Description: Partial Triceratops tooth fossil in a great display case with toy!This Triceratops tooth was found in Garfield County, Montana on the Hell Creek Formation.The tooth fossil is about 1/2" long.Fossil comes in unique Triceratops display case and includes a laminated information card.Also includes a Triceratops toy to display next to the fossil. This toy is NOT LEGO brand but is very cool. This toy is not suitable for children under five years old because of small parts. All fossils sold are authentic fossils, no replicas. TriceratopsGenus of large, plant-eating ornithischian dinosaurs of the Late Cretaceous Epoch (100–65.5 million years ago). Triceratops had a very long skull (some more than 6 ft [1.8 m] long); a large bony frill about the neck; a relatively short, pointed horn on the nose; a beaklike mouth; and two pointed horns, more than 3.3 ft (1 m) long, above the eyes. Adults weighed 4–5 tons (3.6–4.5 metric tons) and grew up to 30 ft (9 m) long. The limbs were very stout, and the hind limbs were more massive than the forelimbs.Triceratops teeth were arranged in groups called batteries, of 36 to 40 tooth columns in each side of each jaw, with 3 to 5 stacked teeth per column, depending on the size of the animal. This gives a range of 432 to 800 teeth, of which only a fraction were in use at any given time (Tooth replacement was continuous throughout the life of the animal). They functioned by shearing in a vertical to near-vertical orientation. The great size and numerous teeth of Triceratops suggests that they ate large volumes of fibrous plant material, with some researchers suggesting palms and cycads, and others suggesting ferns, which then grew in prairies. TR113
Price: 25.99 USD
Location: Davenport, Iowa
End Time: 2024-12-27T02:51:11.000Z
Shipping Cost: 4.99 USD
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