CARCHARODONTOSAURUS TEETH FOR SALE
Are Carcharodontosaurus Teeth The Same As Giganotosaurus Teeth?
Giganotosaurus is another monster theropod dinosaur that has become quite popular since it’s one of the dinosaur protagonists in Jurassic World: Dominion. Giganotosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus are closely related--both reside in the family Carcharodontosauridae--but they are not the same dinosaur. They lived at approximately the same time, were similar in size, and probably looked very similar, but Carcharodontosaurus fossils are found in what is now Morocco while Giganotosaurus fossils are exclusively found in the Neuquén Province of Argentina.
Their teeth looked nearly identical and were similarly sized, but you won’t see any true Giganotosaurus teeth for sale. The primary reason for this is that it is illegal to export fossils from Argentina where Giganotosaurus is found. My understanding is Giganotosaurus fossils are also extremely rare compared to those of Carcharodontosaurus. So, if you see a tooth labeled as Giganotosaurus for sale it is most likely a Carcharodontosaurus tooth from Morocco. If you want to own a Giganotosaurus tooth, a Carcharodontosaurus tooth would be a very close approximation.
About Carcharodontosaurus
Carcharodontosaurus was a massive theropod dinosaur that roamed what is now northern Africa some 90 million years ago. It is one of the largest predatory dinosaurs known, even larger than Tyrannosaurus Rex! It is sometimes referred to as the African T-Rex, though the two dinosaurs are not related.
Of all theropods, Carcharodontosaurus may have been the largest and most formidable to walk the Cretaceous world on two legs. Carcharodontosaurus comprised a genus of theropod dinosaurs that dominated northern Africa between 93-100 million years ago, during the mid-Cretaceous Period. This genus currently includes two gigantic species, which were among the largest known predatory dinosaurs. These giants were comparable in immensity to Tyrannosaurus and Giganotosaurus, but not quite as colossal as Spinosaurus. What really set Carcharodontosaurus apart from other theropods were their humongous, flat, serrated teeth. These teeth grew up to eight inches long and are responsible for the name of the genus. Their name is Latin for “shark-tooth lizard,” alluding to the serrated nature of Great white shark teeth (Carcharodon carcharias). Taxonomists trace the family Carcharodontosauridae back to Carnosauria, the same group as Allosaurus of the late Jurassic. These dinosaurs are characterized by their gigantic size, extra-large nostrils, and nasal and maxillary hollows that sharply reduce the weight of their skulls.
How Big Was Carcharodontosaurus?
C. saharicus (the type species) was the largest of the genus Carcharodontosaurus: various sources suggest length estimates ranging between 12 and 13 meters (39-43.5 ft), a height of 3.6 meters (12 ft) at the hip, and weight estimates between 6 and 15 metric tons. The restored skull of the neotype measures in at roughly 1.5 meters long, or about 4.9 feet. If these measurements are correct, then Carcharodontosaurus is one of the heaviest and longest of the known carnivores. Paleontologists believe that the massive size of Carcharodontosaurus is attributed to their need to outcompete other large carnivores and take down sauropods that reached lengths of 32 meters (108 feet).
With their massive physical size came the need for a large feeding territory, roughly near 310 square miles per dinosaur. Because of this huge range, it is believed that Carcharodontosaurus was highly territorial, often skirmishing with other Carcharodontosaurus and other theropods such as Bahariasaurus and the giant crocodilian, Sarcosuchus, over food. A common trend found on large theropod skulls is antemortem bite marks, suggesting that these carnivores were often involved in territorial battles over prey, mates, or scavenging rights.
Where Did Carcharodontosaurus Live?
While spinosaurids occupied semi-aquatic lifestyles, carcharodontosaurids were easily the largest terrestrial predators in the early and middle Cretaceous. These carnivores aggressively hunted the supercontinent Gondwana (modern South America, Africa, Antarctica, Australia, and India), but the fossil record indicates carcharodontosaurid species were also present in North America (Acrocanthosaurus) and Asia (Shaochilong). Most fossil evidence of C. saharicus comes from mid-Cretaceous formations in Morocco and throughout northern Africa.
