Diprotodon Tooth Molar Replica

$18.00

Diprotodon optatum species fossils have been found in sites across mainland Australia, including complete skulls and skeletons, hair, and foot impressions.

Description

Diprotodon Tooth Molar Replica measures 2 x 1.13 x 2.25 inches. Diprotodon Tooth Molar Replica is museum quality polyurethane cast. Made in USA. Our precise tooth can be used as a teaching tool, museum tooth exhibit, home décor tooth, or office décor tooth.

A giant relative of the wombat from the Pleistocene of Australia, Diprotodon optatum is the largest known marsupial ever to have lived. Along with many other members of a group of unusual species collectively called the Australian megafauna, it existed from approximately 1.6 million years ago until extinction some 46,000 years ago (through most of the Pleistocene epoch).

Diprotodon optatum species fossils have been found in sites across mainland Australia, including complete skulls and skeletons, hair, and foot impressions. Female Diprotodon optatum skeletons have been found with babies located where the mother’s pouch would have been.

Diprotodon optatum superficially resembled a rhinoceros without a horn. Its feet turned inwards like a Wombat’s, giving it a pigeon-toed appearance. It had strong claws on the front feet and its pouch opening faced backwards.

Its footprints have been found showing a covering of hair, which indicates it had a coat similar to a modern wombat.

The skull of Diprotodon optatum has large endocranial sinus cavities, which separate the relatively small cranial vault from the outer part of the skull. These significantly lighten the skull while providing large areas for muscle attachment and reduce load stress.

The majority of fossil finds are of demographic groups indicative of diprotodonts dying in drought conditions. For example, hundreds of individuals were found in Lake Callabonna with well-preserved lower bodies, but crushed and distorted heads. Several family groups are thought to have sunk in mud while crossing the drying lake bed.

Other finds consist of age groupings of young or old animals, which are first to die during a drought. In 2012, a significant group of about 40 Diprotodon optatum were found at Eulo, south-west Queensland.

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Additional information

Weight 1 lbs
Dimensions 2 × 1.13 × 2.25 in
Diprotodon Facts:

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Mammalia
Infraclass: Marsupialia
Order: Diprotodontia
Family: †Diprotodontidae
Genus: †Diprotodon
Type species: Diprotodon optatum
Conservation Status: Extinct -Extinction is the termination of a kind of organism or of a group of kinds (taxon), usually a species. The moment of extinction is generally considered to be the death of the last individual of the species.