Early Cretaceous Fossilized Spinosaurus Teeth (1) (Auction 2026-06-05, Lot 133A)
$224.88
North Africa, early Cretaceous (Lower Albian to Lower Cenomanian), ca. 112 to 97 million years ago. A collection of 10 teeth from Spinosaurus, one of the largest species of carnivorous dinosaur. Each tooth is conical and nearly straight – characteristic of jaws that were built to skewer slippery prey in water- Spinosaurus were semi-aquatic piscivores that cruised along watery environments, hunting fish, and ambushing other dinosaurs that came to the shore to drink. These hunters could reach lengths of 15 to 16 meters (49 to 52 ft)- the head alone could be 1.68 meters (5.5 ft), easily accommodating about 64 teeth! Size: 2.4″ L x 0.73″ W (6.1 cm x 1.9 cm)
Provenance: private Colorado, USA collection, acquired from Keystone Actions LLC, York, Pennsylvania, USA.
Condition: All have losses to enamel and repairs. One might be a composite of 2 teeth. Visible break lines and fissures throughout.























