Collection: Lapparentosaurus tooth fossils

Authentic Lapparentosaurus tooth fossils from Madagascar. These genuine Jurassic dinosaur teeth represent large herbivorous sauropods that lived approximately 160 million years ago.

Lapparentosaurus was a long necked sauropod dinosaur with spoon shaped teeth adapted for stripping vegetation. Fossils from Madagascar provide important insight into Jurassic ecosystems.

Based on incomplete data, the species is currently regarded as a dubious taxon and is frequently categorized as either Lapparentosaurus or Eusauropoda indet.

For more information about these teeth, you can read the this article

About Lapparentosaurus Teeth

Jurassic Sauropod from Madagascar

Lapparentosaurus is known from Jurassic deposits of Madagascar and represents a large bodied herbivorous dinosaur. Like other sauropods, it possessed relatively simple teeth designed for cropping plants rather than chewing.

Identification of Isolated Teeth

Most material from Madagascar is found as isolated teeth. Because sauropod teeth can be similar across related species, identifying individual teeth to a distinct genus is not always possible with complete certainty.

Teeth in this collection are attributed to Lapparentosaurus based on morphology and geological context. Such attributions are made cautiously and reflect current understanding rather than absolute determination.

Scientific and Collectible Value

Jurassic sauropod teeth from Madagascar are valued by collectors and educators. Each specimen represents a tangible piece of prehistoric life from an important fossil locality.

Authenticity

Authenticity and Transparency

All fossils in this collection are genuine natural specimens formed through geological processes over millions of years. We do not sell replicas or artificially manufactured fossils.

Each specimen is individually photographed so you receive the exact item shown. Any stabilization or conservation work, if present, is clearly disclosed in the individual product description.

Lapparentosaurus tooth fossils