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1.95" Fossil Phytosaur Tooth - New Mexico
This is a 1.95" Phytosaur tooth that was collected from the Bull Canyon Formation of New Mexico. There are a variety of phytosaurids that come from this location, making it difficult to conclusively identify them all to a specific genus.
There are a few areas with glue stabilization and a gnarly feeding worn tip on this specimen. For a tooth this size, the level of preservation is excellent.
There are a few areas with glue stabilization and a gnarly feeding worn tip on this specimen. For a tooth this size, the level of preservation is excellent.
Phytosaurs are members of the order Phytosauria. These were semiaquatic, crocodile-like reptiles characterized by long snouts, conical teeth, short legs, heavy tails, and long, low-slung bodies. They also had skin armored with scale-like scutes. However, Phytosaurs are not related to modern Crocodilians. The similarities are an example of parallel evolution, where two different species develop similar characteristics and attributes without a common ancestor.
It is not clearly understood when Phytosaurus evolved, but a number of apparently antecedent species have been found in the fossil record: their relationship to Phytosaurs is still debated. Phytosaurus disappears from the fossil record during the Triassic-Jurassic Extinction, about 200 million years ago.
Generally, Phytosaurs looked like modern crocodilians. Some species had longer, thinner snouts with thin conical teeth for catching fish, while others had comparatively shorter, wider snouts with conical teeth in the front and ripping teeth in the back of the mouth. These were likely ambush hunters that snatched prey at the water’s edge, much like modern crocodiles. The longest known Phytosaur was 39 feet long and would have been about as tall as a human at the top of its back. Unlike modern Crocodilians, whose nostrils are at the end of their snouts, Phytosauria had their nostrils at the bases of their snouts, just above or at the same level as their eyes.
Phytosaurs were nearly globally distributed. The result is phytosaur fossils have been found in Europe, North America, India, Thailand, Brazil, Greenland and even Antarctica.
It is not clearly understood when Phytosaurus evolved, but a number of apparently antecedent species have been found in the fossil record: their relationship to Phytosaurs is still debated. Phytosaurus disappears from the fossil record during the Triassic-Jurassic Extinction, about 200 million years ago.
Generally, Phytosaurs looked like modern crocodilians. Some species had longer, thinner snouts with thin conical teeth for catching fish, while others had comparatively shorter, wider snouts with conical teeth in the front and ripping teeth in the back of the mouth. These were likely ambush hunters that snatched prey at the water’s edge, much like modern crocodiles. The longest known Phytosaur was 39 feet long and would have been about as tall as a human at the top of its back. Unlike modern Crocodilians, whose nostrils are at the end of their snouts, Phytosauria had their nostrils at the bases of their snouts, just above or at the same level as their eyes.
Phytosaurs were nearly globally distributed. The result is phytosaur fossils have been found in Europe, North America, India, Thailand, Brazil, Greenland and even Antarctica.
SPECIES
Unidentified Phytosaur
LOCATION
New Mexico
FORMATION
Bull Canyon Formation
SIZE
1.95" Long
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#192558
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