Description: Plesiosaur extinct dinosaur age marine reptile tooth fossil in display case with cool toy! This tooth is about 1 1/2" long. Rare tooth fossil. It does show some careful repair. The fossil comes in a unique Plesiosaur display case and includes a laminated information card.Also includes a Plesiosaurus toy to display next to the fossil. The toy is about 6" long.This toy is not suitable for children under five years old because of small parts. All fossils sold are authentic fossils, no replicas. Plesiosaur Plesiosaur, any of a group of long-necked marine reptiles found as fossils from the late Triassic Period into the late Cretaceous Period (215 million to 66 million years ago). Plesiosaurs had a wide distribution in European seas and around the Pacific Ocean, including Australia, North America, and Asia. Plesiosaurus, an early plesiosaur, was about 15 feet long, with a broad, flat body and a relatively short tail. It swam by flapping its fins in the water, much as sea lions do today, in a modified style of underwater “flight.” The nostrils were located far back on the head near the eyes. The neck was long and flexible, and the animal may have fed by swinging its head from side to side through schools of fish, capturing prey by using the long sharp teeth present in the jaws. Early in their evolutionary history, the plesiosaurs split into two main lineages: the pliosaurs, in which the neck was short and the head elongated; and the, in which the head remained relatively small and the neck assumed snakelike proportions and became very flexible. The late evolution of plesiosaurs was marked by a great increase in size. For example, Elasmosaurus, a plesiosaurid, had as many as 76 vertebrae in its neck alone and reached a length of about 43 feet, fully half of which consisted of the head and neck. In contrast, Kronosaurus, an early Cretaceous pliosaur whose fossils have been unearthed in Australia and Colombia, grew to about 29.5–36 feet long, based on an estimate of the length of K. queenlandicus and K. boyacensis; however, the reptile’s fossil skull alone measured between 7.2 and 9.5 feet long. An even larger pliosaur from the Jurassic Period, Pliosaurus funkei (known colloquially as “Predator X”), was unearthed in Svalbard in 2009. Its length and weight are estimated at about 50 feet and almost 100,000 pounds, respectively. The jaws of this creature are thought to have produced a bite force of 33,000 psi (pound-force per square inch), perhaps the largest bite force of any known animal. PL051
Price: 42.99 USD
Location: Davenport, Iowa
End Time: 2024-09-01T21:01:24.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.99 USD
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