Teeth collected from the Kem Kem Group of Morocco point to Carcharodontosaurus sharing a habitat with Spinosaurus, other large theropods, and massive crocodilians. Some paleontologists go so far as to speculate that C. saharicus may have preyed upon juvenile and elderly Spinosuarus. During the mid-Cretaceous, Morocco was relatively flat, mainly plains, marshes, and dense, lush rainforests, with many lakes and rivers that supported high species diversity. Though most true Carcharodontosaurus lived in Africa, other species from the family Carcharodontosauridae were discovered in South America, such as the closely related Giganotosaurus. South America and Africa used to be one solid land mass prior to the splitting of Gondwana.
How Many Teeth Did Carcharodontosaurus Have?
Carcharodontosaurus had somewhere around 32 teeth in its massive jaws, each one a deadly, efficient weapon. Despite their overall size, Carcharodontosaurus had relatively weak jaws with a bite force estimated at 3,000 pounds per square inch. This is a rather large number and is indeed very powerful, but in comparison to other large theropods like Tyrannosaurus (12,800 psi) and Spinosaurus (4,200 psi), this number is on the lower end of the scale. However, this comparison doesn’t negate the ability of Carcharodontosaurus as an apex killing machine. Reduced bite force allowed for different hunting strategies to arise.
C. saharicus made up for its weak bite with its highly serrated teeth. The versatility of these teeth offer paleontologists many possibilities as to what feeding strategy the genus actually used, making a definitive strategy impossible to pinpoint, though most prefer to think of the dinosaur as an active hunter. Teeth designed to slash and carve through whatever they bit into would make a pursuit hunting strategy more likely due to the sheer amount of carnage that would be inflicted from a wound on incredibly large prey. A bite from Carcharodontosaurus would leave a gaping wound that aggressively leaked blood, sending prey into shock and dropping them quickly.
Lizard Brain Or Bird Brain?
Working from the skull of the C. saharicus neotype, scientists discovered many intriguing features of the skull’s layout. Carcharodontosaurus has a relatively small braincase for a dinosaur of its immense size. This brain-to-skull size ratio may have been evolutionarily pre-determined by its ancestors. This line of dinosaurs exhibit a pattern of paused growth of the brain regardless of skull size. This trend severely limits biological adaptation and advancement. Perhaps this may have been a factor in Carcharodontosaurus's eventual disappearance leading into the late Cretaceous.
It is estimated that T. rex had a brain roughly 150 percent bigger than that of Carcharodontosaurus. This size difference often leads to the misconception that Carcharodontosaurus wasn’t an intelligent creature and definitely not as intelligent as Tyrannosaurus; this is simply incorrect. Brain development is related to function and usage. The larger a portion of the brain, the more acute that corresponding sense is, and vice versa. Some senses require more brain mass than others and therefore the overall size of the brain will increase to reflect that. In the case of theropods, larger brains equate to better detection, rather than higher thought or deduction and problem solving. Carcharodontosaurus's optic nerve was rather large, suggesting that they had extremely good eyesight, but was probably evolutionary compensation because its eyes were located on the sides of its head, rather than positioned at the front of their face like most predatory animals. Paleontologists believe that despite the overly large optic nerve, the eye position would offset any advantage and the animal probably had poor eyesight.
However, the portions of the brain dedicated to hearing and the sense of smell were rather large, possibly to compensate for weak eyesight. Carcharododntosaurus’s sense of smell may have rivaled that of T. rex, even potentially eclipsing it.
Carcharodontosaurus’s brain case happens to be similar in shape and size to that of a non-avian reptile. This is strange for a theropod, given that this clade of dinosaurs can be traced to modern birds. These findings also lead to the belief that like other non-avian reptiles (think crocodilians), their brains are more adept at sensing and reacting instead of sense, process, and react. Essentially, Carcharodontosaurus had a brain that seemed to resemble more primitive dinosaurs than that of the lineage leading to modern birds. As to why this dinosaur was such an outlier, the jury is still out.
“The T. Rex Of Africa''?
