Spinosaurus Tooth - Fossil Specimen


Price :
Sale price$900.00 CAD

Description

Mined from: Kem Kem Beds, near Taouz, Errachidia Province, Drâa-Tafilalet Region, Sahara Desert, Morocco

Era: Mesozoic
Geological Age: Late Cretaceous, Cenomanian 100.5 to 93.9 mya

Description: This one of a kind Spinosaurus tooth fossil specimen has a thick, tapering form with a dark brown crown that narrows to a sharp point and a broader, lighter brown base with visible natural texture. The surface shows a mix of smooth enamel preservation and rougher fossilized areas where the tooth transitions toward the root. The broken base is natural and gives the piece a solid, excavated look, while the crown remains well defined and visually strong.

This specimen has a heavier, more robust profile than many smaller Moroccan dinosaur teeth, with a clear difference between the darker enamel and the more weathered root area. The shape fits the conical tooth form associated with Spinosaurus, a large predatory dinosaur whose teeth were better suited to gripping prey than slicing it. Teeth like this are commonly recovered from the fossil-bearing beds of southeastern Morocco, where river and floodplain deposits preserved a wide range of Cretaceous animals.

Collectors are often drawn to Spinosaurus teeth because they carry an immediate sense of age, survival, and prehistoric power. This piece has that appeal in a very direct way: it looks ancient, substantial, and unmistakably real.

Quantity: 1pc

With this product, you will get the actual stone in the photograph. We do what we can to buy good quality products and price them honestly. The rocks may differ from the photos, but we hope we do them justice.

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