**Originally Listed At $3500**
North America, Montana, late Cretaceous period, ca. 70 to 65.5 million years ago. A rare and incredibly well-preserved section of a dental battery from a duck-billed dinosaur known as an Edmontosaurus. The mandible of an Edmontosaurus contained over 1,000 miniscule teeth that moved in a side-to-side motion to pulverize and chew rough vegetal materials like conifer needles, tree bark, and angiosperms that would otherwise be inedible. This battery section contains 82 full and partial teeth of petaloid forms with crested midsections that are reminiscent of reptilian scales, and the surfaces have developed a lustrous chocolate-brown patina due to the process of fossilization. Lucite display stand for photography purposes only. Size: 8.4" L x 3.3" W (21.3 cm x 8.4 cm)
Provenance: private Hagar collection, Wildwood, Missouri, USA
All items legal to buy/sell under U.S. Statute covering cultural patrimony Code 2600, CHAPTER 14, and are guaranteed to be as described or your money back.
A Certificate of Authenticity will accompany all winning bids.
PLEASE NOTE: Due to recent increases of shipments being seized by Australian customs (even for items with pre-UNESCO provenance), we will no longer ship most Antiquities and ancient Chinese art to Australia. For categories of items that are acceptable to ship to Australia, please contact us directly or work with your local customs brokerage firm. #159352
Condition
This is a section of a larger dental battery as shown. Nicks and encrustations to obverse, teeth, and peripheries, with rich brown colors as a result of fossilization. Light earthen deposits and great preservation.