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Globidens Tooth

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Globidens Tooth

Globidens Tooth

A genuine Globidents tooth is one of the most distinctive fossils a collector can own — and the tooth itself is why. While virtually every other mosasaur evolved sharp, conical teeth built for gripping and piercing, Globidents went a completely different direction. Its teeth are rounded and globe-shaped, built not for stabbing but for crushing — designed to crack open ammonites, hard-shelled mollusks, and sea turtles that other predators of the Late Cretaceous simply could not process. That specialized tooth form is immediately recognizable and sets Globidents apart from every other mosasaur genus in the fossil record.

Globidents was a fully marine lizard — not a dinosaur, not a fish, but a large, powerful reptile that ruled the shallow Cretaceous seas alongside giants like Mosasaurus and Tylosaurus. It shared those waters with giant sea turtles, ammonites, and bony fish, and its unusual dentition gave it access to a food source its competitors largely ignored. It was a specialist in a world full of generalists, and its teeth are the direct evidence of that strategy.

This authentic Globidents tooth was recovered from the phosphate deposits of the Oulad Abdoun/Khouribga Basin of Morocco, one of the most productive Late Cretaceous marine fossil sites on Earth. The phosphate-rich sediments of this basin were extraordinarily effective at mineralizing hard tissue, and specimens from this region consistently show strong structural integrity and exceptional detail. At approximately 66 to 70 million years old, this tooth is a genuine relic from the final chapter of the Mesozoic Era — the last world before the asteroid impact ended it all.

A rare and genuinely unusual fossil. 100% authentic. No restoration.

$35.00
Globidens Tooth—
$35.00

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A genuine Globidents tooth is one of the most distinctive fossils a collector can own — and the tooth itself is why. While virtually every other mosasaur evolved sharp, conical teeth built for gripping and piercing, Globidents went a completely different direction. Its teeth are rounded and globe-shaped, built not for stabbing but for crushing — designed to crack open ammonites, hard-shelled mollusks, and sea turtles that other predators of the Late Cretaceous simply could not process. That specialized tooth form is immediately recognizable and sets Globidents apart from every other mosasaur genus in the fossil record.

Globidents was a fully marine lizard — not a dinosaur, not a fish, but a large, powerful reptile that ruled the shallow Cretaceous seas alongside giants like Mosasaurus and Tylosaurus. It shared those waters with giant sea turtles, ammonites, and bony fish, and its unusual dentition gave it access to a food source its competitors largely ignored. It was a specialist in a world full of generalists, and its teeth are the direct evidence of that strategy.

This authentic Globidents tooth was recovered from the phosphate deposits of the Oulad Abdoun/Khouribga Basin of Morocco, one of the most productive Late Cretaceous marine fossil sites on Earth. The phosphate-rich sediments of this basin were extraordinarily effective at mineralizing hard tissue, and specimens from this region consistently show strong structural integrity and exceptional detail. At approximately 66 to 70 million years old, this tooth is a genuine relic from the final chapter of the Mesozoic Era — the last world before the asteroid impact ended it all.

A rare and genuinely unusual fossil. 100% authentic. No restoration.

Globidens Tooth | Fossil Great White