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1.6" Tyrannosaur Fossil Premax Tooth Cretaceous Dinosaur Judith River FM MT COA

599.99

Location: Judith River Formation, Hill County, Montana (Private Land Origin)

Weight: 0.5 Ounces 

Dimensions: 1.6 Inches Long, 0.7 Inches Wide, 0.5 Inches Thick

Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.

The item pictured is the one you will receive.

This is a real fossil tooth.

Probably an excellent Daspletosaurusor tooth based on the size and base height of the tooth cross-section


Name: Albertosaurus, Gorgosaurus and Daspletosaurus

Type: Carnivore. 

Time period: Cretaceous Age 70 to 75 Million Years old

The Judith River Formation is approximately 70 million years old, or about 5 million years older than the Hell Creek Formation which produces Tyrannosaurus Rex.

Tyrannosaurs from the Late Cretaceous of northern North America include Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, and Gorgosaurus. Fossils of these tyrannosaurs can be found in the Judith River in Montana and Formations in Alberta. All tyrannosaurs are related and are early relatives to the Tyrannosaurus rex which appears at the end of the Cretaceous Period. All three of these tyrannosaurs are smaller than Tyrannosaurus rex. The Daspletosaurus and Gorgosaurus were similarly sized and lived together during the same time. They are approximately 30 feet long and weigh up to 5000 lbs. Albertosaurus had a similar length of up to 30 feet but were lighter with a maximum weight of 4000 pounds. Albertosaurus appears to have evolved slightly later than its two Judith River Formation tyrannosaur relatives

Albertosaurus, Daspletosaurus, and Gorgosaurus teeth of similar sizes and designs make identification of isolated teeth near impossible. Daspletosaurus would be slightly larger than the other two Tyrannosaurs, and it was in the same subfamily as Tyrannosaurus rex. So, Daspletosaurus is more closely related to Tyrannosaurus rex and may have had tooth characteristics more like Tyrannosaurus rex. Albertosaurus teeth are typically smaller and thinner since they would be used for slicing prey. These tyrannosaur teeth from the Late Cretaceous of northern North America are high-quality and exceptional teeth and are fantastic examples of an early relative of Tyrannosaurus rex.




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