Serrated, 1.5" Fossil Phytosaur Tooth - Arizona

This is a large and serrated, 1.5" long tooth of a Triassic Phytosaur collected from the Chinle Formation of Arizona. There is a repaired crack along one edge of this tooth and the enamel is chipped along both faces. There are a number of genus of phytosaurs who's fossils are found in the same channel deposit. They have nearly identical teeth, but based on the large size of this tooth it more than likely came from Smilosuchus, the largest phytosaur found there.

About Phytosaurs

Phytosaurs were formidable, semi-aquatic reptiles that prowled Triassic rivers and swamps long before true crocodilians evolved. With long, tooth-studded snouts, armored hides, and powerful, paddle-like tails, they looked uncannily similar to modern crocodiles—but the resemblance was pure coincidence. Phytosaurs belonged to an entirely different branch of the reptile family tree, a striking example of parallel evolution in which unrelated animals independently develop the same body plan to master similar environments. Their lineage appears early in the Triassic, though their exact origins remain debated, and they thrived as dominant freshwater predators until vanishing during the Triassic–Jurassic extinction event roughly 200 million years ago.

An artist's reconstruction of a Phytosaur. By Nobu Tamura
An artist's reconstruction of a Phytosaur. By Nobu Tamura


Though phytosaurs shared a crocodile’s general silhouette, their heads told a different story. Some species evolved long, needle-toothed jaws for spearing fish, while others developed broader snouts lined with heavy crushing and slicing teeth suited for tackling larger prey at the water’s edge. The largest individuals stretched an astonishing 39 feet—giant ambush hunters capable of lurking just below the surface before erupting upward in a sudden burst of power. Unlike crocodilians, whose nostrils sit at the tip of the snout, phytosaurs carried their nostrils high on the skull near the eyes, allowing them to breathe while nearly the entire head remained submerged, a subtle adaptation that hints at just how refined these ancient predators were.

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DETAILS
SPECIES
Smilosuchus?
LOCATION
Private Ranch, Northeast Arizona
FORMATION
Chinle Formation
SIZE
1.5" long
ITEM
#145010
GUARANTEE
We guarantee the authenticity of all of our specimens.