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Tyrannosaurus Rex Tooth

Late Cretaceous Period (approx. 67 million years ago), Lance Formation, Niobrara Co., Wyoming

Auction Closed

July 16, 06:46 PM GMT

Estimate

30,000 - 50,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Tyrannosaurus Rex Tooth

Tyrannosaurus rex

Late Cretaceous Period (approx. 67 million years ago)

Lance Formation, Niobrara Co., Wyoming


4.96 inches (12.6 cm) in length, measured base to tip along anterior edge. 8 inches (20.3 cm) tall on stand.


A well-preserved tooth with complete crown and intact enamel, serrations, and tip without repair or restoration. The enamel exhibits a walnut brown patina.

A LONG AND WELL-PRESERVED TOOTH FROM THE KING OF THE DINOSAURS


No animal elicits a combination of fascination, fear, and reverance quite like that of Tyrannosaurus rex, the "tyrant lizard king." Dominating the western landscape of Late Cretaceous North America, T. rex's five-foot-long skull was packed with 60 teeth and featured a bone-crushing bite force of nearly 13,000 pounds per square inch, the strongest of any terrestrial animal other than Gorgosaurus, its tyrannosaur relative. In comparison to other carnivorous theropods, Tyrannosaurus rex teeth are proportionally huge. Robust and thickly-enameled crowns strengthened dozens of teeth, with serrations on both the posterior and anterior edges. The almost unrivaled power of this 40-foot-long (12.2 meter) apex predator allowed it to hunt virtually every large dinosaur in its environment, including TriceratopsAnkylosaurusOrnithomimusPachycephalosaurusEdmontosaurus, and even other tyrannosaurs.