Cave Bear Tooth Fossil

$101.83

A large, elongated tooth fossil from a cave bear. This specimen also has some of the tooth root still attached, which is reasonably rare to find. The tooth is believed to be from a cave bear, and is thought to be around 1 million years old. This item was found in France.

Out of stock

tooth-fossil
Cave Bear Tooth Fossil
$101.83

adding ninja form or contact 7 ,will give the client an install access to the form page to send a request of ask a question to you, this will be sent via smpt direct to your inbox so you never loose a client or a request from the single product page

Cave bears – formally referred to as Ursus spelaeus – became extinct around 25,000 years ago. There is much debate as to why this extinction occurred – climate change, and human hunting have both been posited as potential causes.

The species were given the name ‘cave bear’ largely due to the location of their remains: the vast majority of their fossils have been found in caves. In comparison to their modern-day cousins, cave bears, as the name suggests, spent far more time living within caves. They did not just use them to hibernate in.

Additional information

Weight 160 g
Dimensions 3.5 × 11.5 cm
Country

France

Material

Bone

Time period

Cenozoic Era