Fossilized Tooth of Hornosaurus

Fossilized Tooth of Hornosaurus

Caueratosaurus is also translated as Cryptocoratosaurus, which means "face with slender horns" in Greek. Like all the lower order dinosaurs, the hornophorosaurus was a herbivorous dinosaur. During the Cretaceous period, flowering plants spread across the continent, and Coriolus probably fed on dominant flowering plants, as well as ferns, cycads, and coniferous plants. Coriatops may have used their sharp beak-like beaks to bite off leaves or needles. The fiber-hornosaurus is 2 meters long and may weigh between 68kg and 200kg.
Fossil teeth of Triceratops

Fossil teeth of Triceratops

Triceratops, a herbivorous dinosaur of the genus Triceratops, is a bird-buttock hornosaurus. Triceratops is a kind of dinosaur like rhinoceros. It has heavy appearance, thick legs, three horns on its head, a large bone plate extending backward at the back of its skull to form a neck shield, a short horn above its beak and two long horns above its orbit. Triceratops horns are defensive weapons and can scare off predators. Its tail is short and sharp, and its feet are like hooves.
Fossil teeth of megalodon shark

Fossil teeth of megalodon shark

It is an extinct giant shark, considered the largest shark in history and possibly the largest fish. Living during the Early Miocene to Pliocene period, approximately 23 to 2.6 million years ago. Fossil teeth are the main evidence for the existence of this ancient predator, and these teeth can grow up to 18 centimeters long, more than three times the size of modern great white shark teeth. It has a huge body size and a very strong biting force, making it the strongest known animal. The teeth are similar to modern great white sharks, with triangular, serrated edges and symmetry, but larger, thicker, more evenly spaced serrations, and a darker, V-shaped area near the root of the teeth.