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2.02 in. Mosasaur Fossil Vertebra Backbone - Morocco

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2.02 in. Mosasaur Fossil Vertebra Backbone - Morocco
$20.00

Availability: In stock

Mosasaur vertebra
Backbone

Ouled Bouali, Khourigba, Morocco, North Africa

Upper Cretaceous Period - 99-65 Million Years Old

Tooth : 2.02 x 1.78 in.

1 inch = 2.54 cm

Here is a vertebra (backbone) from a juvenile Mosasaur!
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Description

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Presented here is an authentic and original Mosasaur vertebra from Morocco.

This specimen comes from the phosphate mines located near Khourigba, Morocco and are dated to the Upper Cretaceous Period (99-65 Million Years Old)

Mosasaurs are an extinct group of large marine reptiles. Their first fossil remains were discovered in a limestone quarry at Maastricht on the Meuse in 1764. Mosasaurs probably evolved from an extinct group of aquatic lizards known as aigialosaurs in the Early Cretaceous. During the last 20 million years of the Cretaceous period (Turonian-Maastrichtian ages), with the extinction of the ichthyosaurs and decline of plesiosaurs, mosasaurs became the dominant marine predators. They became extinct as a result of the K-T event at the end of the Cretaceous period, approximately 66 million years ago. Mosasaurs breathed air, were powerful swimmers, and were well-adapted to living in the warm, shallow inland seas prevalent during the Late Cretaceous Period. Mosasaurs were so well adapted to this environment that they gave birth to live young, rather than returning to the shore to lay eggs as sea turtles do.

Note : This is not a reconstructed tooth, it is as discovered with no repair and as found!

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