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Alligator mefferdi Scute (Osteoderm) #1

$20.00

  • Genuine Fossil Alligator Scute
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1 in stock

Description

  • Alligator mefferdi
  • Late Miocene Age
  • Dixie County, Florida
  • Specimen measures approx.  .86″ long and will come in a 2.25″ x 3.25″ Riker Mount with Label as Shown

Alligator mefferdi is an extinct species of alligator described by Charles Craig Mook. They lived in the Miocene period

Inside the scute is a bone that helps protect the alligator from attack. ­Alligators have numerous special features that have allowed them to stick around for 180 million years. For example, alligators are armor-plated. Bony plates inside the skin, called osteoderms or scutes, make the skin very hard to penetrate.
Osteoderms are bony scutes embedded underneath the dermal layers of the skin acting as a protection of the internal organs and tissues. Additionally, these scutes function as an aid in temperature regulation. The scutes are inter-linked by fibrous connective tissue.

Additional information

Location

Florida