Fossils
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$265.00
Out of stock
Dilophosaurus Footprints
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Eubrontes sp.
Late Triassic Period - 225 million years old
Passaic Formation, Milford, New Jersey, USA
Plate : 14.75 x 10 in
Track (largest) : 5.00 x 3.33 in
Track (smallest) : 2.58 x 1.95 in
Track : 3.85 x 3.05 in
1 in = 2.54 cm
All three of these dinosaur footprints are very well inflated and show amazing detail of the foot pads with claws! -
$225.00
Out of stock
Dilophosaurus Footprints
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Eubrontes sp.
Late Triassic Period - 225 million years old
Passaic Formation, Milford, New Jersey, USA
Plate : 15.75 x 11 in
Track (complete) : 5.12 x 3.30 in
Track (top) : 4.24 x 3.4 in
Track (bottom) : 4.01 x 3.55 in
1 in = 2.54 cm
All three of these dinosaur footprints are very well inflated and show nice detail of the foot pads with claws, one is next to another, the isolated print is the most complete and shows the claws! -
Regular Price: $350.00
Special Price $150.00
Out of stock
Atreipus milfordensis (Bock, 1952)
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Ornithischian Dinosaur : Bird - like
Late Triassic Period - 225 million years old
Passaic Formation, Milford, New Jersey, USA
Atreipus is believed to have been an early Ornithischian quadrupedal dinosaur, Ornithischians are closely related to modern day birds based on their bone structure!
These are rare tracks to find from this formation, as commonly you find larger theropod dinosaur tracks from Grallator and Dilophosaurus.
All three of these dinosaur footprints are very well inflated and show nice detail of the foot pads, one is overlaid ontop of another, where the isolated print shows the best detail, including the claws!
Plate : 15.75 x 13. 75 in
Track (w/claws) : 4.75 x 3.5 in
Track (center) : 4.81 x 3.27 in
Track (overlaid) : 4.88 x 3.35 in
1 inch = 2.54 cm -
$85.00
Out of stock
Triceratops horridus (Marsh, 1889) Hell Creek Formation, South Dakota, USA Late Cretaceous Period - 69-66 Million Years Old Tooth : 1 x 0.8 inches (1 inch = 2.54 cm) A beautiful tooth with nice serrations and enamel color. One of the most famous and well known of all dinosaurs! Learn More -
$100.00Carcharodontosaurus saharicus (Depéret & Savornin, 1925) Tegana Formation Kem-Kem Basin, K'Sar es Souk Province, Morocco, North Africa Middle Cretaceous Period - 112-97 Million Years Old Tooth : 1.45 x 0.93 inches (1 inch = 2.54 cm) A beautiful tooth with nice serrations and enamel color. This prehistoric predator was larger than a T-Rex! Learn More
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$95.00
Out of stock
Rebbachisaurus garasbae (Lavocat, 1954) Tegana Formation Kem-Kem Basin, K'Sar es Souk Province, Morocco, North Africa Middle Cretaceous Period - 112-97 Million Years Old Tooth : 1.6 x 0.51 inches (1 inch = 2.54 cm) This tooth had been in our personal collection for about ten years now. It shows incredible feeding wear detail on the tip and has no signs of repair or restoration. Properly described in 2015, this Sauropod had been known from various fossil fragments, but never had a formal scientific description. Wilson and Allain's (in 2015) redescribed Rebbachisaurus garasbae to be the type and only true species of Rebbachisaurus! Learn More -
$150.00
Out of stock
Spinosaurus aegyptiacus (Stromer, 1915) Tegana Formation Kem-Kem Basin, K'Sar es Souk Province, Morocco, North Africa Middle Cretaceous Period - 112-97 Million Years Old Tooth : 3.70 x 0.94 inches (1 inch = 2.54 cm) A beautiful red Spinosaurus tooth with incredible color and with the root still attached! This tooth exhibits a severe "S-bend"pathology on the end of the tooth, pathological tooth deformities are sometimes caused by disease or other physical ailments to the animal. A pathology in the tooth is usually caused by an infection or deformity in the jaw, causing the tooth to grow irregularly, in this case with a severe bend in the tooth. Learn More -
$350.00Carcharodontosaurus saharicus (Depéret & Savornin, 1925) Tegana Formation Kem-Kem Basin, K'Sar es Souk Province, Morocco, North Africa Middle Cretaceous Period - 112-97 Million Years Old Tooth : 3.07 x 1.31 inches (1 inch = 2.54 cm) A beautiful tooth with nice serrations, the tip has natural feeding ware. A Carcharodontosaurus tooth from our personal collection. This prehistoric predator was larger than a T-Rex! Learn More