eocene
Period. The few rare instances that these fossils are found,
usually, only isolated pieces of the skull are found orh isolated teeth. This is the most
complete specimen we have seen ever offered in memory and it is complete
enough to get a fantastic idea of just how small these creatures were.
This was the very first emergence of the sea cow and therefore, it makes
this also an incredibly rare and important specimen for a public museum
exhibition on marine life of prehistory, especially emerging life-forms. NO REPAIR and NO RESTORATION.
Sirenians first appeared
in the Eocene and eventually spread world-wide through various time
periods mostly preferring warm water environments. Interestingly
enough, Florida is the
only area in the world that can boast of continual habitation of sirenians
since the Eocene!
Fossil remains in the state represent all known sea cow families that ever
existed!
Due to the extreme
buoyancy of the creature, sea cows have very dense bones that lack marrow
cavities or spongy internal structure. This allows their skeletons
to act as ballast thereby offsetting their buoyant body mass. They
are exclusively herbivores and are highly docile creatures allowing human
contact in the wild.
ULTRA-RARE
SKULL OF THE EARLIEST KNOWN EXISTENCE OF THE DUGONG - AS COMPLETE AS YOU
CAN EVER EXPECT!
4.65"
long by 2.65" wide
$975
MV31-001 Actual
Item - One Only
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