Description: This Iguanodon bone fossil from the Isle of Wight - United Kingdom.The fossil is about 1" x 1/2".This is a very cool looking Iguanodon fossil!I am unsure which part of the dinosaur the bone piece is from.Fossil comes in a unique display case and includes a laminated information card.Also comes with a cool little Jurassic Park Iguanodon dinosaur toy to display next to the fossil. The toy is new but has no retail packaging. The little toy is about 3" long and 1 1/2" tall.This toy is not suitable for children under three years old. All fossils sold are authentic fossils, no replicas. Iguanodon Iguanodon, (genus Iguanodon), large herbivorous dinosaurs found as fossils from the Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous periods (161.2 million to 99.6 million years ago) in a wide area of Europe, North Africa, North America, Australia, and Asia; a few have been found from Late Cretaceous deposits of Europe and southern Africa. Iguanodon was the largest, best known, and most widespread of all the iguanodontids, which are closely related to the hadrosaurs, or duck-billed dinosaurs. Iguanodon was 30 feet long, stood nearly 2 meters tall at the hip, and weighed four to five tons. The animal probably spent its time grazing while moving about on four legs, although it was able to walk on two. Iguanodontid forelimbs had an unusual five-fingered hand: the wrist bones were fused into a block; the joints of the thumb were fused into a conelike spike; the three middle fingers ended in blunt, hooflike claws; and the fifth finger diverged laterally from the others. Furthermore, the smallest finger had two small additional phalanges, a throwback to more primitive dinosaurian configuration. The teeth were ridged and formed sloping surfaces whose grinding action could pulverize its diet of low-growing ferns and horsetails that grew near streams and rivers. Most bones of the skull and jaws were not tightly fused but instead had movable joints that allowed flexibility when chewing tough plant material. In 1825 Iguanodon became the second species to be described as a dinosaur, the first having been Megalosaurus. Iguanodon was named for its teeth, whose similarity to those of modern. The fossil remains of many individuals have been found, some in groups, which suggests that iguanodontids traveled in herds. Fossilized tracks of iguanodontids are also relatively common and are widespread in Late Jurassic and Early Cretaceous deposits. IG016
Price: 24.99 USD
Location: Davenport, Iowa
End Time: 2024-10-12T00:44:52.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.99 USD
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