Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA
Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams) - Jurassic Period - 199.6 to 145 MYA - Utah, USA

Utah Dinosaur Bone Chunk Jar (300 grams)

Jurassic Period, 199.6 to 145 MYA

Origin: Utah, USA

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Glass jar measures 8x5 cm and will include approximately 300 grams of dinosaur bone chunks.

These dinosaur bone chunks come from a quarry in Utah and are comprised of an assortment of Jurassic period fossils. Since they’re just fossil chunks it’s impossible to say exactly which dinosaurs they came from, but we know they’re bone because of the distinct “spongy” appearance that would’ve housed the animals' blood vessels. Many of these “chunks” have had one or more of their edges cut, exposing the iconic porous bone structure that is still visible within. Each chunk will vary in size and width, with the shape also varying from piece to piece.

About the Jurassic Period:

On the heels of a large scale extinction, dinosaurs emerged as the new dominant land animals in the Jurassic period (201.3 to 145 million years ago). The era saw the rise of massive herbivores like Brachiosaurus, an 80 ton giant that stood at 52 feet (16 m) tall and 85 feet (26 m) long, as well as fearsome predators like Allosaurus and Ceratosaurus. Lush plant life became more abundant as Earth's climate shifted from hot and dry to humid and tropical—a necessary step for plant-eating dinosaurs like Brachiosaurus that had to consume around 880 pounds (400 kg) of dried plant matter each day (Proceeding of the Royal Society B, 2008).

Both the oceans and the skies teemed with new life as well, in addition to the dinosaurs on land. Formidable reptiles like plesiosaurs and crocodiles dominated Earth's shallow interior seas. The earliest known bird (Archaeopteryx) is also thought to have evolved during this period, sharing the skies with flying reptiles known as pterosaurs.

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