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TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old - Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft

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BABY MAMMOTH TOOTH

About 20,000 years old
 
Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft

A fine example of a mammoth tooth, almost complete and in very good condition. This particular tooth is from a very young mammoth. A small area of wear surface is present showing that the tooth was in use for a short period of time.

 
Fossil mammoth teeth are occasionally dredged off the Brown Bank in the North Sea by fishing vessels and date from a time when the North Sea was dry land.
 
MAMMOTH TEETH
A mammoth’s molar teeth consisted of enamel ridges separated by dentine and as the teeth grind together the ridges break up the food.  Mammoth teeth were very resistant to wear because their diet consisted of tough grass, which contained grit.  A mammoth had six sets of teeth in its life and at any one time only one tooth was in use on each side of the lower and upper jaws.  As each tooth wore down it was pushed up until it was discarded and replaced with a new one from behind. 

Mammoth bones and teeth are relatively young in geological terms and so are only partially fossilised. For this reason they are usually treated with a preservative to prevent them cracking.  
 
Click on a picture for a larger image

Size: approx. 9.2 x 6.5 x 4 centimetres
Weight: 265 grams

PRICE: £120.00
Sorry, this item has been sold or is out of stock
TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old -  Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft
TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old -  Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old -  Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old -  Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft TOOTH OF A BABY MAMMOTH - about 20,000 years old -  Dredged from the North Sea, off Lowestoft