This colloquialism is a relatively inaccurate portrayal of Carcharodontosaurus. The extent of the similarities between these two dinosaurs is that both are indeed large theropods. Like most titanic theropods, Carcharodontosaurus had the same basic body plan as T. rex: a massive head with gaping jaws, short forelimbs, thick hind legs for pursuing prey, and a long counter-balancing tail. However, where T. rex was rather heavy-bodied, bulky, and slow, Carcharodontosaurus was more streamlined and agile. If any comparison were to be made, you could almost say Carcharodontosaurus was “ The African Velociraptor”. Based upon the shape and thickness of neck vertebrae, scientists estimate that Cacharontosaurus had more flexible necks than Tyrannosaurus. This wider range of motion would have been needed to deliver a series of lacerating bites to large prey, bringing it down as quickly and efficiently as possible. Just another piece of supporting evidence to the theory that Carcharodontosaurus probably hunted colossal sauropods (Paralititan) and sail-backed iguanodonts (Ouranosaurus) that existed alongside it.
Unlike T. rex, some suggest that these predators may have hunted in packs, though there is no solid evidence supporting this claim. Others speculate that much like modern carnivores, Carcharodontosaurus may not have been adverse to scavenging corpses when an easy opportunity presented itself. A scavenger lifestyle is similar to that of Tyrannosaurs, whose squat, banana-shaped teeth were designed to crush the bones of carrion. However, Carcharodontosaurus teeth were evolutionarily specialized, so this feeding habit was likely few and far between.
While they were still relatively short, Carcharodontosaurus arms were slightly longer than that of T. rex and were potentially used for grasping or assisting in killing prey smaller than a behemoth sauropod if an opportunity presented itself. This split-advantage trait did not evolve for Tyrannosaurus, who evolutionarily allocated more resources to a “bite-only” hunting style.
Speed Demon
Despite their enormity, Carcharodontosaurus was believed to be an extremely fast runner, reaching a top speed of about 20 miles per hour. The basis of these calculations were obtained using fossilized footprints from mid-Cretaceous formations found near the location of C. saharicus’s remains that coincide with its estimated size. Upon deep analysis of Carcharodontosaurus bones, paleontologists discovered preserved lung tissue that contained air sacs. These air sacs were remarkably similar to that of modern birds, bringing a constant flow of oxygen into the lungs. Increased oxygen saturation is an extremely efficient breathing technique that would aid Carcharodontosaurus in running faster and for longer stretches of time while pursuing prey.
The Discovery Of Carcharodontosaurus
The initial holotype of C. saharicus was discovered in western Algeria in the mid 1920s by French paleontologists Charles Depéret and Justin Savornin. They named the species from two teeth, later revealed to be from separate locations, and allotted it to the genus Megalosaurus. These teeth were well described, but their current exact location is unknown. In 1931, German paleontologist Ernst Stromer von Reichenbach unearthed small portions of skull and teeth in central Egypt. Working from these fragments, Stromer renamed the genus and projected the specimen’s size at somewhere near 10.5 meters. Luckily, Stromer left detailed notes and observations, since the reconstructed skull was destroyed in an Allied bombing of Munich in World War II.
It wasn’t until an expedition in the mid-90s when paleontologist Paul Sereno and his colleagues unearthed the neotype of the species. At first Sereno wasn’t quite sure what his team had discovered, but working from Stromer’s descriptions, he deduced that they had found a mostly complete C. saharicus skull.
A later expedition produced a second newly described species of Carcharodontosaurus from the Echkar Formation of Niger, what came to be known as C. iguidensis. This species differs from C. saharicus in size of braincase and certain aspects of the maxilla. With most current classification and taxonomic information emerging within the last few decades, Carcharodontosaurus has become wildly popular in the paleontological world and many more discoveries are sure to be on the horizon. In fact, C. iguidensis is currently under some scrutiny: reviews point to the species as an amalgamation of other carnivore remains. Only time and further research will illuminate the true nature of C. iguidensis.
Extinction Events
Past the Turonian age (93.9-89.8 MYA), Carcharodontosaurus might have been replaced by smaller abelisaurids in Gondwana and by tyrannosaurids in North America and Asia. The disappearance of carcharodontosaurids, spinosaurids, and other megafauna in Gondwana and across the world suggests a global replacement event. Regardless of this potential event, fossils discovered in Brazil that appear to be carcharodontosaurids indicate some members of this group survived until the latest stage of the Cretaceous. Until this era, Tyrannosaurus never attained a size much larger than the average raptor, while carcharodontosaurids were often attaining lengths comparable to that of a small bus. Many paleontologists believe that the removal of carcharodontosaurids gave Tyrannosaurus the opportunity to attain their impressive size and fill empty feeding niches.