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Seventy million years ago, a hulking T. rex chomped into a fresh carcass. As the giant meat-eater's teeth ripped flesh from bone, this large tooth broke loose and fell to the ground to be fossilized and then cast millions of years later. T. rex commonly lost teeth like this one in a process we call "shedding." These teeth are usually found by scientists apart from a full T. rex skeleton, often near a plant eating dinosaur carcass that served as a feast for the giant Cretaceous predator. Specs: Tyrannosaurus rex. Late Cretaceous (70 m.y.a.). North America.
B**E
Very detailed
Nice size and good detail. I use it when doing tours of the local dinosaur tracks.
R**S
Looks great on my display case
Affordable price. Looks great on my display case.
S**E
Awesome resemblance. Great scale
Son loved it.. and it didn't break the bank
R**H
Too shiny, doesn't look real.
Too shiny, doesn't look real.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
1 day ago