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Apachesaurus Fossil Tooth Giant Anphibian Prehistoric Triassic Collection (1)

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Description

Origin : New Mexico (USA) - Bull Canyon Formation (Dockum Grp. San Miguel Co.)

Geological era : Upper Triassic (Noric)

Age : 227-208 million of years

Size : mm 2


Prehistoric Giant Amphibian Fossil Tooth mm 2 Apachesaurus gregorii Extinct Labyrinthodonts Temnospondyls Mesozoic Triassic Collecting Paleontology Museum, in plexiglas box diam. cm 3.
Also known as Buettneria or Koskinonodon.
An adult tooth of Koskinonodon is for sale at this link.

Valuable fossil of a young specimen, representative collectible item difficult to find and of excellent quality, with clear anterior and posterior details of the tooth surfaces and well-preserved enamel and extremities.
No restored at all. Only a piece, as in photos.


Apachesaurus (Temnospondylia - Stereospondylia - Metoposauridae) is an extinct genus of large amphibians that in the late Triassic filled the same predatory niches then occupied by crocodiles. It was very common during the Noricum, in what is now the American southwest.
At the beginning of the Jurassic most of the Temnospondyls, including Apachesaurus, had disappeared. They are likely to have died out during the Triassic-Jurassic transition event, along with most other large amphibians, the Conodonti class and 34% of all marine genera. We do not know what caused this mass extinction; the hypotheses include huge volcanic eruptions, climate changes, ocean acidification and even another impact with an asteroid. It is known, however, that more than half of the species living on Earth became extinct as a result of this event.
Apachesaurus may have reached up to 3 m in length, with a very large 65 cm long skull, and large jaws that could hold many sharp and pointed teeth simultaneously, perhaps even more than 100 on each side of the upper and lower jaw, with the actual number which constantly varied during the life of the animal. It had both marginal teeth and larger teeth on the palate, of two types: large ones with shallow and small furrows with deeper furrows. These grooves ran longitudinally along the teeth, optimizing them to pierce the prey and prevent it from escaping, resisting the bending force applied by the struggling organism and propagating the cracks in the hard parts such as the bones, allowing easier feeding and digestion. These dental adaptations improved the ability of the Apachesaurus to capture prey.
He also had a large, wedge-shaped tail, to assist him in swimming, hunting, and probably even in defense. It was not as long as that of today's crocodiles, but robust enough to allow him to quickly get out of hiding to catch prey before he could escape. The legs were short with 4 fingers on the front limbs and 5 on the hind legs. Apachesaurus probably spent a lot of time motionless, waiting for the prey, as its small, sturdy legs were active hunting.
Apachesaurus hunting style consisted of lying at the bottom of a shallow swamp, waiting for a fish, a crustacean, a smaller amphibian or even a young phytosaurus. When he identified the prey, he used his huge jaws to swallow and consume it. Some particular adaptations suggest that Apachesaurus had this aquatic lifestyle. First of all, they had lateral lines formed by sensory furrows. These are useful for detecting changes in water pressure caused by movements due to swimming of proximal organisms. Even their stretched legs were adapted for water. They would not move quickly or efficiently to the ground, although they might have done so to find another pool of water with more food or other resources. Common graves were found, perhaps the result of a group of these animals gathering in a pool of water that had dried up during a period of drought.
He lived in superficial and marshy habitats alongside many other small amphibians, and his fossils were commonly found with remnants of phytosaurs. The best conditions for fossilization occur in river valleys or in floodplains. Apachesaurus is famous for its extremely well preserved fossils, often found in groups.
Most Apachesaurus fossils have been found in the United States, but also in India.
The genus was formerly called Buettneria da Case in 1922, but in 2007, B.D. Mueller realized that the name Buettneria had already been given to a bush, and so was renamed in the genus Koskinonodon, while, following what was established in 2017, the contemporary Apachesaurus gregorii turned out to be a juvenile stage of Koskinonodon perfectus. The final ending -odon, means that it possessed a specific dental form.
The two known species are therefore K. perfectus and K. bakeri, which differ from one another for some characteristics, such as the skull orbit.
Synonyms: Buettneria perfecta, Koskinonodon perfectus, Metoposaurus bakeri, Eupelor.



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